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The Presidents of Columbia, Howard and N.Y.U. Announce Their Retirements

Lee Bollinger of Columbia, Wayne A.I. Frederick of Howard and Andrew Hamilton of N.Y.U. have had to guide their universities through Covid.

A changing of the guard: Lee Bollinger has been president of Columbia for the past 21 years, and Wayne A.I. Frederick has been president of Howard since 2013.Credit...Left, Seth Wenig/Associated Press; right, Mandel Ngan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

There is suddenly a long Help Wanted list for university presidents. In the past two days, the leaders of Columbia, Howard and New York Universities have announced that they are stepping down.

Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia for the past 21 years, will depart at the end of the next academic year.

Dr. Wayne A.I. Frederick, a surgeon trained at Howard who began as interim president in 2013, will leave in 2024.

The president of New York University, Andrew Hamilton, will step down next year in his eighth year on the job. Dr. Hamilton boasted that in his tenure, N.Y.U.’s medical school had become the first in the nation to be tuition-free.

But he also hinted at how hard the last two years have been.

“The challenges presented by Covid-19 were the most difficult I have seen in my 40-year career in higher education and, I suspect, the worst faced by N.Y.U. since its financial crisis of the 1970s,” Dr. Hamilton, 70, said in the announcement.

At yet another highly ranked university, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the president, L. Rafael Reif, announced in February that he planned to step down at the end of this year, after more than a decade at the helm of the science-oriented school.

Dr. Frederick, 50, took over Howard as the university and the hospital, both located in Washington, were operating with deficits.

Dr. Frederick oversaw the university as its retention and graduation rates rose. It increased financial aid to first-time students and improved its rankings. The university’s endowment reached more than a billion dollars. But he also endured votes of no confidence by the faculty, and a financial aid scandal. Student protests over financial aid, tuition costs and conditions in student housing also continue.

In recent years, the historically Black university attracted prominent thinkers and scholars to lead its programs, including Nikole Hannah-Jones, the Pulitzer-winning New York Times reporter behind the 1619 Project; Ta-Nehisi Coates, the novelist and journalist known for his coverage of race; and the actress Phylicia Rashad, who is the dean of the fine arts school.

Mr. Bollinger, who will turn 76 this month, led Columbia to a 17-acre expansion north of 125th Street in Harlem, an area known as Manhattanville. It is now the site of towering new glass buildings housing centers for science, the arts and business.

In the announcement of Mr. Bollinger’s pending departure, Columbia said it had worked with communities surrounding the new campus “to support priorities like housing and education and to build alliances that are creating vital bonds with our neighbors and defining a new era of collaboration and progress.”

However, those sentiments hide a more contentious reality. At first, the expansion threatened to become a new chapter in Columbia’s long history of friction with the surrounding Harlem neighborhood in a town-and-gown conflict between the privileged world of academia and the often forgotten world of the poorer neighborhood around it.

A spokeswoman for Columbia, Victoria Benitez, said the university had tried to address community concerns by helping businesses to relocate or preserving them, stepping up resources for local youth and building affordable housing.

Keith Wright, a state assemblyman from Harlem for several decades, was intimately involved in negotiating with Columbia over the expansion, which Harlem residents feared would displace them and local businesses. Mr. Wright, now a consultant, recalled that negotiators had spent almost 24 hours locked in a room before they came out with an agreement over the project.

The goal of community leaders, Mr. Wright said on Thursday, was “to create a pipeline so Columbia University can be accessible to folks down in the valley.”

“I think we got a lot of community giveback,” he added.

Mr. Bollinger, a First Amendment scholar, attracted attention in 2007 by inviting the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to speak at Columbia and then attacking Mr. Ahmadinejad’s record as he sat nearby. At least one professor at Columbia accused Mr. Bollinger of inappropriately dabbling in politics.

Mr. Bollinger was also a prominent figure in two pivotal affirmative action cases, Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger, as president of the University of Michigan before he arrived at Columbia.

In Grutter, the 5-4 opinion found that the law school’s admissions process passed constitutional muster because it was highly individualized to achieve a diverse student body. But in Gratz, the Supreme Court found that a points system used in undergraduate admissions was too formulaic.

The principles enunciated in Grutter are now under review in two cases the Supreme Court has agreed to hear, at Harvard and the University of North Carolina, in which the group Students for Fair Admissions is challenging race-conscious admissions.

After the Grutter decision, Mr. Bollinger continued to be an ardent defender of the principles of affirmative action and was often quoted as an expert on the subject.

In a letter to the campus community announcing that he would step down on June 30, 2023, Mr. Bollinger called the presidency of Columbia, “a defining experience of my life.” He said he was “thrilled” to return to being a law professor full-time.

Kitty Bennett contributed research.

Anemona Hartocollis is a national correspondent, covering higher education. She is also the author of the book “Seven Days of Possibilities: One Teacher, 24 Kids, and the Music That Changed Their Lives Forever.” More about Anemona Hartocollis

Giulia Heyward is a 2021-2022 reporting fellow for the National desk. More about Giulia Heyward

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 20 of the New York edition with the headline: Presidents of 3 Top Universities Say They’re Stepping Down. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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