Memorial names Alta. academic as president


Gary Kachanoski has a PhD in soil physics, was unanimously endorsed by university senate

The search for a new president of Memorial University of Newfoundland started with a national uproar over academic freedom and ended with the appointment of an Alberta soil expert.

Gary Kachanoski, who has served as vice-president of research at the University of Alberta, was named Wednesday to take over the school’s top job July 1.

The selection process for the prestigious post was revamped after accusations of political meddling erupted last year.

There was outrage and disbelief in the national academic community after the former education minister personally interviewed – and rejected – two candidates. They included perceived front-runner Eddy Campbell, who was acting president at the time and has since moved on to become the University of New Brunswick’s president.

Joan Burke was shuffled out of the education post last April, but Premier Danny Williams said the cabinet overhaul had nothing to do with the presidential search.

He also said his government would stay out of the selection process in future.

Provincial law gives cabinet the authority to approve or reject the search committee’s pick, but approval had long been considered a formality.

Bob Simmonds, head of Memorial’s board of regents and its search committee, took pains Wednesday to stress the government’s hands-off stance.

“This process was absolutely, completely objective, professional, transparent, fair and without any interference – from not just government, from anybody.”

Kachanoski, who was born in Manitoba and raised in Saskatchewan, said he did not meet with anyone in the government prior to getting the job.

He holds a PhD in soil physics and was inducted into the Canadian Conservation Hall of Fame in 1997 for his dedication to soil and water conservation.

Kachanoski was chosen from an undisclosed short list by a 12-member selection panel that included students, faculty, the board of regents and the public. It hired an executive search firm and advertised nationally and internationally for candidates, Simmonds said.



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