President Shalala to Step Down

President Shalala to Step Down

Athletic Director Blake James

“It is hard to imagine the University of Miami without Donna Shalala.  She has meant so much to the U Family over the past fourteen years and has been a tremendous visionary, leader and friend to our students, faculty, staff and alumni around the world.  President Shalala has been instrumental in our Athletics resurgence and has been our biggest supporter.  Though her departure will be a loss, we are a better university because of her.  She has been a friend and mentor to me and I wish her the very best in the future.”

Head Coach Al Golden

“It’s a sad day. Donna has been nothing but embracing for me and my family since we’ve been here. You grow close with somebody when you go through the adversity that we went through together. That was not an easy time for her or for me, and as I said during that time, I don’t know how you could have a better leader in your corner during that adversity.

“What she has done here speaks for itself. It’s amazing. It’s an amazing university. The campus is incredible, and that’s her legacy. Her legacy is all around us. We should all be so lucky to leave that kind of legacy. Watch out, whoever she’s going up against next – whether it’s in politics or whatever. She’s a competitor, she’s brilliant, she can cut through it and makes things simple, and obviously somebody that will be missed here.” 

Head MBB Coach Jim Larrañaga

President Shalala is a tremendous person, a great leader and a role model. She is one of the main reasons I wanted to come to the University of Miami. Her support for the student-athlete and our athletic department is greatly appreciated by all of our coaches. Our basketball program will miss her dearly.

Head WBB Coach Katie Meier

“The incredible leadership of Donna Shalala has inspired me from the moment I interviewed at the University of Miami. Her non-stop energy, curiosity and passion for education provide a platform for student development that is unmatched. Her support for athletics is personal—and I always enjoy her presence on the sideline, locker room and postgame receptions and events. To have a president who is simply ‘a phone call away’ is quite rare as a women’s basketball coach and I could not be more grateful for her presence and strength during the years we spent building the program. I congratulate her on leaving a legacy and wish her the very best. She will be missed deeply.” 

 

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (September 08, 2014) — University of Miami President Donna E. Shalala announced today that she is stepping down at the end of the 2014-2015 university year (summer 2015) after 14 years of distinguished service.

President Shalala has also served as a professor of political science, teaching one of the University’s largest and most popular courses focusing on the politics and economics of health care, featuring such special guest lecturers as former U.S. President Bill Clinton. She plans to return to the faculty as a professor of political science and health policy.

“President Shalala’s tenure as the University of Miami’s fifth president has been a fortuitous and celebrated circumstance of the right leader at the right place at the right time,” noted Stuart A. Miller, Chair of the University of Miami Board of Trustees, UM law school alumnus, and Chief Executive Officer of Lennar Corp. “As we look ahead to building on President Shalala’s significant accomplishments, we will be appointing a Presidential Search Committee to be chaired by Richard D. Fain, Vice Chair of the Board and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. This will be an inclusive process and will seek valuable input from the greater University of Miami community,” said Miller. (For full text of Chair’s statement, click here.)

UM’s current era was launched in June 2001 with the naming of Shalala as the fifth president in the history of the institution. Her presidency has been marked by accelerated progress in all key areas—teaching and learning, the discovery of new knowledge, the delivery of cutting-edge medical care, service to the region and beyond, and fundraising. Under her leadership, UM rapidly advanced into the top-tier of American higher education, joining the nation’s finest research universities.

Few individuals are as accomplished or as dedicated to public service as President Shalala, who commands more than 40 years of experience as a professor, scholar, and administrator. She has held the position of Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and President of Hunter College of the City University of New York.

One of the most honored academics of her generation, she has been elected to seven national academies: The Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences; the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; the American Philosophical Society; the National Academy of Education; the National Academy of Social Insurance; the National Academy of Public Administration; and the National Academy of Political and Social Science.

Under the Clinton administration President Shalala served as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services for eight years, the longest serving HHS Secretary in U.S. history. In 2007, President George W. Bush handpicked President Shalala to co-chair with Senator Bob Dole the Commission on Care for Returning Wounded Warriors. In June of 2008, he presented her with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, our nation’s highest civilian award.

Milestones during President Shalala’s tenure at the University of Miami include:

The University received 31,614 freshman applications for fall 2014—more than twice the 14,721 received in 2001. Between 2001 and 2013, the mean SAT score of incoming freshmen rose from 1190 to 1325, while those in the top 10 percent of their high school classes now compose more than 70 percent of our freshman class, up from 51 percent in 2001. The six-year graduation rate, another standard measure of success in higher education, has risen from 63 percent to 81 percent since 2001.

With almost 17,000 undergraduate and graduate students, diversity has never been higher. In Fall 2013 enrollment was 47 percent minority students, including 26 percent Hispanic or Latino, 8 percent black, and 13 percent Asian/Pacific Islander—up from 39 percent in 2000.

Faculty research and sponsored program expenditures have increased by more than 71 percent, from $202 million in 2001 to more than $346 million in Fiscal Year ’13 in support of more than 2,250 extramurally funded projects. For Fiscal Year ’13 the UM Miller School of Medicine was No. 38 in National Institutes of Health funding. NIH funding in 2013 reached $118 million, solidifying the Miller School as the top NIH-funded medical school in Florida. The UM School of Nursing and Health Studies is the top NIH-funded nursing school in the state

In 2003 the University announced Momentum: The Campaign for the University of Miami, the most far-reaching and ambitious comprehensive campaign in its history. The historic fundraising drive surpassed its $1 billion goal in January 2006, a year and a half ahead of schedule, and ended December 31, 2007, having raised $1.4 billion, the first university in Florida to successfully mount a billion-dollar campaign.

In 2012 the University launched Momentum2: The Breakthrough Campaign for the University of Miami, a $1.6 billion effort, and to date the campaign has raised $1.3 billion with more than 137,000 donors contributing. When completed the Momentum campaigns will represent an extraordinary $3 billion philanthropic legacy that has transformed the University and the South Florida community.

The University of Miami has hosted a wide variety of high-profile events during the Shalala years. Some 63 million people tuned in to a live broadcast of the 2004 Bush-Kerry presidential debate held on the Coral Gables campus; a few years later, UM and Univision Communications presented the first-ever internationally televised candidates’ forums targeting Spanish speakers.

Among the many other dignitaries and luminaries who have visited UM to speak during President Shalala’s tenure: the late poet Maya Angelou, columnist George Will, award-winning journalists Anderson Cooper, Thomas Friedman, and Fareed Zakaria, television host Rachel Maddow, filmmaker Spike Lee, novelist and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, Supreme Court justices Sonia Sotomayor and Anthony Kennedy, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, primatologist Jane Goodall, and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos Calderón.

In 2010 the University hosted the Clinton Global Initiative University, and it will do so again in March 2015—the only university to be selected twice for this honor.

An independent study of UM’s economic impact conducted in 2012 found that the University has a total economic impact of $5.62 billion on Miami-Dade County and an impact of $6.1 billion on the tri-county (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach) region. One of the largest employers in Miami-Dade County, the University is a major engine that contributes widely across the area, with its employment and expenditures driving further economic activity that affects multiple sectors in the economy.

President Shalala’s presidency has seen an unprecedented growth in facilities totaling almost $2 billion of new construction and comprising 2.7 million square feet of projects completed or in process, plus 1.7 million of existing square feet renovated. Major projects on the Coral Gables campus include the BankUnited Center, Student Activities Center, University Village student housing, the Schwartz Center for Athletic Excellence, and the Newman Alumni Center among others. Additions to the Miller School of Medicine campus include the Clinical Research Building, University of Miami Hospital, Biomedical Research Building, and UM Life Science and Technology Park. Next month the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science will dedicate the Alfred C. Glassell, Jr. SUSTAIN Building and Marine Technology & Life Sciences Seawater Complex.

President Shalala has become the consummate Miamian, deeply involved in its civic, business, and cultural life. Through her efforts as the leader of the region’s oldest university, she has helped advance Miami’s world-class status and raised the bar in the arts, education, health care, and community engagement. In 2014 she received the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce’s highest honor, the Sand in My Shoes Award.

In her letter announcing her plans to step down, President Shalala gave praise to the University of Miami family—students, faculty, staff, trustees, alumni, supporters, and donors: “Collectively we have accomplished what we set out to do—secure the University of Miami’s place as the next great American research university.” (For full text of President Shalala’s statement, click here.)