Monday is Joan Gabel's first day in the University of Minnesota president's office — the 17th person and first woman to occupy it in the U's 168-year history.
One former regent called overseeing the state flagship university's five campuses and $4 billion budget an "almost impossible job." Gabel must juggle the sometimes discordant needs and demands of students, employees, lawmakers, alumni, donors, business partners, fans of Gophers athletics and a 12-member governing board that holds clashing views on the U's direction.
She inherits an institution enjoying strong student demand and stable finances but one that also is facing formidable challenges, including renewed calls to control costs, ongoing questioning of the value of higher education and a need to better serve an increasingly diverse student body. Eric Kaler, her predecessor, stepped down a year ahead of schedule, citing "an incredibly demanding job, essentially seven days a week."
Gabel comes to the U with experience shattering academia's glass ceiling: An attorney by training, she was the first female provost at the University of South Carolina and the first female dean of the University of Missouri's business school.
She will make $640,000 in base salary under a five-year contract that regents backed in December.
In an interview with the Star Tribune, she spoke about her goals, her interest in seeking new sources of revenue and plans for her September inauguration.
Q: How have you been preparing to take over the presidency during the months since the Board of Regents chose you to lead the university back in December?
A: I have been coming here on average probably four or five days a month, mostly on weekends, to visit with people at different levels of the institution and in the community: a really well-prepared cross section of voices to try to learn the unique opportunities and challenges we have here so that when July 1 came around, we were actually starting to work rather than starting to only learn.