DULUTH – The University of Minnesota Duluth's chancellor will retire in 2022, after 12 years leading the northern Minnesota campus.
Lendley "Lynn" Black, the university's ninth leader, has held the role twice as long as the national average. In his time at UMD he oversaw a $170 million, 10-year capital campaiggn; the improvement and building of new campus facilities, including the Heikkila Chemistry and Advanced Materials Building completed in 2019, and a slew of national hockey championships.
He managed the university through years of budget struggles, declining enrollment and a blockbuster coaching lawsuit. A balanced budget was in reach when the pandemic struck in 2020, he said, and enrollment fell 6%.
Federal and University of Minnesota money helped UMD survive pandemic losses, and Black, 69, said he's leaving the campus in a good place.
"This institution is so solid; it will continue to persist," he said.
Black, who replaced Kathryn A. Martin in 2010, began his tenure toward the end of a UMD building boom, when several major facilities were constructed on campus. Part of Black's legacy, said student life Vice Chancellor Lisa Erwin, is a strengthened campus climate.
"Lynn has a tremendous commitment and heart for students," she said. "He's been a constant support and champion for the work we do in student life, which impacts so many aspects of the student experience."
Black has been "extremely focused" on student outcomes, working to make UMD affordable while maintaining a broad range of degree options, said David McMillan, University of Minnesota Regent for the Eighth Congressional District.