Haslam Announces Local Governing Board for the University of Memphis

Wednesday, October 12, 2016 | 11:53am

University to Have Increased Autonomy with Local Governing Board

NASHVILLE – Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam today announced the eight appointees to the newly created University of Memphis local governing board, giving the university increased autonomy to support student success as the state continues its Drive to 55 initiative.

The University of Memphis’s governing board is one of six to be appointed by the governor, a result of the governor’s FOCUS Act passed by the General Assembly earlier this year.

The appointees to the Memphis board are:

  • Douglas Edwards, senior advisor at BBH Capital Partners and former CEO of Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc.;
  • Marvin Ellison, CEP and board chairman of J.C. Penney Company, Inc.;
  • Alan Graf, executive vice president and chief financial officer for FedEx Corp.;
  • Cato Johnson, senior vice president of public policy and regulatory affairs for Methodist Healthcare;
  • Brad Martin, former interim president of the University of Memphis and retired chairman and CEO of Saks Incorporated;
  • David North, president and CEO for Sedgwick Claims Management Services;
  • Carol Roberts, senior vice president and chief financial officer for International Paper Co.; and
  • Susan Springfield, executive vice president and chief credit officer for First Horizon National Corporation.

“There is incredible momentum around Tennessee’s college enrollment rate, which increased to a historic high of 62.5 percent in 2015. With Tennessee Promise and Tennessee Reconnect we’ve been successful in increasing access to higher education, but as we change the conversation and culture of expectations in our state we have to ensure our colleges and universities are supported in their efforts to create student success,” Haslam said.

“These six local governing boards will provide more focused support to the institutions as we continue the Drive to 55, our push to have 55 percent of Tennesseans with a degree or credential by 2025,” Haslam added.  

Haslam also appoints members to local governing boards for Austin Peay State University, East Tennessee State University, Middle Tennessee State University, Tennessee State University and Tennessee Technological University.

Subject to confirmation by the General Assembly, the board appointments are effective January 16, 2017. If confirmed, board members will undergo orientation and professional development delivered by the Tennessee Higher Education Commission. The University of Memphis board will assume responsibility upon the first called meeting by Haslam.

The formation of the University of Memphis’s local governing board fulfills a campaign pledge Haslam made during the 2010 gubernatorial campaign to give the university more autonomy.

The six state universities will have increased autonomy with the authority to appoint the campus president, manage the university budget and set tuition, and oversee other operational tasks.

For more information on the University of Memphis appointees click here.

About the Drive to 55
In 2013, Governor Haslam launched the Drive to 55 to increase the number of Tennesseans with a postsecondary degree or certificate to 55 percent by 2025. As a result, the Drive to 55 has established the Tennessee Promise program, the nation’s first scholarship and mentorship program that provides high school graduates last-dollar scholarships to attend two years of community or technical college free of tuition and fees; reduced the number of college freshmen requiring remediation through the SAILS (Seamless Alignment and Integrated Learning Support) program; provided free technical college for adults through TCAT Reconnect Grants; created Tennessee Reconnect + Complete to help more adults return to college to complete unfinished degrees; developed a more comprehensive state approach to serving student veterans; and leveraged technology to enhance classroom instruction and college advising.