Carolyn Meyers Announces Her Resignation as President of Jackson State University in Mississippi
Posted on Oct 27, 2016 | Comments 0
Carolyn Meyers, president of Jackson State University, announced that she is resigning, effective November 1. The university did not offer any explanation for the resignation. In a short statement, Dr. Meyers said that she was leaving “out of genuine love and pride in the university.”
However, recently it was reported that the university’s cash reserves had dropped by 89 percent over the past five years from more than $37 million to $4.2 million. Jackson State University owes $8.74 in debt for every $1 held in its unrestricted fund balance
In a statement issued five days before President Meyers resigned, Glenn Boyce, Commissioner of Higher Education for Mississippi, stated that “Since May 2014, the Board of Trustees, the Commissioner of Higher Education and IHL Staff have communicated concerns over the university’s financial position to Jackson State University personnel, including the Chief Financial Officer and President. The annual financial statement for FY 2016 received by IHL Staff in August 2016 indicated that the situation has escalated from a concern to a level serious enough to require immediate intervention.”
Dr. Meyers was named the 10th president of Jackson State University on December 1, 2010, and began serving in the role in January 2011. Just last year, her contract was extended for four years.
Before being named president of Jackson State University, Dr. Myers was president of Norfolk State University in Virginia. Earlier, she served as provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs for North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro, where she was a tenured professor of mechanical engineering and dean of the College of Engineering.
President Meyers earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Howard University in Washington, D.C. She holds a master’s degree in mechanical engineering and a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta.
Filed Under: Leadership • News • Retirements