AUSTIN, Texas
Texas Southern University has a new, five-member board of regents, confirmed by the state Senate on Friday. The appointments come after weeks of uncertainty about the historically Black institution’s future caused by the resignation of the entire previous board at Gov. Rick Perry’s request.
Perry asked the board to step down last month amid the school’s financial problems, and he initiated impeachment proceedings against the board chair, who had initially refused to resign. Perry appointed the new board on Thursday, with the state Senate voting unanimously to confirm them the next day. The confirmations came in time for the HBCU’s weekend commencement ceremony.
“With a capable and committed board of regents in place, students can be assured that their degrees will be awarded on time, and Texans can know that the process of reforming this proud university is moving forward,” says Perry.
The appointed members are Gary Bledsoe, Richard C. Holland, Glenn Lewis, Enrique Javier Loya and Richard Salwen. The non-voting student regent, Larry Taylor of TSU’s Thurgood Marshall School of Law, does not need to be confirmed by the Senate.
“We look forward to the outstanding contributions they are going to make to the university,” says Gayle Barge, the university’s director of marketing and communication. “We are excited about the opportunity the university will have in benefiting from their expertise.”
Since Perry asked for the resignations, all university-related plans have been put on hold, including the search for a new president. TSU’s former president, Dr. Priscilla Slade, is facing criminal charges for allegedly using hundred’s of thousands of dollars of university funds to decorate and landscape her home.