New President of West Liberty Says Keys to Success: Listening, Partnering

 

West Liberty University is one of several  higher education institutions in the state that have recently hired new presidents. Weirton-native Stephen Greiner spoke with West Virginia Public Broadcasting about coming home to lead a school in the Northern Panhandle.

“I’ve been here for three weeks and the initial experience has been overwhelming because everyone has been welcoming and so kind. I’ve spent most of my days meeting faculty and staff and students and spending a good bit of time meeting the leaders in the community.”

Greiner’s background is in education. He spent 19 years as a professor and says he never expected his career to branch into administration. But it did. He has 14 years’ experience as a college president and comes to West Liberty from Hazard Community and Technical College in Kentucky. He says he’s happy to return to his old stomping grounds.

“Everything that I have become was a result of the northern panhandle. My education, my training, my family values. Everything started here. The opportunity to give back was just too good of an opportunity to pass up.”

The challenges West Liberty faces are the same, Greiner said, as all higher education institutions across the country. They include declining enrollment and budget constraints. West Liberty has seen a 14.5 percent decline in enrollment in the past five years. Last year alone, it saw a ten percent dip in enrollment numbers. 2,340 students enrolled in fall of 2015. And Greiner said at one point more than 50 percent of West Liberty’s budget was supported by the state. Today, it’s approximately 18 percent.

Greiner’s management strategy, he explained, is first to listen to ideas from the entire campus community. He hopes to assess accomplishments and trends, as well as collect diverse ideas about how best to proceed. He said some less popular programs might have to give way to new programs that will enhance enrollment. New master’s degree programs in business administration and criminal justice are in the works, and he points to a new science program that he hopes will attract students:

“We just signed the partnership with Oglebay Resort and the Good Zoo for that new major in zoo sciences, which is tremendous because there were only four programs like that in the country and this is the only program that partners with a zoo. So the kinds of hands-on training that our students are going to get is priceless.”

Greiner said he has also been meeting with heads of other educational institutions in the region.

“One of the things that I think is critically important for success in the success of higher education in the Northern Panhandle,” Greiner said, “is for us to collaborate with our partner institutions. And look at ways that we can have joint programs and functions and activities.

 

“When you look at the percentages in our counties of people who have completed a college degree,” he continued, “it’s a very low percentage and working together we can combat that and we can enhance those opportunities for our citizens.”

Greiner remains optimistic in spite of difficult budget challenges the school and the state face. He says West Virginians will always figure it out and bounce back.

 

HEPC Gives Final Approval to Three Presidents

The Higher Education Policy Commission approve presidents at three state universities Friday.

The West Virginia Higher Education policy Commission voted unanimously to grant final approval of three presidential selections. Jerome Gilbert at Marshall University, Mary Hendrix at Shepherd University and Stephen Greiner at West Liberty University.

HEPC Chancellor Paul Hill said it’s uncommon to have three new presidents coming in at the same time, but he feels the universities made good choices.

In approving the appointments, the Commission granted Hill the authority to approve final contracts for the new presidents.

Also during the meeting, the Commission welcomed new member Andrew Payne, who was appointed by Governor Earl Ray Tomblin. 

West Liberty University Selects New President

West Liberty University announced the selection of a new president this week. Dr. Stephen Greiner is currently the president of Hazard Community and Technical College in Kentucky, but he will take over as president at West Liberty in January.

Greiner originally hails from Weirton, West Virginia. In fact it was his sister, a Northern Panhandle area resident and West Liberty alumna, who brought the presidential search to his attention. Greiner says he wasn’t interested at first.

“Then I said, why wouldn’t I want to be here? This was the very first college campus I ever visited and set foot on. Maybe it’s time I serve the area where I grew up,” Greiner said during a meet-and-greet with community members, staff, faculty and students on campus.

The West Liberty Board of Governors selected Greiner unanimously. He has 14 years’ experience as a college president and 19 years as a professor. West Liberty professor Dr. Peter Staffel says he and many of the other faculty applaud the choice.

“We were nervous as a faculty that we had a short time to do this search and advertise it,” Staffel said. “The final four that they brought to us, each would have been a good president, I think, but each brought very different things and he brought the most. Without question I think he was the best candidate.”

Greiner steps into a position fraught with financial challenges but he says it’s the same reality all over the country.

“We’re seeing reduced state funding all around. I’m experiencing the same thing right now. But when you approach funding as a team and you involve everyone, it’s amazing the ideas employees, faculty and students will come up with.”

Greiner was selected from a pool of 40 applicants during a search that began seven months ago.

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