New president to focus on re-examination
Lindsay Lorenz
Issue date: 9/10/09 Section: News
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The 56-year-old former provost and vice president for Academic Affairs at Montana State University comes to URI with an open mind and the "hope" of re-examining many of the university's policies.
"I'm not assuming there are things that need to be changed," he said. "But why don't we look at it?"
One of his first, and most notable, policy amendments was the decision to allow alumni to tailgate. Former President Robert L. Carothers banned alcohol from campus events, making URI a "dry campus," 15 years ago.
When asked if this change might precede the decision to allow students to consume alcohol on campus, Dooley explained, "It's just sort of the first outcome of a more systematic review of policies," he said. "We're not going to retreat from making URI a safe environment."
Also up for re-examination is the university's budget. In the face of a multi-million dollar deficit and reduced state funding, Dooley said he is optimistic that URI will continue to make progress. The scarce budget is familiar territory to the man who managed to increase MSU's research budget from $45 million to $100 million.
In order to continue and extend the quality of a URI education, Dooley said he plans to reconfigure URI's budget by focusing on "accessibility and affordability," with input from students and faculty.
"We have a process for developing the budget in a very open and inclusive way," he said. The result will be a budget developed "more cohesively and without pointing fingers."
As early as last spring, when Dooley visited URI and discussed his qualifications at an open forum, he spoke about overcoming financial problems, telling guests that there have been about 30 recessions since the Great Depression - "and they all had one thing in common: they ended."



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