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Penn State President Retires In 2022, Successor To Be Sought

Chris Knight
/
AP
Penn State President Eric J. Barron, right, listens during a Penn State University Board of Trustees meeting on the campus of Penn State Harrisburg in Middletown, Pa., Friday, July 21, 2017.

The president of Penn State University has announced plans to retire at the end of his current contract, which runs through June of next year, and a phased approach to finding his replacement is set to begin this spring.

President Eric Barron, who announced his plans to university trustees Friday, assumed the office in 2014 as the first president hired after the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal at the school. His predecessor, Rodney Erickson, was provost before taking over after the resignation of former president Graham Spanier following Sandusky’s November 2011 arrest.

“It has been my greatest professional honor to serve as president of Penn State and to be able to collaborate with and learn from our amazing faculty, staff and students every day,” Barron said. “Together, we have elevated Penn State as a leader in higher education poised to meet the future and to attract the best and brightest students.”

Chair Matt Schuyler of the board of trustees said the process of finding a successor will begin in the spring, with students, faculty, donors and others asked to weigh in on the qualities and qualifications they want in the next university president. The selection committee’s search is to start in the early summer.

Barron said he hopes to successfully conclude the current $2.1 billion capital campaign, garner support for regular state funding, increase access and affordability through scholarship and other programs aimed at helping more students graduate in four years work to control operating expenses to keep tuition as low as possible.

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