Published November 04, 2009 10:35 pm - The results of a faculty vote of no confidence in Missouri Southern State University President Bruce Speck apparently have not prompted any of the three candidates for the school’s top academic position to back out of the running.
Faculty members meet third finalist for MSSU vice president post
By Greg Grisolano
ggrisolano@joplinglobe.com
The results of a faculty vote of no confidence in Missouri Southern State University President Bruce Speck apparently have not prompted any of the three candidates for the school’s top academic position to back out of the running.
One of those candidates, Brian Chapman, said Wednesday that he believes Southern is a campus that has a lot of potential for growth and development.
“I think this is a university that in a couple of years will be vastly different from what it is now,” said Chapman, a former provost at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington. “And I think if I’m offered the position, I’d have to think long and hard about that. But I think that it’s very possible to make a positive impact here.”
The faculty on Monday gave a no-confidence vote regarding Speck’s leadership by a margin of 140 to 44. Almost 78 percent of the faculty of 237 participated in the vote.
Background
Tensions between the faculty and the president began mounting in the spring and summer semesters of 2008, when Speck over time cut more than $1.3 million from the university’s operating budget. The budget for the Institute of International Studies, an administrative arm of Southern’s international mission, was reduced by 40 percent. That decision prompted an outcry from students and faculty members, and became part of a list of 23 grievances compiled against Speck this fall by a faculty senate committee. That ultimately led to the no-confidence vote.
Chapman discussed the situation at length with about 20 faculty members who attended a question-and-answer session Wednesday afternoon in Corley Auditorium. The session was part of a series of interviews being conducted with the top three candidates for the vice president of academic affairs job.
“I think it’s very possible for a vice president of academic affairs to work with this group (of faculty),” he said. “Yeah, they’re concerned, but that’s a good thing. What would be worse is for them to be totally apathetic.”
Chapman opened the session with a short presentation about his background, personally and professionally, before taking questions.
Several faculty members brought up the no-confidence vote in their questions, while others asked about budget issues related to hiring tenure-track faculty and the fate of the school’s international mission.
While he said he supports providing students with the financial resources to study abroad, Chapman also said he believes Southern’s Institute of International Studies needs to be more efficient with its resources. He emphasized that at a previous job in Texas, he was able to send more students overseas on a per-year basis than Southern has with the help of private support.
“I’ve worked with a lot less money than you all had, and we did a lot more,” he said. “So one of the things I’d like to do is get in there and help you review the budget, because there’s a drain in there somewhere.”
Candidates lauded