AGB Report
AGB Report
AGB Report
Newly-elected President Bob Caslen recommended to trustees last year that we ask the
Association of Governing Boards (AGB) – the nation’s premiere organization that strengthens higher
education governing bodies such as our board of trustees – to review University of South Carolina
governance procedures.
Trustees took the president’s advice because we wanted a top-to-bottom review of procedures
from an outside entity in which the university community, taxpayers and policymakers could have
confidence. AGB has completed that review, and it is attached. Whether or not we agree with many of the
findings and conclusions in the report, we will take the opportunity during our upcoming retreat to discuss
with AGB what led to them.
AGB recognizes the time and energy that trustees devote as volunteers in support of this
institution we love. We cast votes with the best interests of the entire university system in mind. “The
consultants were impressed by board members’ commitment to the university,” AGB senior consultants
Richard Legon and Dr. Ellen Chaffee write in the accompanying report. We are proud of AGB’s
recognition; it is that commitment that drives our work.
Like the SACSOC findings, the AGB report is an opportunity for reflection.
The university is breaking records: for enrollment, test scores and grades of incoming students.
University programs – from business to nursing to education – rank among the very best in the nation.
Researchers are making a difference, and innovative partnerships with businesses are training students for
the jobs of tomorrow.
We have even more reason to be optimistic thanks to the leadership of President Caslen.
According to AGB: “The new president has moved appropriately and aggressively to establish a new tone
and his own brand of leadership. And, while he continues to learn about system leadership, his approach
is one that merits support, most especially by the governing board.”
With the assistance of AGB, we have begun examining ways to strengthen governance
procedures. This includes periodic mandatory training for members and publishing new procedures for
future presidential selections. Our goal remains to meet the highest standards of ethical, transparent and
accountable board governance, both in word and in action. I have no doubt we are on the right path.
We look forward to open, honest and candid discussions of the topics covered in the AGB report.
Please read the report carefully in the spirit of service to our great university. While it is important to read
the report, it is also important to keep in mind that AGB, as well as trustees, will present critical context
about the topics covered in this report during the upcoming trustees retreat. I am confident that the topics
raised in this report, together with substantive discussions during the retreat, will play a key role in
helping trustees, as well as university leaders, meet the high expectations to which the university
community, elected officials and accreditation institutions hold us as we move forward.
Effective board governance is not solely about stepping up after a crisis, but
rather is about consistently fulfilling the board’s fiduciary responsibilities. Whether
it entails monitoring a risk register or being comfortable asking uncomfortable
questions, boards have a duty—indeed, a legal obligation—to know what is going
on and to determine for themselves what they need to know.
~Richard Legon
Transforming Board Governance for the
University of South Carolina System
By AGB Senior Consultants Richard Legon
and Ellen Chaffee, Ph.D. (January 24, 2020)
Executive Summary
Board governance at the University of South Carolina System (UofSC) made the news in 2019,
experiencing a series of breakdowns that led to, among other things, a lawsuit brought by one
trustee against the full board, an investigation by the institutions’ regional accreditor, two
legislative bills to restructure the board, and a number of embarrassing media reports.
To their credit, the board and the new president engaged governance experts in August to
advise them on how to begin restoring the credibility of system governance. The consultants
were impressed by board members’ commitment to the university. Board service is a volunteer
role requiring professional-level engagement. UofSC trustees have invested many years in
service despite the inevitable impact on their professional and personal lives.
Clearly the trustees’ intention is to add value, yet collectively the board demonstrates limited
understanding of how best to do so, likely built over decades of following past practice with little
self-examination. The consultants found a fundamentally misguided governance culture – one
that is a consistent threat to the university system board’s ability to address strategic issues in
an effective manner and to its reputation. As a result, the board is limited in its strategic focus
and fiduciary awareness, inappropriately permits staff control of board responsibilities, and
focuses primarily on only one of the eight institutions for which it is accountable. The board
displays limited attention to shared governance and focuses too much attention on managerial
matters at the expense of strategic and generative issues that will determine the future of higher
education in South Carolina.
Legislators elect most trustees in a competitive political process, and the board acts according
to a political model. Being politically elected sets up a two-way assumption that board members
are responsible to the legislature, confirmed in the board’s bylaws, and they have a similar
culture including, for example: allegiance to a party, reciprocal-benefit bargaining, personal
influence based on longevity and power, multiple loyalties, and appeals to another’s self-
interest. Predictably, the board also has factions and internal conflicts that do not advance
effective governance.
System and political leaders are at a highly consequential crossroads. What’s needed now is a
proactive, planned transition from a political culture to a fiduciary governance culture, likely
requiring months or years to complete. In a fiduciary culture, the best interests of the institutions
are the standard that drives governance, based on legal expectations for loyalty, care, and
obedience. Becoming a fiduciary board will require time, leadership, persistence, education,
accountability and a willingness to accept some risk factors. It will require new assumptions,
skills, perspectives, and behaviors. Changing board culture will not be easy, but it is essential.
Changing the number of trustees without also changing the board’s culture would have no
impact.
Today’s report focuses on committing to a substantial transition over time and on more
immediate changes that align with best practices and will help remind participants that they are
on a new path. Frequent, ongoing board education in the next one to two years is essential as
well.
Effective board governance demonstrates appropriate accountability. The anticipated 2020 visit
from the system’s regional accreditor will be the first in what we recommend will be a series of
accountability checkpoints. Progress will be expected.
The board is reviewing this report with the consultants at a January 24-25, 2020 board retreat.
The board will decide whether, how, and when to follow up on any of the recommendations.
One goal of the retreat is to ensure board members understand the recommendations; another
is to encourage them to commit to them and start planning for implementation.
Introduction
All governing boards can and should engage in proactive continuous improvement of their
governance practices while ensuring that fundamental policies focusing on an institution’s
academic and reputational standing are current and periodically reviewed. So often, institutions
that are compromised by a high-profile issue recognize that board governance has not been
optimally effective. Some governing boards, especially those whose action (or inaction) have
created risk for their institution or its reputation, have a greater need to improve their
governance practices than others. The summer of 2019 was a difficult time for the University of
South Carolina System Board of Trustees, and therefore for the system it leads. To its credit,
the board leaders and the president recognized that they had no options other than committing
to a comprehensive governance review.
In July 2019, the President and the Board of Trustees of the University of South Carolina
System asked the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges (AGB) to
facilitate a comprehensive review of board governance, including board structure and
engagement, establishing a mutually supportive relationship with the new system president,
addressing shared governance, and revisiting the staff/board working relationship. The review
addressed multiple areas, however its overall emphasis focused on the following:
● Clarifying the fiduciary responsibilities of the board and its individual members;
● Improving institutional and system governance;
● Building more effective board governance practices with an emphasis on full
transparency and integrity;
● Continuing to build strong and ethical board leadership; and
● Developing a comprehensive orientation for new board members and annual education
programs for all board members.
The governance review revealed a very real need for the board to rethink the nature of its
responsibilities, its engagement and its focus—most especially in light of the regional
accreditor’s expressed concerns about the risk to board member independence. The board,
while recognizing the uncertainty of its standing as the legislature continues to consider a
legislative restructuring, must recognize the need to change. A number of good-governance
practices, if adopted, would substantially increase the board’s productivity, reduce risk, and
better enable the board to add value to the system and its campuses. In the end, only the board
can commit to change and then implement those changes. Clark Kerr’s sage admonition that
“ultimately an institution can be only as good as the quality of its governing body” is an
appropriate consideration for the board of the University of South Carolina System.
Background
The University of South Carolina System Board of Trustees governs a system that enrolls about
50,000 students at eight campuses with 19 locations around the state, including one research
university, three regional comprehensive universities, and four associate degree-granting
institutions, with a coordinating online college. The president of the University of South Carolina
System is also the president of the University of South Carolina-Columbia.
The board consists of 16 members elected by the legislature from each of the state’s judicial
districts, plus the governor, the state education superintendent, and the president of the alumni
association as ex officio voting members. The governor also has an appointee to the board and
may designate an individual to fill the governor’s seat on the board. As is often the case where
governors hold ex officio seats on a governing board, the current governor does not attend
board meetings.
The new president immediately launched a proactive effort to meet people on campuses and
communities throughout the state, fill key vacancies, share his vision, and lead a more formal
strategic visioning process. Nevertheless, additional difficulties continued to arise during the fall
semester. Faculty, staff, and students had been expressing concerns about shared governance
since the spring, and on October 2nd the research university’s Faculty Senate adopted a
resolution of no confidence in the Board of Trustees. State legislators proposed a major
restructuring of board membership and are now considering a second restructuring bill. An
embarrassing series of communication gaffes regarding support for the football coach and AD
hit the media. This did not start as, nor did it become, a smooth presidential transition.
After a series of written exchanges throughout the fall, SACS informed the president and the
board that the accreditor would monitor its progress on governance improvement and conduct a
site visit in 2020. SACS spared the system another hit on its reputation but gave itself every
opportunity to explore further whether the board and others are working together to ensure a
model of independent fiduciary governance that supports institutional autonomy. So, while the
university was not sanctioned by its regional accrediting body, the board should not view the
lack of action as indicating support for its governance behavior or vindication of the precipitating
events.
What We Found
Colleagues at the University of South Carolina System, as well as external leaders with whom
we met, were largely consistent about the specific issues that need to be addressed by a
governing board that seemed to lose its bearings in meeting its fiduciary responsibilities. In
interviews, through our own observations, and in our policy review, several consistent themes
became clear. Together they revealed a governance model that is a consistent threat to the
university system’s ability to address strategic issues in an effective manner and to its
reputation. They pointed to a set of important recommendations that follow in this report.
• A university system in which the governing board had become “the story,” resulting in a
diminution of the system’s overall reputation.
As so often happens, recent incidents had their origins not in individuals, but in a culture and
practice with fundamental board governance weaknesses. These governance issues must be
recognized and corrected in order to reduce the risk of further threats that could undermine the
effectiveness of the UofSC System and its institutions. The good news is that the board now has
a significant opportunity to change course for the better, recognizing that good governance is
not optional and that it takes work.
Predictably, we met people—board members and others--who believe that the UofSC System
trustees report to and are directly accountable to the state legislature, that a trustee owes
special responsiveness and loyalty to legislators, and that some legislators expect trustees to
respond to their requests for favors. The culture is entrenched as trustees have no term limits,
to the point that one-third of the board members have served more than 12 years, some more
than 30. The election process further handicaps the board’s overall composition because it does
not allow for selecting trustees primarily on the basis of needed expertise or the diverse
perspectives they can offer to board deliberations.
The requisite fiduciary culture, on the other hand, drives attention and decisions solely toward
the best interests of the institution—the who and what for which a board is accountable-- just as
a trust officer must place the best interests of the trust owner ahead of any other interests.
Fiduciary responsibility is a legal obligation defined by loyalty, obedience, and care; it applies to
every trustee and to the board itself as an agency of the state (or a corporate body). A core
purpose is to fulfill the fundamental expectation of institutional autonomy. Otherwise, institutions
of higher learning are at risk of falling captive to ideas or interests that prevent them from
fulfilling their mission.
By state law and board bylaws, the UofSC board of trustees is accountable to internal and
external stakeholders and to the people of South Carolina for exercising independent judgment
on matters such as developing a first-rate higher education system, ensuring compliance with
state law, and overseeing the human, financial, capital, intellectual, reputational, and other
assets of the institutions and the system. Public officials and accrediting agencies who have
official concerns may seek to hold the board accountable on behalf of the people if the board
fails to meet its fiduciary responsibilities. Legislators may pass laws, auditors may issue
findings, and accreditors may investigate compliance with their requirements, each in
accordance with its legal authority. However, no one is entitled to political favors.
Fiduciary decisions are therefore independent decisions that come from each trustee’s
thoughtful consideration of what will advance the best interests of the institution. Disagreements
among trustees can exist and should be aired, but the discussion should focus on the benefit or
harm to the institution—to its human, financial and physical assets, to its students, faculty, and
staff, and to its reputation and public service mission. It must not be about personal preference,
public opinion, the external influence of others, or the desire to be re-elected as a trustee. South
Carolina’s own policies are clear about fiduciary responsibilities. So, while board members take
their seats under a political selection process, they must recognize that the voluntary job they
assume is defined by the state’s fiduciary standards; the several duties of obedience, loyalty,
and care; all of which clarify the board’s accountability, limit the authority of individual board
members, and protect against conflict of interest.
That said, administrators, faculty, staff, students, alumni, legislators, and other constituencies all
have roles to play in transforming board governance. This board must devote itself
systematically to understanding and making the changes required for effective fiduciary
governance. As for other constituencies, we recommend proactive, two-way communication
throughout the transformation process. This will facilitate development of essential shared
governance, appropriate administrative support for the board’s efforts to change, and greater
understanding of changes the board makes not only in itself but also in how it makes decisions
and interacts with others.
The board has extremely limited access among its members to expertise and experience in a
wide range of issues required to oversee a higher education system. Of the 19 board members
other than the governor and education secretary, over half (10) are attorneys, five are in the
financial industry, three in health care, and one in real estate. With respect, their collective
experience is likely extremely limited in areas such as strategic leadership and management of
large organizations, communications, technology, academic affairs, and the higher education
sector. With the pace of change occurring and demanded by the public related to higher
education, it is incumbent for all governing bodies to remain current and to be seen by their
many stakeholders as sufficiently curious and aware of a rapidly changing 21st century sector.
The current board does not embody such currency or diversity of backgrounds.
Even more concerning, of the 19 members other than the governor and education secretary, 17
are men and 18 are white. To represent the state’s population, board members would include at
least five times as many women and minorities as is currently the case. We cannot overstate
the significant real and perceived losses that lack of diversity represents to the board, system,
and state. Diverse boards and leaders make better decisions, bring broader experiences to the
table, affirm institutional commitment to serving all people, provide young people with role
models, and are seen as more trustworthy by their many internal and external stakeholders.
The opportunities for rebalancing board membership in the short term are limited to the
governor’s two appointees and the 16 members who are elected by the legislative assembly,
whose terms are equally divided to expire in either 2020 or 2022. Given the long tradition of
incumbents seeking and gaining reappointment by the legislature, change is likely to be slow,
even if the latest legislation becomes law, albeit with a reduction in the number of overall board
members. In these rapidly changing times, the board cannot serve the best interests of the
campuses without taking steps to diversify its membership and solicit diverse input through
other means.
A review of recent agendas and minutes indicates that nearly all of the board’s business
consists of informational reports by staff and transactional decisions. Granted that our time and
access were limited, however we did not see evidence in most documents of substantive
There are some bright spots. In November 2019, the Ad Hoc Committee on Strategic Planning
reviewed a Strategic Plan update and the Student and System Affairs Committee considered a
white paper organizational assessment of the UofSC System. Minutes of the August breakfast
meeting to hear from the new president reflect lively discussion of mostly strategic topics. These
and other significant future-oriented issues are prime for board and executive development.
Committee chairs and the executive staff need a strong partnership based on the understanding
that the chair’s role is to lead the committee and the staff role is to support it. Of course, senior
staff members, often representing the president’s agenda and play an important role in shaping
the board’s agendas, however staff must respect board input to the strategic issues that are to
appear on agendas and the board must facilitate its own conversations. The board must not
cede its rightful and essential leadership responsibilities.
1. Assess each topic on board and committee meeting agendas to determine whether they are
about high-level policy issues, decisions that impact the long-range future of the campuses
and system, or assurances that key functions are operating effectively with integrity. Boards
hire presidents to lead and manage; the job of the board is to support, advise, and even
challenge executive leadership, not to second-guess or advise on management’s job.
2. Restore leadership for creating agendas to the committee and board chairs, with advice and
support from liaison executive leaders. Executives are welcome to make suggestions and
provide information, and they should ensure trustees are aware when board attention is
required. However, final decisions about board agendas belong to trustees. Committee
reports to the full board should be presented by committee chairs.
3. Include all meeting materials with agendas and distribute them at least a week in advance.
Expect trustees to have read all materials before the meeting. At the meeting, provide just a
few minutes of overview introduction, not the full report. Clearly identify and focus on where
decisions or recommendations are required. Identify relevant issues, pros/cons, and topics
meriting discussion among trustees.
4. Limit oral staff reports during the committee and board meetings to information trustees
request that is not in the written materials. Ensure that the board meeting doesn’t appear to
be overly scripted—for example having motions and seconds settled in advance of the
board consideration of each issue requiring action adds to the sense that the board
delegates much of its responsibilities to staff and that board action is foreordained.
5. Include time on every board or committee agenda for board education on governance,
higher education, and the UofSC System and its institutions.
Admirable as universal attendance is in terms of commitment, it is not the best use of trustees’
time. There are better and more efficient ways to ensure all trustees have all the information
they need or want.
Many trustees travel and some require overnight stays as well as time on the road. Reducing
the number of meetings would have many benefits in cost and time. In addition, having fewer
meetings allows trustees to spend periodic concentrated time on UofSC System business, away
from their other roles, rather than having short meetings much more often. Staff time preparing
for and following up on board meetings is also significant and can be put to more productive use
with fewer meetings. Our recommendation is to cut from an estimated 64 hours per year on 10
non-consecutive days to 48-60 hours per year on four or five 1.5-day meetings.
1. Hold four to five meetings per year, plus an annual retreat.
2. Increase from about six working hours per meeting to 12 working hours over 1.5
days - for example, all day Friday and Saturday morning.
3. Hold committee meetings the first day, scheduling two at a time if necessary, to allow
at least two hours per committee, with committee assignments divided so that no
trustee needs to be in two places at once. Limit staff reports during board and
committee meetings. Prevalence of staff presentations to the board implies that a
board is largely disconnected to issues coming before them. The business of the
board and its committees should be the board’s business.
4. Whenever possible, round out the meeting with board education or constituent
relations events. Bring in experts, key constituents, and the like to inform and discuss
major issues. Visit a renovated facility, attend a campus performance.
5. Conclude with a full board meeting on the second morning. Focus committee reports
on major current or impending issues/decisions and on recommendations for board
action. There is no need to replay the committee meeting for the full board.
6. Incorporate social time among trustees, with executive leadership, and with campus
and community constituencies.
7. Plan annual retreats to engage trustees with fundamental challenges, issues, and
opportunities, as well as further board governance development.
Adopt through Board action a thoughtfully designed charter for each committee, specifying its
purpose, expectations for its performance, authority for decisions or recommendations,
membership, and self-evaluation. Each committee should use its charter to guide agenda
planning and should review and possibly recommend revisions in its charter every year.
College sports, especially football and basketball, are a focal point at UofSC-Columbia. And
football has long been a priority of members of the Board of Trustees, as is true to some extent
elsewhere. However, board engagement in college sports requires a clearer understanding of
fiduciary responsibility than this board demonstrates. A board that acts more as a fan than a
fiduciary can actually cause challenges for the athletics program and the institution.
Clearly the recent publicity surrounding the future of the UofSC-Columbia football coach and the
ready press availability of board members demonstrates a misunderstanding of fiduciary
responsibilities. While the athletics program involves a substantial financial investment, trustees
and boards that overly engage in the management of athletics are clearly operating outside their
appropriate scope of accountability.
The governing board must demonstrate appropriate accountability at the governance level; it
must focus on mission over management. Selecting coaches, setting salary ranges for coaches
and athletics personnel (except for approving unique or significant contract details, as specified
in board policy), and commenting on personnel—especially based on wins and losses—are
outside the lane of board engagement.
Instead, boards should expect to see data on such issues as student-athlete safety and
academic progress, graduation rates of student athletes, risks related to changing NCAA
policies related to cost-of-attendance policies, and the behavior of student athletes. It’s not
about a board weighing in on the next coach, but rather ensuring that the university is running
an athletics program that is financially sound and focused on the welfare of student athletes.
The future of this board’s Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics is relevant. Over the years, we
have witnessed substantial movement among Division I institutions away from a standing
committee on athletics; currently only about 10 percent of boards have such a committee.
Athletics committees run a high risk of being more booster than fiduciary; and if the institution
views athletics programs as integral to the overall mission of the university then the issues
attended to by such a committee should be spread among the other related committees of the
board such as finance or academic and student affairs.
For the foreseeable future, all trustees – not just new ones – need extensive board orientation
and governance education. Individual trustees must come to understand and respect the
boundaries beyond which their behavior fails the fiduciary test and creates risk for the system
and institutions. Some examples of unacceptable behavior include communicating about
university or board business with campus personnel other than the president or the president’s
designee, acceding to special requests from public officials, getting involved in hiring or firing
anyone but the president, failing to know and follow the board’s bylaws and policies,
communicating to the public about university or board business unless authorized by the board,
and creating cliques within the board that lead to fragmentation and mistrust.
A governing body or individual board member who intentionally or inadvertently intrudes into the
management of the institution is creating a fiduciary risk and is clearly disrupting the operations
of the institution. Other than essential staff support for board committees and their chairs, the
board should limit its interactions to its sole employee—the president. Going beyond that
focused reporting line creates disruption and uncertainty for the men and women who report to
management of the institution.
A common denominator in many such situations is that non-trustees, even including institutional
employees, do not realize the very real limits of authority granted to individual trustees. When
non-trustees bring their issues to individual trustees, they typically go away thinking that the
trustee will make something happen on their behalf. But the board’s power resides only in the
full board. Each trustee is entitled only to a voice and a vote. Not only must trustees get board
approval before something can happen on a large scale, but they also have no direct authority
as individuals over any system employee – even the president, who reports to the full board, not
each trustee.
Traditionally, the job of the president is to set the direction of the system and the Columbia
campus, while looking to the board for strategic and policy leadership. And, the president looks
to the board for support. Boards should feel comfortable engaging on the issues that matter
most, asking questions and depending on a transparent level of communications with the
president. Boards rely on current data and dashboards that clarify how the system and its
institutions are progressing, where problems exist, and addressing risk.
As essential as is the board’s support of the president, so must be the president’s respect and
engagement with the board and its members on strategic issues and risks. Presidents who are
not sufficiently engaged in a partnership with their board are likely to ultimately come up short in
their success or tenure.
Establishing a formal written set of mutual expectations between the board and the president
provides a stable but flexible platform that defines what the board expects from the president
and what the president should expect from the board. This exercise and compendium should
be developed with patience and care and thoughtfully revised as needed. It should be framed
directly by the president and board leadership, taken seriously, and periodically reviewed
together.
Conclusion
The events of last summer arose from a fundamental misconception of the role of the board of
trustees, compounded by a focus on the research university to the detriment of attention to the
other system institutions and to assessing and improving the board itself. In order to engage in
At the board’s January 24-25, 2020 retreat, we will engage trustees in a healthy dialogue about
these recommendations and support their efforts to begin shaping a multi-year board
development plan.
Richard Legon
Ellen Chaffee, Ph.D.
Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges
The board and president of the University of South Carolina engaged AGB to help guide forward
momentum after the governance challenges associated with the recent presidential search
process, and they encouraged us to accept your invitation today. Ellen and I are focused on
developing and improving the university’s board governance, while three other AGB colleagues
focus—in concert with institution administrative and academic leadership-- on the overall
strategic direction of the University. We bring many (many) years of institution leadership and
governance expertise to the assignment. Approaching its 100th anniversary, AGB has an
exceptional track record of supporting better governance for higher education systems and
institutions in every state, and in a number of foreign countries. While AGB may be
headquartered in Washington, DC, its roots and commitment are focused on the institutions and
students we impact across the country.
We are here this morning to share our thoughts about university governance as you wrestle with
important questions about how to ensure a vibrant mission-focused university; we have been
invited to share some thoughts about effective board governance at your invitation. We are not
here to either defend or indict the governing body of the University for any of its recent actions,
nor are we here to take a position on S.798. Board governance can always be improved; the
UofSC board’s recognition that it must do better and its willingness to embrace continuous
improvement are commendable.
Members of the UofSC governing body appear to be dedicated individuals who are somewhat
constrained in meeting their fundamental fiduciary responsibilities, as we will describe.
Of course, this state’s legislature plays a significant role in higher education board governance –
much more directly in South Carolina, perhaps, than in any other state--and not just with regard
to UofSC. Some of the constraints on UofSC’s governing board have to do with how its
members are selected. We have views and recommendations for your consideration, and we
will be happy to respond to your questions.
Context
The days of a higher education governing board that merely rubber-stamps the university
administration at one end or micromanages the institution at the other end are long gone.
Today’s governance focuses on high-level “upstream” engagement, strategic issues, securing
the institution’s future, effective shared governance, and advocating on behalf of higher
education’s value proposition. Presidents and governing boards have come to grips with the
fact that the 21st century higher education sector is quite literally under siege--with urgings for
disruption, change and transformation informing most institution plans. Universities with highly
effective board members working together and in partnership with bold and visionary presidents
have tremendous strategic advantages over those that do not. Research and experience
confirm that boards that understand good governance and have members who bring diverse
expertise and perspectives make better decisions than others, especially when working as
partners with the president. Board governance today requires a level of engagement that is a
careful balancing act—supporting the president but recognizing that the board has a different
job that is serious and often complex. It is no longer the honorary position it once was when
board governance was a lot about social functions, football tickets, and perks. It’s neither about
board passivity nor intrusion. It is a responsibility that requires a professional commitment to a
voluntary role; it is about being an effective fiduciary.
Let’s take a minute to see what universities are facing today. Since the Great Recession (2008-
2009), higher education has witnessed a dramatic drop in state financial support for higher
education across the country (including here in South Carolina, where state support for
universities and colleges relative to the state general fund has declined by about one-third in 10
years[i] and now totals about 10% of UofSC’s annual revenues). Many higher ed leaders across
the country now refer to their “state” institutions as being “state-located” --rather than state
supported. Even where institutions have made significant cost reductions, other costs have
continued to increase, and students have had to cover more of the bill. However, the price
students are paying today has much to do with the cost shift from the public to the customer.
Faced with the prospect of increased debt, the value proposition of higher education has shifted
for many. Parents and prospective students are actually asking whether a higher education
degree is worth the price or if it’s even needed at all. Much of today’s debate is about higher
No wonder the pressure for high performing governing boards and institution leadership is
heightened throughout higher education. Most of the nation’s 50,000 men and women who
serve over 20 million postsecondary students are being asked to own and address these
strategic challenges. Board members are typically highly successful women and men in their
own fields and professions; yet often they do not realize that governing a college or university
carries distinct responsibilities most never experience in their day job. As with our colleges and
universities themselves, it is incumbent that governing bodies recognize their own obligation to
improve how they meet their responsibilities.
Being a member of a highly effective higher education fiduciary body is not only a high honor; it
is also a commitment to be accountable to students (perhaps any board’s primary
responsibility), to other internal stakeholders, to the public, to those who look to the University
for its applied research initiatives, and to a state’s strategic goals relative to the university’s
mission, including its role as an economic driver. The future of a state’s culture, civic life,
economy, and workforce depend on successful universities. And it is the fiduciary body—the
governing board—that bears the responsibility under the law to hold the institution, the state’s
assets, in trust and to ensure that it effectively fulfills its mission and can do so well into the
future. While higher education success depends on collaborative leadership, ultimate authority
rests with the governing board.
We realize that members of this body hold important responsibilities. You are directly
responsible to the citizens in the district you represent. Yours is by definition a political position
and structure. Elected officials and trustees who serve on higher education governing bodies
have mutually important expectations, yet a very different scope of accountability – you to the
people, and trustees to the university and its assets—human, financial and capital—that the
state has entrusted to their care.
Trustees hold a university in trust, similar to trust officers in financial institutions. Fiduciary
principles, including the duties of Obedience, Loyalty, and Care (reinforced in South Carolina
State Code), are the gold standard of voluntary service on a governing body. Trustees are
obligated to put the best interests of the institution ahead of everything else. They can meet
those obligations best only if they are independent, both individually and as a board. When they
are obligated to any other entity, their service to the university’s best interests is compromised.
Trustees who seek a second (or more) term should be evaluated on their demonstrated
commitment to the institution and their effectiveness as a board member, not their service to or
agreement with an appointing authority—be it through gubernatorial selection or legislative
election.
Independence and fiduciary principles are the essential ingredients of effective board leadership
and accountability. The U.S. Supreme Court in 1819 affirmed the primacy of independent
governing bodies in the Dartmouth Case. The potential for legislative or gubernatorial intrusion,
beginning with the process of board member selection for many South Carolina institutions,
compromises the independence of the board members. We infer that trustees feel beholden to
those who select them. While some legislators might not intend to hinder or influence governing
board members, others have a clear expectation of loyalty and expectation from trustees in the
form of who the board is accountable to. This flies in the face of independence and fiduciary
responsibility. And, on a practical level it puts the university in the cross hairs of SACS-COC
accreditation review--jeopardizing the university’s federal financial support (student assistance
and federally supported research grants), now totaling some $1/2 billion annually, which would
clearly harm the university’s reputation and its appeal to stellar faculty, and raise concerns with
students and parents who may see the institution as unstable. While few love their accrediting
body, its judgment is the key to accessing federal funding and to institutional reputation. If an
accreditor is concerned about board independence, then we urge you to likewise be concerned.
Both Ellen and I have traveled widely, likely to every state as well as to countries on every
continent, talking with and educating leaders about governance, and helping governing boards
to address weaknesses. A significant distinction we have found across the globe is between
our model of independence, autonomy, and innovation versus the often-glaring assertion of
government dicta on institution direction, leadership, academic content and delivery that has
hindered the quality of institutions in many parts of the world. In this country, we expect our
universities to be models of excellence, service, research; and we expect trustees to protect
institutional autonomy. The primary instrument for those values is the voluntary service of
independent fiduciaries who understand their responsibilities and know how best to fulfill them.
Requiring board members to periodically campaign, as do those seeking political positions, for a
role that requires them to be independent creates an appearance of conflict of interest, and an
implicit expectation of reciprocity that is not characteristic of our best institutions and their
boards. And again, it risks the expressed concern of SACS.
Our client is the leadership of the University—the president and board of the university system.
And while we don’t take a position on S.798, two points jump out: the bill doesn’t seem to
address the major variables that impede best practices in governance, such as thoughtful
Board Composition
We have been told that this body will not consider not electing trustees. Although we would like
to recommend exactly that, we offer instead some perspective and more modest suggestions
for your consideration.
Diversity. Diversity matters—including gender, race and ethnicity, age, and experience. Your
current method of electing trustees makes diversity all but impossible, as is readily apparent. Of
the 18 elected and appointed members of the UofSC board, 16 are white men and 10 are from
the legal profession. Homogeneity to this degree is a liability that does not serve the state well.
We have met these people. As we stated, they are absolutely dedicated to the university and
committed to adding value regardless of background. Although this is by no means a
commentary on their commitment, highly effective governing boards need the collective wisdom
that diverse members can provide. Diverse backgrounds ensure diverse opinions, experiences
and ideas. Diverse boards make better decisions, welcome and offer fresh information and
perspectives, and inspire wider circles of trust in the communities they serve. A diverse board
helps to ensure thoughtful consideration of the changes that the public is demanding of all of
higher education.
Qualifications. We urge you to consider establishing a process that encourages candidates who
have needed characteristics to apply. Some qualities, such as character and balance by gender
and race, might always be addressed; others might emphasize current needs, such as financial,
marketing, social media, or construction expertise, or experience in higher education leadership
and the academy.
Independent boards are accountable for fulfilling their fiduciary duty, meaning they must have
no external allegiance and respond to no pressure other than the best interests of the university.
Role of the governor. The current law in South Carolina allows the sitting governor to serve as
the de facto board chair at meetings that he or she attends. We cannot find another example of
such gubernatorial influence in any other state. While a number of states include the governor
as an ex officio board member, none have the governor designated as the board chair. In
addition, public officials must understand that they cannot “take off their official hat” when
discussing anything having to do with a board’s governance responsibilities. Thus, for
example, the mere fact of a public official contacting board members on a given governance
matter can be viewed as having a material influence or the appearance of undue influence. Both
can compromise the essential value of independence; they create a conflicted situation. The
Governor will not “NOT” be viewed as the governor when weighing in—even in the role of chair
of the board; it intrudes on effective board governance.
Role of the legislator. We see quite a lot of inappropriate communication in our study of the
board, whether it be internal or external, initiated by trustees or by others. This is a major topic
for our work as university consultants. We heard about some very concerning expectations and
requests that some legislators apparently have made of trustees, and we hope to help both
them and you with that going forward. If you all cannot resolve this issue, both here and at other
public universities in the state, SACS is likely to notice—and the press and internal stakeholders
across the system already are concerned. We hope that at a minimum, legislators will respect
and treat board members as independent volunteers who have a job to do that does not include
loyalty or service to politically elected leaders. Conflating political influence with board service
has the consequence of creating another de facto legislative body.
And, finally a word about board member orientation. We have been told by UofSC board
members that orientation to their duties and fiduciary responsibilities is typically cursory at best;
Conclusion
An iconic leader of higher education once wrote for an AGB national commission on higher
education board governance that, “no institution can ever be better than the quality and
leadership of its governing board.” He and his fellow commission members recognized that
among board structures, a self-perpetuating board is best, and an elected board is the least
effective as it, too often, compromises board independence and accountability. Ultimately,
when a board defaults (even unintentionally) to operate like a political body, it loses much of its
independence.
The University of South Carolina system is one of the state’s grand successes. The universities
and colleges contribute to the state’s economy to the tune of $5.5 billion annually; they attract
and partner with major industries and agencies; they retain thousands of young South
Carolinians and attract major talent and investments from around the country and the world.
They serve every corner of the state with new providers and outreach services in essential
professions like public health, nursing, education, law, and social work. We urge you to help
ensure that this vital engine for your future will benefit from leadership that demonstrates best
practices in governance.
We welcome your questions and we thank you for allowing us to comment on this important
matter.
[i]
https://www.che.sc.gov/CHE_Docs/finance/abstract/Abstract-2017-web.pdf, page 114
The Bylaws need updating, and the board needs a set of written policies and procedures to help
guide their actions as well.
Institution governing board bylaws define the legal expectations of a governing body’s structure
and responsibilities—they are a “rulebook” of a board’s operations. Men and women
considering service on a board should read a board’s bylaws before they join, so they get a
sense of how the board does its job. Bylaws are important and deserve regular attention.
Elements of a public institution’s bylaws are mandated by state policy, with little opportunity to
update or amend. Beyond the board’s fundamental purposes and authority, however, bylaws
define the basic framework of how the board does its business, including membership, officers,
elections, committees, and amendment procedures. Bylaws define operations that are relatively
stable over time, but best practice is to review and amend as needed about every five years.
Initiating the review is normally assigned to the board’s Governance Committee.
Based on our review of the UofSC System Board’s bylaws, we believe that the following
changes to this central policy document merit consideration for amendment—both to facilitate a
Article II:
Section 1: There needs to be time spent on clarifying the “governor’s designee v. the
governor serving on the board”. It is unique to have a placeholder for the Governor who sits in
for the Governor, whose service is both honorific and linked to policy. Consistency in board
culture is important, even when it comes to a governor’s seat at the table. We urge the
legislature to consider changing the relationship of the Governor to UofSC’s board.
Section 2: At the end of this section on trustee terms of office, we recommend adding a
statement that encourages trustees to consider voluntarily enabling others to serve by not re-
applying after 12 years of service.
Article VII:
Section 1
Revise as needed to respond to your decisions about our recommendations above for
the board’s committee structure.
Article VIII:
The board chair should appoint committee chairs and vice chairs. Revise Article VIII as needed
to respond to your decisions about our recommendations above for the board’s committee
structure.
Section 1: There is an implicit focus on the Columbia campus; the bylaws must clarify
throughout that the governing board is the responsible fiduciary body for the system and all of
its campuses. This is important for all stakeholders to understand as well as for incoming board
members. Adding language that reinforces board commitment and oversight of the system and
its overall education progress would be an important addition to the board’s bylaws. And we
urge a specific reference to the board’s responsibility to understand and be accountable for
educational quality across all of the institutions within the system—perhaps noting the
relationship between academic quality and institutional finances (a good point to include in the
respective charges for the Academic Affairs Committee and the Finance Committee)
Article IX:
Section 4:
Change meeting material dissemination to 7-10 working days in advance of meetings. In
addition, it could be helpful to reference the Board Chair’s input to board meeting agendas—in
concert with the president and appropriate senior staff.
Section 8:
Add reference to committee agendas.
Article X:
Consultants also recommend referencing (a) consent agendas, (b) strategic issues (or
similar term), and (c) board development as standard entries in the order of business.
Article XI:
Consider including reference to the following:
· Coordinate committee meeting agendas between committee chairs and appropriate staff
members
· Coordinate board meeting agendas between board chair and president
· Expect board members to remain aware of issues confronting higher education and help
ensure that the board has the opportunity to assess their potential impact/risks for the UofSC
System.
Article XVI:
We recommend that the governing board’s conflict of interest policy be elevated beyond
standard state agency requirements and that a “compelling benefit” standard principle be
added.
Article XVIII:
Section 3. It is woefully inappropriate for the bylaws to state that the “use of the masculine in
the bylaws includes the feminine gender.” This obvious implicit bias should be rectified
throughout the bylaws (for example the description of the board chair indicates an expectation
that only a male shall be selected to lead the board)—21st century governance merits correcting
the bylaws and rendering this article moot.