Wagner to Step Down Next Year, Reflects on Legacy

Photo by Hagar Elsayed

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This year will become one of reflection as Emory’s  president announced today he will step down in August 2016. The past 12 years of University President James W. Wagner’s term saw record-breaking fundraising, major campus renovations and a completed 10-year strategic plan, but were also marked by major academic cuts, the arrests of student demonstrators and an editorial that many found racially insensitive.

“You want to feel as though you’re running the race at top speed when you hand the baton off — not just stumbling into the box barely getting the baton to the next person,” he told the Wheel. “I feel that way. I feel very excited for Emory. And I have got to confess: I feel excited for me, too.”

Wagner announced his decision during this morning’s meeting of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees, and he sent a campus-wide email just after noon.

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President James Wagner timeline

Graphic by Olivia Shuler

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He said he came to his final decision over Labor Day weekend but began discussing his departure with John Morgan, chairman of the Board of Trustees, and other advisers late spring, according to Associate Vice President for Media Relations Nancy Seideman. The president’s appointment is renewed annually, she said.

Wagner does not plan to seek a job at another university or institution. While former University presidents often serve on non-profit and for-profit boards, Wagner will spend a year without any employment, including part-time service on boards, according to Seideman.

The Board of Trustees will establish the selection process for Wagner’s successor this semester.

In his thirteenth year in office, Wagner finds that Emory is at a “crossroads,” perfectly-situated for a transition with the end of one of his top tasks: a $1.69 billion fundraising effort. At the heels of a new campaign that will last roughly eight years, Wagner said leaving in the middle of another fundraiser wouldn’t be optimal for Emory. University presidents, at Emory and in the nation’s private universities, stay in office for an average 9 years.

On top of that, this year marks the end of Emory’s 10-year strategic plan, the University’s approach to become “a destination university, internationally recognized as an inquiry-driven, ethically engaged, and diverse community.”

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I feel very excited for Emory. And I have got to confess: I feel excited for me, too.

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Wagner believes his school has accomplished that goal. For the first time in Emory’s history, the College received more than 20,000 undergraduate applications. The University has repeatedly been ranked by U.S. News & World Report as a top university but over the years has slipped to 21st among national universities. Last year, the University received countrywide attention as it treated the first Ebola patients in the Western hemisphere. Students return every year to an incrementally transforming campus, including expansions and renovations to the Atwood Chemistry Center, Candler School of Theology, Health Sciences Research Building, Emory Point and more.

Granted, the moments of controversy under Wagner’s administration still ruminate in the memories of some Emory students. In 2011, police arrested several students demonstrating against the University’s food service vendor Sodexo. The next year, College Dean Robin Forman announced the closure of numerous academic departments, igniting a series of protests and backlash.

In 2013, Wagner wrote an Emory Magazine editorial that cited the U.S. Constitution’s three-fifths compromise in an argument about the need for national and campus consensus, drawing immediate local and national criticism, faculty letters of discontent and campus protests. In response, the College faculty put forth a motion of “no confidence” in Wagner, which was rejected by 60 percent of the voters.

These points of Wagner’s administration don’t factor into his personal characterization of his legacy.

“We are at a moment in history, and I hope this is a passing moment in history, where we tend to define people by the things that disappoint us,” Wagner said.
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Emory University Presidential tenure

Graphic by Olivia Shuler

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Within the University’s ongoing lessons, such as those about social justice awareness, Wagner has had his own learning moments, he said. After Wagner wrote an apology for his article involving the three-fifths compromise, many criticized his attempt to explain what he intended to say. That portion of the apology was later removed.

“I learned the difference between asking for forgiveness and asking to be excused,” he said. “I was asking to be excused for both my ignorance and insensitivity.”

Wagner looks forward to relieving himself of a 24/7 position that hasn’t allowed him to be open about many of his personal opinions. But, more than anything, he said he will miss the people who surround him.

A couple years into his term as president, a student asked Wagner about trick-or-treating at his home — the Lullwater House, an iconic Emory destination tucked over a half mile deep in a preserve on the edge of campus. For the next half dozen years, less than a hundred students treked the dark path to Wagner’s home every Halloween for casual conversation and a taste of his wife Deborah Wagner’s homemade cookies.

All of a sudden, the Wagner’s were overwhelmed with student trick-or-treaters. “It must have gotten on some bucket list,” he said.

The night has now become an Emory tradition and a night-long production, with full-sized candy bars and a capella groups welcoming students.

“It’s an endearing [memory],” Wagner said. “Something that I will remember about this place.”

This time next year, the home will belong to someone new, someone Wagner hopes shares his passion for higher education and liberal learning.

“I understand the wonderful platform that Emory provides,” he said. “If they do, they will instantly also develop an affection for this place.”

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