Who needs a chancellor, anyway? The question...
Who needs a
chancellor, anyway?
The question posed in the May 11 Daily Pilot, “What is a
chancellor and what do they do?” sought to identify the role and
responsibilities of this somewhat exalted position and, in the
process, seek to provide something resembling justification for the
jump in his salary along with his three vice-chancellor assistants.
This did not happen.
It’s most pertinent to recall that, a little over five years ago,
the California Citizens Commission on Higher Education saw fit to
recommend the elimination of the chancellors of the 72 community
college districts in California, along with 72 district boards. The
commission was headed by John Brooks Slaughter, president of
Occidental College, and Harold M. Williams, president emeritus of the
J. Paul Getty Trust. The remaining 25 members included distinguished
leaders in education and business.
In its final report, “Toward a State of Learning,” the commission
found that “higher education’s structure tends to be overly
stratified” and, more specifically for the community colleges,
recommended that “the governance and structure of the California
Community Colleges should be simplified and changed to one based on
campuses, not on districts.”
To fill the void created by the loss of the chancellor and the
board, the commission proposed the appointment of a council, which
would consist of members appointed by local elected officials, the
state board and campus constituencies.
Although there is much to be said in behalf of these
recommendations, including phenomenal savings approaching $150
million, they went nowhere in the Legislature or in educational
circles.
Perhaps the time has come for the new leadership in Sacramento to
dust of the commission’s report and give it a thorough review.
LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS
Costa Mesa
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