Central Michigan University president to head VCU
VCU's new president
Meet Michael Rao, the man selected to follow in Eugene Trani's footsteps at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Central Michigan University
Michael Rao, president of Central Michigan University, will become the president of VCU on July 1.
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Michael Rao
Education: Bachelor’s degree in chemistry from the University of South Florida in Tampa; doctorate in higher education from the University of Florida in Gainesville.
Current post: President and tenured professor at Central Michigan University since 2000.
Career path: Chancellor at Montana State University-Northern, 1998-2000. President of Mission College in Santa Clara, Calif., 1994-1998. Mission’s dean of cultural and technical arts, 1992-94
A university president known for his quick rise through the academic ranks will become the next president of Virginia Commonwealth University.
The VCU board of visitors last night unanimously selected Michael Rao, the 42-year-old president of Central Michigan University, to succeed Eugene P. Trani on July 1.
"He and VCU are about the same age, and they are both now just hitting their stride," said Edward H. Bersoff, the board member who was chairman of the presidential search committee.
Rao and his wife, Monica, were greeted with a standing ovation as they were introduced to faculty, staff and students who crowded into the VCU meeting center to hear the board's decision.
Rao had spent the day on campus meeting with small groups from the university community. He said his meeting with students had been "absolutely affirming for me. This is the right place to be."
Rao was just 33 when he became president of CMU in 2000. He already was one the nation's youngest college presidents in 1998 when he was named chancellor of Montana State University-Northern. Before moving to Montana he had served as president of Mission College in Santa Clara, Calif. since 1994.
Like VCU, Central Michigan University is a large public, research university. Located in Mount Pleasant, it is the fourth largest of Michigan's 15 public universities, with about 28,000 students. VCU has more than 32,000 students.
Rao will serve as president of VCU and its health system and will be a tenured professor in the School of Education. He will receive a salary of $488,500. Of that $176,113 will be paid from state funds and $312,387 will come from VCU Health System and private funds.
His total compensation package also includes $66,500 in deferred compensation, a $60,000 housing allowance and use of a car, all paid by private funds. Separate from the compensation package, Rao will receive a signing bonus of $275,000, paid by private funds. He will be required to repay $200,000 if he leaves the university within five years.
In December, Rao's contract at CMU was extended until 2016. He said last night that extension was made before he was interviewed by VCU in January.
Rao, the son of a physician from India, was born in Boston but grew up in Florida after his father's death. His wife is a professional watercolorist and graphic designer. They have two sons, Miguel, 9, and Aiden, born May 25.
A graduate of the University of South Florida with a doctorate from the University of Florida, Rao will become VCU's fifth president.
Trani, who attended the announcement yesterday, will stay on as a distinguished professor at VCU when he leaves the job he has held since 1990. In July, he underwent quintuple coronary-artery bypass surgery and announced a month later he would leave the presidency a year early for health reasons.
Trani's health crisis came in the midst of a challenging summer for VCU -- an investigation into the improper awarding of a bachelor's degree to Richmond's former police chief and ethics concerns over university research for Philip Morris USA.
"Most universities have seen troubled times," Rao said when asked about those issues.
Rao praised Trani's legacy and the "fantastic level of diversity" at VCU.
He spoke of the great potential of universities to transform the lives of students by "creating successes for them that they may not have dreamed of" until they arrived on campus.
VCU Rector Thomas Rosenthal said the three adjectives that were the most used to describe Rao were "energetic, intelligent and transformative."
Dan Ream, the faculty senate president who served on the search committee, said committee members were impressed by Rao's communication skills. The amount of knowledge he had about VCU "was just stunning to us."
VCU senior Jibran Muhammad, president of the student government association, described Rao as an exciting choice and said the appointment "came as a great relief to those of us who met him this afternoon."
"Replacing a man of Dr. Trani's stature is obviously a tall order, and it seems as if the presidential search committee hit a home run."
He said he hoped the new president would bring football to VCU.
But Rao addressed that issue cautiously last night, saying it was not something to jump into too quickly.
But he noted CMU's success -- it's a member of the Mid-American Conference -- and quipped "VCU currently has an undefeated football team."
Contact Karin Kapsidelis at (804) 649-6119 or .
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Reader Reactions
What a great pick! The infectious energy and vitality of Mr. Rao is just what VCU and Richmond needs. Rao and U of R’s Dr. Ayers will make great academic duo and turn Richmond into a even stronger haven of higher education.
“Have you checked references for Rao?“
The entire academic community in RVA—VCU, Union, Richmond, etc, etc—have certainly checked this guy out.
From what I’ve gathered from talking to a few of them this morning, the consensus is that this pic is a disappointment. I only got to talk to 3-4 professors this morning, but they were not at all impressed by this pick.
Consider—
- CMU does not have the racial diversity of VCU.
- CMU is a rural residential college, not an urban commuter college. It literally is next door to an Indian reservation.
- Professors are NOT impressed with Rao’s academic credentials - a PhD in Higher Education Administration.
- CMU is not well-run, especially when it comes to matters that could’ve been addressed w/ a little PR savvy. Google “CMU Dennis Lennox” and just look at that story, for instance.
- CMU’s endowment is $52 million. By comparison, the endowment for the University of Michigan (2 hour drive away) is over $5 billion. Rao isn’t a fundraiser, to say the least. BTW, VCU’s endowment is over $300 million.
- CMU has 20,000 students, while VCU has 32,000 students.
- CMU has no law school, and only a newbie fledgling medical school which has yet to enroll its first student.
As a Michigan guy, I’ve got my own CMU horror stories too. CMU’s gain is VCU’s loss, as people will soon find out I’m afraid.
To all the naysayers: Were any of you on the committees to choose a new VCU president? Have you checked references for Rao? The guy wasn’t just picked up off of the street - there is a long and tedious process to pick someone that’s going to lead a large university. Let’s trust those that helped pick Rao - this includes Students, Faculty, and Staff at VCU.
I for one am going to give the guy a chance and not brush him off as a bad choice. Anyone that was picked would most likely have their enemy’s, so why don’t you all just take a deep breath and give the guy the benefit of the doubt.
And, yes, CMU was a tool of the Dem / Liberal establishment in Michigan during Rao’s tenure. The right wing blogs have killed lots of web space detailing political irregularities, including the harsh censoring of one student who dared ask CMU to enforce the rules concerning a “professor” who had obvious political aspirations.
Michigan guy here, living in RVA.
The only notable accomplishment that this guy had at CMU was his ability to hire a good football coach. Yes, I know, VCU doesn’t have a football team.
Beyond that, CMU is one of the most screwed up places in Michigan.
Good luck to Dr.Rao for his new assignment and hope that he will take VCU to further heights. His salary is amazing($488,500). VCU pays the least salary to graduate and post doctoral fellows as compared to other universities in US. We are hoping that new president atleast try to implement NIH scale salary to young graduate and postdoc like us
Based on this article, it appears that Rao was chosen because he had good “communication skills” and a significant amount of knowledge about VCU. I would suspect there are many people in Richmond alone who would meet (and/or exceed) those qualifications. The other comments were that he was about the same age as VCU (WHAT?? - so are a million other people—so what??), and his “quick rise” through the ranks (which may or may not speak to his ability to be an excellent university administrator). So is that what the decision was based on? I would think that the people who were on the search committee and the board would say something about his “unequivocal success and impeccable skills as a president and/or university administrator” rather than his communication skills and what he knows about VCU, his age (?) and his quick rise to fame - curious to say the least. While he may be an excellent president, it is obvious that he doesn’t let the grass grow under his feet. His longest tenure was 8 years at CMU (according to the article) - where he recently signed a “contract” to extend his tenure until 2016—but now he is leaving there—after signing the new contract in Dec. I would suspect that the VCU search probably started soon after Trani announced his retirement after his illness last summer, so even though he had not interviewed with VCU in Dec (according to him), he would probably have submitted his application to VCU before that. So if he was considering leaving CMU, WHY would he sign the new contract in December?? Perhaps this is the way it is done in academia(?). However, these types of issues would make me pause for a minute and “wonder” about him—hopefully he will be worth the money (and a LOT of money it is!!). Fortunately he has impressive communication skills, he knows a lot about VCU, he is the same age as VCU and he can move quickly through the ranks. Maybe the “next president” will be the same age as MCV - wouldn’t that be a hoot!!
“Yogi” writes: “Effectively leading a multi-million dollar educational enterprise and health system takes both intellegence and administrative talent. . . . Will, why don’t you stick to writing your little research articles and your strenuous 10 hour work week and leave the work of running a university to someone with the appropriate background, skills, and experience.“
Jeez, there’s a snotty comment. Yogi’s implied definition of VCU as an enterprise tinged in an ethos inimicable to education, though, is correct. Apparently a background in teaching and in research isn’t appropriate for a VCU leader, because these aren’t the proper business of the university, which is to be a multi-million dollar enterprise. The University of Richmond got a genuinely distinguished scholar-teacher for their new President so they made a big mistake.
The sneer about the ten-hour work week is implausible and unworthy even of Yogi. VCU has tripled its full-time enrollment while shrinking its tenure-track faculty. Of course quintupling the professional administrators with no teaching experience was a big help, especially when it came to allocating six-figure salaries. The question about Rao’s presidency will be whether he can derail the Trani-train of endless expansion and do something to genuinely improve the education that’s going on at VCU. A young professional administrator might just be the ticket; it’s not a ticket punched very often by universities with much better reputations than VCU or CMU. Fingers crossed.
Effectively leading a multi-million dollar educational enterprise and health system takes both intellegence and administrative talent. While some university faculty have the former quality, few have the latter, and virtually none have both. Will, why don’t you stick to writing your little research articles and your strenuous 10 hour work week and leave the work of running a university to someone with the appropriate background, skills, and experience.
Goodbye Dr. Trani.
Time for some VCU FOOTBALL!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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