When Doug Whitlock first arrived on the Eastern Kentucky University
campus, he was a wide-eyed freshman, a hometown boy and the first member
of his family to attend college.
When he departs this summer,
Whitlock will be retiring as Eastern's 11th president, ending an
association with the school that dates almost 50 years.
Whitlock,
69, noted in a Herald-Leader interview Tuesday that he came to Eastern
fitting a student profile that continues at the school even today, with
first-generation students still making up more than half of new
enrollees.
"For most of our students, attendance at Eastern
Kentucky University is a truly life-changing event," he said. "It was
for me. Had it not been for the opportunity to go to Eastern, my life
would have been entirely different."
Whitlock wants to see that tradition continue. But now it will be up to someone else to keep it going.
Eastern's search for a new president is entering the final stages, following the announcement of three finalists last month.
Tight
budgets fueled by state funding cutbacks have dominated Whitlock's
agenda almost since the day he became Eastern's president in fall 2007.
And he says his successor probably can look forward to more of the same, at least in the short term.
"The
year coming up will be the first since I've been on the job where we
don't have a (state) budget cut impending," he said. "So, I do think
that the decline in state support has stopped.
"But the only
prospect I can see for any significant infusion of new state dollars
would be through tax reform or expanded gambling. Otherwise I don't see
anything except modest, incremental improvements in our future."
That
means Eastern, under its new president, will have to continue efforts
already under way to cut costs, including plans for voluntary job cuts
and program reductions that EKU regents authorized last month.
The
reductions, totaling about $23 million — 10 percent of Eastern's annual
budget — will allow EKU to re-allocate money to raises and new
initiatives and stabilize the university's financial picture.
But involuntary layoffs could follow if reductions don't produce the needed savings, officials say.
While Whitlock says that Kentucky is not funding higher education adequately, "it could be a lot worse."
"Since
the financial hard times began in late 2007, cumulative budgets for
higher education in Kentucky have been cut about 16 percent," he said.
"But if you look a states around us ... you'll find cuts ranging from 25
percent to almost 50 percent in the case of Georgia."
'Tipping point' on tuition?
Reduced
state funding has forced Eastern and other schools to steadily boost
tuition over the past few years to make up the shortfall. Whitlock said
Eastern has weathered the tight money "in pretty good fashion." But he
warns that higher education could be nearing a "tipping point" if
tuition keeps climbing.
"Despite the fact that tuition has gone up
significantly, I still think college is affordable," he said. "But I do
believe that there is a tipping point where we could price people out
of the market."
That could be significant for Eastern which,
Whitlock notes, includes several economically depressed counties in its
primary service region.
Whitlock became president at Eastern after
holding several staff positions at the university and serving as an
executive assistant or vice president under four presidents. But it
turned out to be rather like being given a new Cadillac only to find
that the engine had a blown head gasket.
The bottom fell out of the U.S. economy soon after Whitlock was named, and higher education support nosedived.
Asked if he ever asked himself "why me," Whitlock responded by pointing out that he is a country music fan.
"No
matter how bad your day is, you can always turn on a country music
station and hear a song about someone who's got it a whole lot worse
than you," he said.
Even so, he said, Eastern has accomplished
much despite penny-pinching budgets. Among other things, he cited the
university's new $64 million science building, positive accreditation
results, strong student performance and good reviews by EKU employees.
Arts center problems
A
trouble spot has been the EKU Center for the Arts, where financial
irregularities surfaced soon after it opened last year. The center's
executive director, Debra Hoskins, resigned after EKU tried to fire her.
Whitlock says, however, that the controversy apparently has not affected the center's success.
"I
regret some of the aftermath, but that will heal," he said. "I don't
think it has affected this season, and I understand that financially
we're doing better than we did a year ago."
Through it all, Whitlock apparently has managed to maintain good relations with the university community.
Malcom
Frisbie, faculty representative on EKU's Board of Regents, noted that
the faculty senate voted to recommend Whitlock be given the title of
president emeritus when he retires.
"I think it was a heartfelt
thing," Frisbie said. "He has had good relations with the faculty;
faculty members feel comfortable with him and confident in his
abilities.
"He has not had the luxury of ample financial resources
during the six years he's been president, but he has managed to help us
to move forward."
Whitlock also has earned the admiration of
students, according to Madelyn Street, an EKU senior who represents
students on the board of regents.
"He has demonstrated throughout
his presidency that he truly cares about students and wants them to
succeed," Street said. "He's been very visible at athletic events and
student activities. Probably every student has had a chance to meet him
at some point."
With his days at Eastern winding down — he's
scheduled to retire July 1 — Whitlock says he wants to do some
traveling, perhaps get into consulting, perhaps even write a novel. But
he promises that he will "stay out of the new president's way."
"The
way this university is going to succeed is if the person who follows me
succeeds," he said. "So whatever he asks me to do I will do. But the
institution can have only one president, and whoever comes is going to
have my full support."
Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2013/04/02/2584063/after-half-a-century-at-his-hometown.html#storylink=cpy
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