SCHENECTADY –(Jan. 11, 2005) Union College President Roger Hull will leave the school at the end of June, ending a 15-year tenure in which the college almost tripled its endowment and led the rehabilitation of an adjacent neighborhood.
Hull, 62, wants to start a charitable foundation that will inspire disadvantaged grade school students to seek college educations.
“It's been a great run,” Hull said. “I've had a lot of fun doing a wide range of things.”
Trustees of the college credited Hull with improving both the school and its home city.
Hull's 15-year run was problematic at the beginning. There were 107 empty dormbeds in his first academic year, enrollment was 63 students below the budgeted figure and the school's $50 million budget was $2 million in the red. The student speaker at Hull's first commencement said Union trustees “made a mistake” in hiring him.
“It was not the most fun I've had as a president, that first year,” Hull said.
But he turned it around, ultimately lasting about nine years longer than the average university president does.
Hull said he was proudest of not having to lay anybody off during his time at Union. “We have not moved this place forward on the backs of the people that work here,” he said.
Cliff Brown, a political science professor and chairman of Union's faculty executive committee, said he was sorry to see Hull go.
Brown, who has been at Union for 25 years, said Hull was able to overcome his rocky start by bringing in good people and raising the quality of students who attended the school.
Looking back, Brown pointed to several Hull initiatives as successes. The creation of a new house system that will foster a greater sense of community; the $11 million restoration of the 16-sided Nott Memorial, a campus showpiece now far removed from the broken-windowed eyesore it had become; and the school's investment in Seward Place are among his legacies, he said.
Since 1998, Union has spent more than $26 million in that neighborhood on the western edge of campus. Last fall, the school opened a new dormitory in a former Ramada Inn.
While it is de rigueur for schools to invest in surrounding neighborhoods around them — Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Russell Sage College are among the local institutions participating in the trend — Hull has been credited for bringing the concept to the Capital Region.
Schenectady Mayor Brian U. Stratton said Hull's work on the Seward Place project has created a model for other city neighborhoods to emulate.
Hull was appointed Union's 17th president in 1990 after serving as president of Beloit College in Wisconsin for nine years.
Hull said there is a “90 percent chance” that he will remain in the Capital Region as he starts his foundation, which currently has no home and no backing.
His goal is to start with a network of about a half-dozen colleges across the country that will open their doors to low-income grade schoolers to come twice a week after school and once a month on Saturdays. Those students would then attend the program until they graduate high school.
A similar program Hull helped start at Beloit has helped 275 pupils — 95 percent of whom have gone on to college.
The best part about it, he said, is that “you're changing people's lives.”
But while he has an idea, he's going to hold off on building it up until he's left the school.
“I've got six months to go and I just want to make sure I keep my streak of balanced budgets and full enrollments going,” he said.
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