Nation & World

Missouri Chancellor Loftin will also step down along with president

University of Missouri system president Tim Wolfe was at the board of curators meeting on Monday in Columbia shortly before he announced he would resign.
University of Missouri system president Tim Wolfe was at the board of curators meeting on Monday in Columbia shortly before he announced he would resign. along@kcstar.com

R. Bowen Loftin announced late Monday that he will step down at the end of this year as chancellor of the University of Missouri’s Columbia campus.

Loftin will move to a role coordinating research on the campus.

The announcement came hours after University of Missouri System president Tim Wolfe resigned.

Wolfe, bowing to mounting pressure, announced his resignation at a university board of curators meeting Monday morning.

“My motivation for this comes from love ... I love Columbia, where I grew up,” Wolfe said in addressing the media and others gathered in a small room in the university’s alumni center. He said his resignation was effective immediately.

“I know this will bring joy for some, anger for others,” Wolfe said.

Pressure had been mounting for him to step down over concerns about his handling of recent racial issues directed at black students on the Columbia campus. The tension prompted graduate student Jonathan Butler to start a hunger strike last Monday. Butler had vowed not to eat until Wolfe stepped down and more students and faculty members Sunday expressed support for his action.

What had been a simmering student protest was jump-started into national headlines Saturday evening when black members of the Missouri football team announced they would not practice or play until Wolfe steps down or is removed.

Earlier Monday, the Missouri Students Association, which represents the 27,000 undergraduates at the system’s Columbia campus, called for Wolfe to step down in a letter sent to the Missouri System Board of Curators on Sunday night.

The students say there has been an increase in “tension and inequality with no systemic support” since last year’s fatal shooting of an unarmed black 18-year-old by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo.

Wolfe, in his remarks Monday, made a point to address students, particularly the Concerned Student 1950 group, graduate students and football players.

“The frustration and anger I see is clear and it is real,” Wolfe said. “I don’t doubt that.”

He thinks the problems occurred because “we stopped listening to each other. We got frustrated with each other and forced people like Jonathan Butler to take immediate action.”

Wolfe said he takes “full responsibility for this frustration. I take full responsibility for inaction that has occurred.”

Loftin’s departure followed a report in the Columbia Tribune that the deans of nine different MU departments have requested his dismissal.

The Tribune reported Monday afternoon that the deans sent a letter to the Board of Curators saying they wanted to express “our deep concern about the multitude of crises on our flagship campus.” The letter called for Loftin’s dismissal.

The nine deans met on Oct. 9 and on Oct. 13 met with Wolfe, Loftin and Provost Garnett Stokes to express their concerns, according to the letter.

“The issues we raised in those meetings have continued to deteriorate into a campus crisis that demands immediate and decisive action,” they wrote. “It is the Chancellor’s responsibility as the Chief Executive Officer of the campus to effectively address these campus issues.”

Loftin, the former president of Texas A&M University, has been chancellor at MU since February 2014.

The football players’ action drew the support of head football coach Gary Pinkel and put the team’s upcoming game against Brigham Young University into jeopardy. If Missouri is forced to cancel the game scheduled for Saturday at Arrowhead Stadium, it would have to pay BYU $1 million, according to contractual terms.

On Sunday, Pinkel tweeted: “The Mizzou Family stands as one. We are united. We are behind our players.”

There were reports early Monday that some undergraduate students were attending class despite two student groups calling for walkouts in solidarity with the protesters who want Wolfe to resign.

Brendan Merz, a senior undergraduate heading to an economics class Monday, says the protests haven’t affected him. Merz says the protests are “a little excessive.”

The Steering Committee of the Forum on Graduate Rights and the Coalition of Graduate Workers called Sunday for walkouts of student workers.

On Friday, Wolfe admitted to some missteps and apologized for his handling of sensitive issues regarding race on MU’s campus. Wolfe’s statement on Sunday said only that the administration is working to resolve problems on campus. He said the university would continue work on a systemwide diversity and inclusion strategy set to be unveiled next spring.

“In the meantime, I am dedicated to ongoing dialogue to address these very complex, societal issues as they affect our campus community,” Wolfe said.

The protests at the campus began after Payton Head, the black student government president, said in September that people in a passing pickup truck shouted racial slurs at him. Days before the homecoming parade, members of a black student organization said slurs were hurled at them by an apparently drunken white student.

Also, a swastika drawn in feces was found recently in a dormitory bathroom.

This story was originally published November 9, 2015 at 2:17 PM with the headline "Missouri Chancellor Loftin will also step down along with president."

Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW