On July 11, we covered the surprise, unilateral move by UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz to waive tuition and fees for any prospective North Carolina student coming from a family making less than $80,000 ("Is the UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor a Badass?"). He suddenly made that commitment hard on the heels of the Supreme Court's overturning of affirmative action, so the political defiance was pretty clear.
We predicted at the time that his shocking independence (because university rules allows him to do what he did), and the new policy itself, would mark him for ouster. The honchos of the General Assembly (Berger/Moore) don't exactly cotton to independence, and their chosen representatives on the UNC Board of Governors, not to mention Chapel Hill's own Board of Trustees, tend to follow the same path. All Republican (if not 100%, then pert nigh).
Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz being grilled at the July 19 BOG meeting |
White asked Guskiewicz whether he agreed with that statement in light of the court’s ruling. It was an uncomfortable moment for a chancellor whose university fought to keep race as a factor in admissions — but who understands political appointees to whom he answers largely oppose it.
Guskiewicz replied that as an educator with decades of classroom experience, he has seen the difference a more diverse student body makes to all students on campus and their readiness to engage with the larger world....
[He said a lot more right in here, trying to elevate the BOG's vision for diversity ... leading to this:]
“The bottom line is a decision has been made,” Guskiewicz said. “And we will abide by that decision.”
Oh, they'll have to get rid of him now.
" unilateral move by UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz to waive tuition and fees for any prospective North Carolina student coming from a family making less than $80,000 ("Is the UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor a Badass?")"
ReplyDeleteDoes this apply to white and Asian students as well?
"Does this apply to white and Asian students as well?"
ReplyDeleteYes. The only qualifications, "...any prospective North Carolina student coming from a family making less than $80,000".
Great! Thanks.
ReplyDelete