University of Minnesota regents on Friday narrowed their search for a new president to three candidates, all higher education leaders working at other universities, two of whom have ties to the state.
Remaining in contention are: Laura Bloomberg, president of Cleveland State University and former dean of the U’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs; Rebecca Cunningham, vice president for research and innovation at the University of Michigan; and James Holloway, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of New Mexico.
It’s the first time in recent memory that U regents have considered multiple finalists for president in the last, public sprint of the search process. Many of them signaled that they expect to face a tough decision when they meet Feb. 26 to interview contenders and decide which one to hire.
“Having a hard decision is a really great place to be at,” said Mike Kenyanya, vice chair of the Board of Regents, during Friday’s meeting.
The U president is responsible for overseeing five campuses that enroll about 68,000 students and employ more than 27,000 people. Regents have called this a consequential moment in the U’s history and said they expect choosing a new president will be among the most important tasks of their tenure.
The search is unfolding at a critical time for the U, which is negotiating deals that will shape the future of its medical programs, trying to convince the Legislature to give hundreds of millions in additional funding, and attempting to reverse the enrollment declines that stressed finances at some of its five campuses.
The final three candidates
Two of the finalists — Cunningham and Holloway — overlapped briefly while working at the University of Michigan, another school in the Big Ten Academic Alliance.
Cunningham works as the University of Michigan’s vice president for research and innovation, overseeing more than 400 people working on projects at three campuses and a health system. She wrote on her resume that she launched a pandemic relief program for faculty members, helped secure an investment to support diverse faculty hires, and took on additional roles while the school navigated the “turbulent administrative transition” of three presidents and three provosts in the past two years.