UVa Board Extends Ryan Contract for Three Years

UVa President James Ryan

by James A. Bacon

The University of Virginia Board of Visitors voted unanimously Friday to extend President Jim Ryan’s employment agreement for three years to 2028. His existing contract doesn’t expire until 2025.

“Jim Ryan has been a strong and focused leader for this community under extraordinary circumstances,” University Rector Whitt Clement said, as quoted by UVa Today. “We are pleased that he has agreed to this extension and look forward to what the institution will accomplish under his leadership in the coming years.”

UVA Today, the house communications organ of the Ryan administration, provided no explanation of why the Board thought it necessary to act now to extend a contract that lasts another three years, or why, if the Board was pleased with Ryan’s performance, it could not just pay him another bonus already stipulated in his contract. Last year, the Board granted Ryan a $200,000 bonus on top of his $695,000 salary.

The timing suggests that the Board of Visitors, all of whose members were appointed by Democratic governors, were moving to lock in Ryan’s tenure, which could be threatened by new board members appointed by Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin over the next four years. Whether coincidence or not, the Board’s Friday vote occurred the same day that Youngkin delivered a speech at UVa’s law school in which he denounced higher-education “cancel culture” as a toxic threat to American democracy. (Youngkin did not single out UVa or Ryan by name.)

In yet another irony, 4th-year UVa student Emma Camp had an article published in the New York Times this morning, decrying the ideological conformity and student self-censorship at Virginia’s flagship university. Wrote she:

I went to college to learn from my professors and peers. I welcomed an environment that champions intellectual diversity and rigorous disagreement. Instead, my college experience has been defined by strict ideological conformity. Students of all political persuasions hold back — in class discussions, in friendly conversations, on social media — from saying what we really think. Even as a liberal who has attended abortion rights protests and written about standing up to racism, I sometimes feel afraid to fully speak my mind.

The UVA Today article ticked off a list of Ryan accomplishments. He launched the 2030 Plan, a strategic plan advancing the theme of making UVa “great and good,” and has made significant progress implementing it. He has kicked off the Honor the Future, a $5 billion capital campaign to support the plan, and has raised $3.9 billion toward the goal. He has recruited an new executive team, and launched new schools and programs such as the Karsh Institute of Democracy and the School of Data Science. He also presided over the university’s response to the COVID-19 epidemic.

“Even as they guided this University successfully through a global pandemic, Jim Ryan and his team have remained focused on UVA’s core academic, research and patient care missions, on implementing the University’s strategic plan, and on raising the funds necessary to support these important priorities,” Clement said.

While Ryan has been undeniably successful in raising money and building programs, he also has presided over a change in university culture. UVa, like many elite universities, has aggressively moved to institutionalize left-wing social-justice theories under the ideological banner of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI). As the older generation of ideologically diverse Baby Boomer faculty retires, it is being replaced by a younger generation thoroughly steeped in leftist ideology. Conformity is enforced by the practice instituted under Ryan of requiring job applicants and employees undergoing annual reviews to write “diversity statements” describing their commitment to DEI principles. Diversity training varies from school to school, but in some instances has indoctrinated employees with left-wing social-justice theory.

As the range of viewpoints propounded by faculty and the administration has narrowed, so has the band of acceptable discourse. Meanwhile, orthodoxy is enforced by ostracism, social-media mobbing, and a hands-off attitude of the administration. While Ryan has made progress in creating greater demographic diversity at UVa, he has presided over a steady contraction of intellectual diversity and a closing of the mind.

Bacon’s bottom line: Governor Youngkin has signaled his attitude toward Diversity, Equity & Inclusion by re-branding DEI as Diversity, Opportunity & Inclusion in state government. The guiding sentiment is to create institutions in Virginia that are welcoming and open to individuals from all walks of life. But the emphasis is on creating “opportunity” — giving Virginians tools to succeed through their own efforts — rather than “equity,” where the emphasis is guaranteeing equal group outcomes.

Ryan’s critics have high expectations that Youngkin will appoint independent-minded members to the UVa Board of Visitors who will add a little intellectual diversity to the university’s governing body.

Update: Rector Whitt Clement addressed questions raised in this story and elaborated on the Board’s reasons for extending Ryan’s contract.


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18 responses to “UVa Board Extends Ryan Contract for Three Years”

  1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    So three additional years of Ryan bashing on BR… terrif…

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Keeps ‘im outta the pool hall.

  2. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Call 9-1-1! Wh🚑 needed at BR!

  3. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
    Virginia Gentleman

    I applaud the BOV at UVA.

  4. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    Now what would make it interesting AND fun would be in Youngkin reappointed Dragas! 😉

    I’ll give Youngkin this. He has a good speechwriter and he’s willing to travel.

    The question is, is anybody buying it beyond the culture warriors?

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Floridians are arranging buses to support DeSantis II.

      https://bluevirginia.us/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/youngkindesantis1.jpg

  5. I asked Rector Whitt Clement to address questions raised in the article. This is the response I received. — JAB

    The contract was extended for several reasons. We unexpectedly lost our provost on very short (several months’) notice—Liz Magill left the University on March 1 to take the head job at Penn. At the same time, our College dean had outstanding an offer to become provost at a major competitor. So, we extended both Jim Ryan’s contract and the contract with JJ Davis, the COO, and promoted the College dean to the provost’s position– all three actions at the same time to help ensure stability at our top positions.

    We also approved several years ago the 2030 Strategic Plan that contains very specific goals. We have not made the progress we have wanted to achieve at this point because of the urgency and costs of the pandemic. Extending Pres. Ryan’s contract is meant as a signal to him that we do not want to lose him as we resume our focus on meeting the goals of the strategic plan he developed with board input.

    And we were also very pleased with how well Jim Ryan, JJ Davis and leaders from the Health System have navigated the pandemic– about as well as any university, balancing the health and safety of the University at large with the traditional student experience. And during that difficult time, we still reached a number of remarkable goals—ahead of schedule on the capital campaign, creating 600 new endowed professorships and scholarships, record applications, a new Data Science School, etc. (and other accomplishments that may have been noted in the UVA Today article).

    As you may know, the average tenure of a university president is about 6 years. Naturally it takes a period of time—at least one, probably two academic years—to get his/her bearings on opportunities and needs of the institution. Jim Ryan came to the University in August 2018; we lost practically two years on responding to the pandemic so extending his contract made sense to us in taking the long view. Insofar as new members coming on the board, the extension imposes no new financial obligations whatsoever on the University, and I hope they will see the value gained in the board’s working with Jim during such a challenging time and the opportunities that lie ahead.

    1. walter smith Avatar
      walter smith

      Sorry. I ain’t buying.
      So also extended JJ Davis? And promoted JR’s bud, Baucom, to Provost without doing a search?
      And JR did a great job during the pandemic? As determined by who?
      This was a political move. Period. Just like the booster being moved to January 14 from February 1.

      1. The place hasn’t been the same since Hereford retired.

        1. walter smith Avatar
          walter smith

          Yep. Last one not crazy…

          1. Only blotch on his record was cancelling Easters.

          2. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            I was there then…
            The highlight year was apparently 1975. I was there for 1976 and it was fantastic. 1977 was crowded. !978 was insane – way too many people and not fun because of it. But I do wonder now…why can’t it be re-instated?

    2. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      So it was unanimous? How many on the BOV? Seem like at some point the anti-UVA folks have to accept that their view is not the BOV view of Ryan and other leadership.

      Also, the papers say UVA is doing quite well on applications:

      https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/8e0e13de437c5cc9dba186432bae1e4b11e16e949e56d4200c8df57443a05303.jpg

      1. Rob Austin Avatar
        Rob Austin

        What’s the yield? UVa is the archetypical second or third choice – a safety school. Applications are one thing; enrolls are quite another. And I am a double Hoo.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          well, I doubt their enrollment is down…. especially because of their “woke”, right?

          1. Rob Austin Avatar
            Rob Austin

            Sadly, you are probably right.

  6. disqus_VYLI8FviCA Avatar
    disqus_VYLI8FviCA

    Ryan and the BOV make it so pleasant to continue not giving another dime to UVa. I was not a whale in my giving, so they probably couldn’t care less, but I’m glad to rent a house at the beach for a week instead of sending that money to UVa. I’ll thank Jim when I’m having cocktails this summer.

    1. Rob Austin Avatar
      Rob Austin

      Amen. He’s done whatever he can to undermine the distinctive uniqueness of the kind of liberal education UVa was sood great at offering. He and the BOV are embodiments of “hey, look at me, I’m a proud sjw!” And then hit the country club for an 18-year old scotch.

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