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UT President Emphasizes Commitment to Student Safety

Joe DiPietro addresses the University of Tennessee Board of Turstees April 1, in Martin.

MARTIN – Declaring even a single incident of sexual assault “one too many,” University of Tennessee President Joe DiPietro told UT trustees the work of raising awareness and protecting students is ongoing and not new.

DiPietro’s remarks came during his report to the full board at its spring meeting, which took place on the UT Martin campus. DiPietro said University officials will be satisfied with nothing less than the safety of all students, faculty and staff.

“Be assured, we will never be complacent on issues of sexual violence, and it is a priority for every University of Tennessee campus and institute,” DiPietro said. “At UT, we believe strongly that every single incident is one too many.”

Among more recent efforts to raise awareness of or prevent sexual assault, DiPietro cited:

Trustee John Foy speaks as acting chair of the Academic Affairs and Student Success Committee.

Turning to another high-profile priority, DiPietro also stressed the importance of diversity and inclusion efforts across the UT system, noting a foundation has been laid for continuing a statewide dialogue.

“While the journey has been challenging, the good news is we have helped more people understand what diversity means at the University of Tennessee, and that it goes beyond issues of race, sexual orientation and gender expression,” he said.

In 2017, plans are to conduct a system-wide diversity climate survey for a snapshot of campus life and experiences. The information will be used to improve diversity and inclusion at all UT campuses and institutes.

UT Martin Interim Chancellor Robert Smith updates the Board of Trustees on the accreditation status.

Succession planning has become a pressing need, DiPietro said, noting that 40 percent of the University’s 103 senior leaders become eligible for retirement in the next five years. He outlined plans to develop a succession planning model, aided by consultants.

After a request-for-proposals process, the University selected The Oliver Group, based in Louisville, Kentucky, to help create the planning model and implement it as a pilot on one of UT’s campuses. After testing, the University’s human resources team will roll it out across the System.

Also, the University awaits cost savings validation in the ongoing facilities outsourcing discussion, DiPietro told trustees. He noted that the opportunity to opt out exists even after state costs are validated and compared, and proposals are received. Chancellors of each UT campus or institute will decide whether outsourcing is appropriate for their campuses and, if so, will have to justify the decisions to the University and Board.

The UT Board of Trustees honored former UT Martin Chancellor Tom Rakes, who retired in May of 2015.

In other business, the board:

The University of Tennessee is a statewide system of higher education with campuses in Knoxville, Chattanooga, Martin and Memphis; the UT Space Institute in Tullahoma; the UT Institute of Agriculture with a presence in every Tennessee county; and the statewide Institute for Public Service. The UT system manages Oak Ridge National Laboratory through its UT-Battelle partnership; enrolls about 50,000 students statewide; produces about 10,000 new graduates every year; and represents more than 360,000 alumni around the world.

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