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UNC President Kay Norton to Retire in June

University of Northern Colorado President Kay Norton announced during her annual State of the University Address today that she will retire as president at the end of June.

University of Northern Colorado President Kay Norton announced during her annual State of the University Address today that she will retire as president at the end of June.

Norton, the longest tenured among current presidents of four-year public institutions in Colorado, has served at UNC president since 2002. Only three other presidents in UNC鈥檚 129-year history have served longer.

鈥淜ay鈥檚 an exceptional president,鈥 said UNC Board of Trustees鈥 chair Dick Monfort. 鈥淪he鈥檚 exactly who we needed to lead us on the rough road we had to go down these past 15 years. It鈥檚 hard to capture everything she has done for UNC.鈥

Norton ushered in a new normal on the day she became president. UNC鈥檚 state funding was cut 25 percent over the first two years of her presidency. State funding now makes up less than 20 percent of UNC鈥檚 operating revenue in a permanently changed environment.

鈥淚 am incredibly proud of what we鈥檝e accomplished together over the past 15 years,鈥 Norton said in a campus memo following her State of the University address. 鈥淲e kept a steady heartbeat through one of the most tumultuous periods in the modern history of higher education 鈥 and kept our focus on fulfilling our promise to students.鈥

Among those accomplishments since 2002:

  • the number of degrees and certificates offered grew by more than 30 percent and UNC鈥檚 Extended Campus grew by more than 300 percent;
  • UNC鈥檚 annual investment in financial aid increased from $4 million to $28 million to address accessibility as tuition increased;
  • the university twice earned re-accreditation from the Higher Learning Commission;
  • UNC transitioned to NCAA Division I and joined the Big Sky Conference;
  • two major residence halls and the Campus Commons have been added to campus;
  • and this fall鈥檚 enrollment reached its highest in a decade.

Norton said she made her announcement today 鈥渢o see through the fiscal sustainability and community building work we鈥檝e committed to do鈥 and to provide the Board of Trustees with time to conduct a presidential search. 

鈥淭he nature of the university makes it impossible to wrap up everything and hand it off with a nice bow on top, but we鈥檙e coming up to a logical transition point,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the right time for UNC, and it鈥檚 the right time for me.鈥

Norton, a graduate of Wellesley with a juris doctorate from the University of Denver, practiced law for two decades when she was appointed by Colorado Gov. Roy Romer to serve on UNC鈥檚 Board of Trustees in 1995. From 1998-2002, Norton served as UNC鈥檚 vice president for university affairs, general counsel and secretary to the Board of Trustees.

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