After two years spent grappling with a damaging NCAA investigation and unprecedented budget cuts, Chancellor Holden Thorp will look into the future.
At today’s full meeting of the Board of Trustees — the last of the academic year — Thorp will give a presentation that introduces UNC as a potential role model for public institutions across the country.
“Carolina, because of its affordability, is in an usual position to lead a national discussion,” Thorp said. “We haven’t doubled our tuition like other universities… and we have record-low levels of debt.”
The issues Thorp will address include the cost of education, faculty retention and new research objectives, he said.
Thorp said he wants the board’s committees to begin discussion about the pressure that state budgets and schools are undergoing and how to provide relief.
Thorp will also discuss the University’s next long-term fundraising campaign, which administrators hope will be the largest in the University’s history.
With the debate surrounding tuition hikes on hold, Thorp said there is no time like the present to step back and re-evaluate.
At the board’s budget, finance and audit committee meeting Wednesday, board members expressed relief that the long-debated tuition battle had come to an end, at least for now.
“It’s so nice to have a positive report,” said Sallie Shuping-Russell, chairwoman of the committee.