Robert Robbins is stepping down as聽president of聽the University of Arizona, his seven-year tenure battered in聽recent months by a聽large surprise budgetary deficit and a聽persistent lack of聽faculty confidence.
鈥淎lthough this is a聽difficult decision, it聽is the right decision for the university that I聽love so dearly and for me,鈥 Dr Robbins, a聽cardiothoracic surgeon, said in聽.
Dr Robbins said he would leave the presidency by the end of his current contract in June 2026 but would be ready to go as soon as the university identifies a聽replacement.
The current crisis dates back to November, when university officials publicly revealed an unexpected budgetary shortfall that is聽now estimated at about $177聽million (拢141聽million).
探花视频
The university administration blamed the problem largely on faster-than-expected increases in spending in areas of sports and student financial aid, and described plans for an unspecified number of layoffs and a 10聽per cent cut in the president鈥檚 annual base salary of about $816,000.
Dr Robbins announced his planned exit just ahead of a meeting this week of the university鈥檚 faculty senate, which was taking steps towards holding another vote of no聽confidence in the president.
探花视频
The faculty senate approved a no-confidence vote against Dr Robbins and his management team a year ago, in protest against the fatal shooting on campus of a professor by a former student, which the professor鈥檚 colleagues saw as a reflection of inadequate on-site security. At that time, the state board of regents 鈥 the governing authority over Arizona鈥檚 public colleges and universities 鈥 stood behind Dr聽Robbins.
This time, the board accepted Dr Robbins鈥 departure, issuing a statement that focused on his achievements in areas that included increasing research funding and philanthropy, and deepening connections between the university and the state鈥檚 Indigenous and rural communities.
鈥淧resident Robbins implemented a strategic plan focused on the opportunities and challenges presented by the Fourth Industrial Revolution,鈥 said the chair of the regents, Cecilia Mata, the founder and president of a military services company.
The board last year extended his contract to 2026, and granted him and other system leaders 3聽per cent pay rises.
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Both the regents and Dr Robbins have faced criticism from Arizona鈥檚 governor, Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, whose complaints included both the surprise budget deficit and performance woes at the University of Arizona Global Campus 鈥 the former for-profit Ashford University that the university agreed to buy in 2020.
The university鈥檚 faculty senate welcomed the president鈥檚 decision to step down now, with its chair calling it 鈥渢he first step in the University of Arizona鈥檚 turnaround process鈥.
鈥淥ver the last six weeks, it has become clear that the team that created our predicament was not going to get us out of it,鈥 the faculty senate chair, Leila Hudson, an associate professor of Middle Eastern and North African studies, told 探花视频. 鈥淭here are big challenges ahead, but our university is resilient and our community is strong and mobilised for change.鈥
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