New Place, Same Pace

As UMass Lowell's leader, Meehan gets right down to meeting his early goals

From the Boston Globe

He's not in Congress anymore, but Martin Meehan says his schedule sure makes him
feel like he still is.

The University of Massachusetts at Lowell chancellor is usually at work by 8
a.m., running in and out of meetings before lunch, taking cellphone calls in
between formal receptions, participating in community task force gatherings,
and, if he's lucky, getting home by 9 p.m.

And Washington, D.C.? Yep, he still has to go there sometimes, on university
business.

"Sometimes it feels like I haven't even changed jobs," he said after leaving a
UMass reception in downtown Boston recently. "My schedule is pretty much the
same. But it's a different kind of work."

It has been a year since news first broke that Meehan was contemplating ending
his 15-year career in Congress for the top job at UMass-Lowell. Since then,
voters have elected Nikki Tsongas to Meehan's former Fifth Congressional
District seat, and he has plunged deep into the business of running a university
with nearly 12,000 students and a $220 million annual operating budget.

Meehan took over the job from interim chancellor David MacKenzie on July 1, and
he has met almost all of his early goals, said UMass President Jack Wilson.
"He jumped in and got his team together," Wilson said. "I'm very pleased."
Among those goals: nailing down the largest donation in school history for a $10
million endowed scholarship, helping to keep the UMass-Lowell hockey team in the
preferred Division I East conference, initiating a search for a new provost, and
putting together a new master plan.

Goals still on the list: building new residence halls for students, increasing
the diversity of the student body and faculty, starting a recycling plan on
campus, and tackling the school's graduation rates.

The University of Massachusetts system comprises four universities in Amherst,
Boston, Dartmouth, and Lowell, along with a medical school in Worcester. Meehan
said the Lowell campus has at times been overlooked, but plans are being laid to
change that by attracting more research dollars and creating more of a campus
environment.

"We're off to a good start," said the 51-year-old Meehan, who refused to give
himself a grade on his first eight months on the job. "Some of these challenges
are going to take longer than I originally thought."

For example, 75 percent of UMass-Lowell students are commuters. Meehan said he
would like to see at least 50 percent of the student body living on campus in
the next few years, so it would have more of the traditional feel of a
university. To accomplish that, the university will have to build new housing.
"That's a process that could take around five years," he said. "I wish I could
put more beds on campus now."

The university has not built any new structures in more than 30 years. Not only are many of its buildings aging, but some have been outgrown and can't serve their needs on the 112-year-old campus.

Meehan's appointment was not greeted wholeheartedly by everyone. Robert E. Parkin, an engineering professor and president of the faculty union, said he was skeptical and disappointed when Meehan was chosen. A critic of the previous administration, Parkin wanted Wilson to appoint an academic who understood university life enough to know what changes were needed.

But Parkin said that after working with Meehan and watching the changes he has
made, it's "been a breath of fresh air." Parkin said he likes how Meehan has
moved new people into senior administrative positions and pushed for new
buildings on campus.

"He's made the right moves. Things are different around campus," said Parkin.
"You can feel it."

One of Meehan's first announcements was a plan for a new Emerging Technologies
and Innovation Center, and that appears to be moving along. The building,
university officials hope, will house nano- and bio-manufacturing research and
other emerging technologies, and would cost $85 million to $95 million. Meehan
said he hopes to build it with both state and private aid.

The 97,000-square-foot facility is now slated to be erected at the present UML
North location of Smith Hall, a 110-bed residence hall constructed in 1948. A
$15 million parking garage is planned for next door.

Another goal is increasing enrollment at the university and attracting more minority students. According to 2007 numbers, UMass-Lowell has an enrollment of 11,635 students. More than 90 percent of them are residents of the Commonwealth, and about 19 percent are minorities.

A big hurdle is making the university more affordable, said Meehan. Average annual in-state tuition for undergraduates is $8,731, with room and board costing $6,978. It's a far cry from the bills at top-flight institutions like Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, but still a challenge for the mostly working-class families who send their children there.

To help offset those costs, Meehan has been aggressively pressing alumni to help
with scholarships. In September, UMass-Lowell announced that alumnus and former
trustee Charles J. Hoff and his wife, Josephine, had donated $3 million - the
largest gift in the school's history - to help set up a $10 million endowed
scholarship fund.

Wilson said Meehan was key to getting Hoff to commit to that gift. "Charlie took
one look at Marty and said, 'Let's go,' " said Wilson. "He wanted to make sure
that we had good leadership in place."

Helping students transfer more easily from other institutions is another area
for improvement, Meehan said, especially for students coming from nearby
Middlesex Community College and Northern Essex Community College in Lawrence and Haverhill. "We still need to streamline the process," said Meehan. "It's not as
smooth as it should be."

When he took the job, Meehan, who is married and has two children, negotiated a
three-year contract as chancellor. But he said recently he may want more time.
"My sense," he said, "is that I need to be here longer than three years to get
things done."

But doesn't he miss Washington? "Sometimes," he said. "Well, not really. I don't have time to miss it."


Office of the Chancellor
Allen House, UML South, Two Solomont Way, Lowell, MA 01854
Cumnock Hall, UML North, One University Avenue, Lowell, MA 01854

Phone: 978-934-2201 Fax: 978-934-3000 Email: Marty_Meehan@uml.edu