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Texas A&M faculty senates will likely stay, new leader says

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Jessica Priest – 2025-07-28 05:00:00


Glenn Hegar, a first-generation college student from a rural Texas town, began his tenure as Texas A&M University System chancellor on July 1, 2025. Overseeing 12 universities and multiple state agencies with a $7.3 billion budget, Hegar focuses on improving student outcomes, accessibility, and reducing debt amid political pressures to align education with conservative values. New Texas legislation limits faculty senates’ power, shifting oversight to governor-appointed regents, though Hegar expects faculty senates to continue. He questions the impact of DEI programs, stresses practical workforce preparation, and advocates for serving students equitably while building community partnerships across the system.

Texas A&M System’s new leader hints faculty senates in state leaders’ crosshairs will stay” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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When Glenn Hegar was first admitted to Texas A&M University as a teenager, he decided not to go. The College Station school felt like too big a leap from his small, rural hometown of Hockley.

A first-generation student who only knew life on a rice farm, he chose to start at North Harris Montgomery Community College District, now known as Lone Star College. He transferred to Texas A&M a year later when he felt ready for the move.

At the time, he didn’t know what a university system chancellor was, let alone that they lead and advocate for an entire web of campuses. More than 30 years later, Hegar left his job as the state’s chief accountant to become chancellor of the Texas A&M University System at a time when the stakes couldn’t be higher. At the same time Republican state and federal lawmakers are threatening to cut funding unless universities align with their conservative vision, young people are increasingly questioning whether a college degree is worth the cost.

While his predecessor’s tenure was marked by big, bold ideas, the sense of feeling overwhelmed as a student has Hegar focusing first on making Texas A&M feel accessible.

“There are different paths,” he said, “and you need to promote those for different people.”

The Texas Tribune spoke with Hegar last week before he toured the Texas A&M Transportation Institute, part of a 30-day push to visit all 12 universities and eight state agencies under his leadership.

Right to left, Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI) research scientist Jett McFalls, gives Texas A&M University System Chancellor Glenn Hegar, TTI agency director Greg Winfree, and deputy agency director Joe Zietsman a tour of the sediment and erosion control laboratory at the Texas A&M RELLIS campus in College Station, Texas, on Tuesday, July 22, 2025. Hegar’s visit to the RELLIS campus was his first since beginning his tenure as chancellor on July 1.
Right to left, Texas A&M Transportation Institute research scientist Jett McFalls, gives Texas A&M University System Chancellor Glenn Hegar, TTI agency director Greg Winfree, and deputy agency director Joe Zietsman a tour of the sediment and erosion control laboratory at the Texas A&M RELLIS campus in College Station on July 22, 2025. Credit: Cassie Stricker for The Texas Tribune

As chancellor, Hegar will oversee a network that educates 158,000 students from College Station to Corpus Christi and Canyon to Commerce. The system also includes state agencies focused on agriculture, transportation, emergency management and more, with a combined annual budget of $7.3 billion.

Hegar, who started as system chancellor on July 1, said he wants to help Texas A&M students complete college, expressed skepticism about the effectiveness of now-defunct DEI programs, and suggested that the schools in the system will likely continue having faculty senates — even after lawmakers have criticized the advising bodies and gave universities permission to disband them.

Here are some takeaways from the conversation.

New rules for faculty’s input

This year, the Texas Legislature passed Senate Bill 37, which shifts oversight of curriculum and hiring from faculty to the governor-appointed university system regents.

The law follows several high-profile clashes between state leaders and faculty senates, which are elected governing bodies made up of professors from colleges across a university who represent their colleagues and work with university leadership on academic matters.

SB 37 calls for the elimination of all faculty senates by Sept. 1, unless regents authorize them. Authorized senates would be capped at 60 members, two for each college. Half would be appointed by university administrators and serve longer terms than those elected by fellow faculty.

Texas A&M University’s faculty senate currently has 120 members, with larger colleges allotted more representation.

Even if faculty senates are permitted to continue, faculty groups argue that the new regulations undermine the principle of shared governance, a long-standing practice of giving professors a voice in key academic decisions. Those include policies on curriculum, hiring and tenure, a status that protects professors from being fired without just cause.

Hegar said that system staff plan to give the board guidance on how to implement the new law at their next meeting, which is scheduled for Aug. 27. But he suggested A&M schools’ faculty senates won’t disappear.

“At this exact time, I don’t see a situation where faculty senates would not exist,” he said.

At Texas A&M University in College Station, the faculty senate has criticized the university system’s board of regents for bending to political pressure, like when it eliminated an LGBTQ studies minor late last year despite faculty’s objections.

Faculty also spoke out in 2023, when the university placed Professor Joy Alonzo on administrative leave after she allegedly criticized Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick during a lecture on the opioid crisis.

Texas A&M University System Chancellor Glenn Hegar sits for an interview with Tribune reporter Jessica Priest at the Moore-Connally Building in College Station, Texas, on Tuesday, July 22, 2025. Hegar began his tenure as chancellor on July 1, taking over from John Sharp.
Texas A&M University System Chancellor Glenn Hegar sits for an interview with The Texas Tribune at the Moore-Connally Building in College Station on July 22, 2025. Credit: Cassie Stricker for The Texas Tribune

Former A&M Chancellor John Sharp communicated directly with Patrick after the lecture and promised to investigate and potentially fire her within the week.

When asked how he’d respond in a similar situation, Hegar first said it would likely be handled by the university president, not him.

Hegar — the former Texas state comptroller who ran for reelection in 2022 as “a true conservative defending the values of faith, family and freedom” — ultimately declined to say whether he would defend a professor’s academic freedom and freedom of speech, saying it would depend on the facts of each case.

“But do I think that an individual, whether it’s Glenn Hegar as the chancellor or whether it is a professor, associate professor in a course, should push on you their personal beliefs? No, that’s not our role,” he said. “Our role is to teach you the course material that you’re taking.”

The Texas Conference of the American Association of University Professors warns that SB 37 threatens the freedom to learn, teach and research by shifting oversight of curricula to political appointees who may not be subject matter experts. Faculty also criticize SB 2972, which lawmakers passed in response to pro-Palestinian protests. Faculty warn that the law’s vague language could lead to arbitrary restrictions to speech on campus under the pretext of safety.

Back to the basics

Hegar and Sharp, his predecessor, share a political lineage. Both represented the same region in the Texas Senate and later served as state comptroller. But it seems their leadership styles will be markedly different.

Sharp pursued projects that helped shift the perception that Texas A&M was the University of Texas System’s less prestigious, less visible and more rural little brother. Under his leadership, the system acquired a law school in Fort Worth, expanded Kyle Field into the largest football stadium in the state, and beat UT for a contract to help manage the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.

Hegar, by contrast, is starting the job focusing less on headline-grabbing expansion and more on student outcomes. He said he wants to make sure A&M students are not dropping out and help them lower their debt when they finish college.

“Those are really important because I think … our first and foremost mission is providing an economic opportunity to that student — that they’re better off when they leave than when they got here,” Hegar said.

While 97% of the freshmen at the flagship campus returned for their sophomore year in 2024, only between 70% to 74% of first-time, degree-seeking undergraduate students at Texas A&M schools in Commerce, Kingsville, Texarkana and San Antonio continued their studies after their first year, according to data from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.

Meanwhile, over the past decade, the percentage of undergraduate Aggies finishing school with debt has decreased from 46% to 39% while the average amount they owe has increased from $23,055 to $26,572.

Hegar said he also wants to focus on something he heard repeatedly from presidents of the system’s regional universities during his statewide tour: the need to “own their own backyard” by building stronger partnerships with local communities and businesses, and to expand economic opportunities for the students these campuses were built to serve.

Texas A&M University System Chancellor Glenn Hegar, left, greets Texas A&M University student bus drivers Isabel Nichols, Dylan Tan, Connor Schultz, and Bryan Gonzales during a visit to the RELLIS campus in College Station, Texas, on Tuesday, July 22, 2025. Hegar’s visit to the RELLIS campus was his first since beginning his tenure as chancellor on July 1.
Glenn Hegar, Texas A&M University System Chancellor, left, greets university student bus drivers Isabel Nichols, Dylan Tan, Connor Schultz and Bryan Gonzales during a visit to the RELLIS campus in College Station on July 22, 2025. Credit: Cassie Stricker for The Texas Tribune

The Texas Legislature recently agreed to transfer the University of Houston-Victoria to the Texas A&M System after local leaders said the region needed agribusiness and engineering programs that weren’t currently available.

Avoiding the culture war crossfire

Hegar expressed a view that many Republican lawmakers have cited as justification for major higher education reforms in the last few years: that colleges’ focus should be on preparing students for the workforce.

One of the biggest shakeups came in 2023 with the banning of diversity, equity and inclusion offices and programs at public universities.

When asked whether it matters to him that Texas A&M’s student body reflects the diversity of Texas, Hegar did not give a direct answer. Instead, he questioned the value of focusing on a single metric and said schools might want to consider whether the student body should reflect the state’s diversity, each campus’ regional diversity or the diversity of students entering the public education system. He also said he wasn’t convinced DEI offices had led to more diversity.

The percentage of Black students enrolled at the flagship campus has persistently lagged behind the percentage of Black residents in the state. Some students and alumni of color have said that the university’s refusal to remove a statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross, a former Texas governor, confederate general and university president, has given them the impression that their voices do not carry equal weight.

“I think what’s most important, no matter what is, is you’re constantly trying to make sure that you are serving the students you have and you’re trying to provide equal opportunities for education across the system and for the state,” he said.

The Texas Tribune partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage.

Disclosure: Lone Star College, Texas A&M Transportation Institute, Texas A&M University, Texas A&M University System, University of Texas System and University of Houston have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/07/28/texas-am-system-chancellor-glenn-hegar-faculty-senates/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

The post Texas A&M faculty senates will likely stay, new leader says appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This article from The Texas Tribune maintains an overall balanced tone, offering a detailed profile of Texas A&M System Chancellor Glenn Hegar while neutrally reporting on policy shifts affecting higher education in Texas. However, the article subtly frames recent legislative actions—such as the elimination of DEI programs and changes to faculty senates—in a way that aligns with academic and faculty concerns, which tend to reflect left-leaning values like shared governance and academic freedom. The language is factual and avoids overt editorializing, but the sympathetic framing of critics and faculty responses nudges the presentation slightly toward a center-left perspective.

News from the South - Texas News Feed

Johnson criticizes Paxton's handling of DREAM Act, calls redistricting 'un-American'

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www.kxan.com – Nicole Williams-Quezada – 2025-07-26 09:00:00

SUMMARY: State Sen. Nathan Johnson, D-Dallas, running for Texas attorney general, accused Attorney General Ken Paxton of colluding with the federal government to end the Texas DREAM Act, which allowed certain undocumented residents in Texas to pay in-state college tuition. Paxton declined to defend the law, leading to its overturn by a federal judge. Johnson criticized this move as anti-democratic and argued the program economically benefits Texas by educating residents who have lived in Texas most of their lives. He also condemned Gov. Abbott’s special session agenda, particularly on redistricting. Johnson emphasized focusing on traditional attorney general duties like consumer protection and political corruption. The primary is March 2026.

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The post Johnson criticizes Paxton's handling of DREAM Act, calls redistricting 'un-American' appeared first on www.kxan.com

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News from the South - Texas News Feed

Suspect arrested after University of New Mexico dorm shooting leaves 1 dead

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www.kxan.com – SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN and MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press – 2025-07-25 23:29:00

SUMMARY: A shooting early Friday at a University of New Mexico dormitory killed a 14-year-old boy and wounded a 19-year-old, prompting a campus wide shelter-in-place and evacuation of hundreds of students. Police took an 18-year-old male suspect into custody. The incident began during a video game session in a dorm room. The campus remains closed as the investigation continues, with increased law enforcement presence planned. University officials expressed concern for students, especially those attending orientation. Albuquerque has faced rising violent crime, particularly involving juveniles, prompting calls for legislative action to address the state’s crime issues.

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The post Suspect arrested after University of New Mexico dorm shooting leaves 1 dead appeared first on www.kxan.com

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News from the South - Texas News Feed

The Family Place offers domestic violence help for men

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www.youtube.com – FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth – 2025-07-25 19:48:42

SUMMARY: In recent weeks, two men in North Texas were killed by current or former female partners, reflecting a growing awareness of domestic violence against men. In 2023, 26 men in Texas died due to abuse by female partners. The Family Place operates a domestic violence shelter specifically for men, offering life skills, counseling, and stable housing to help them escape violent relationships and become self-sufficient. One survivor shared how the shelter helped him recover from homelessness and rebuild his life. The Family Place emphasizes breaking the cycle of violence for men and their children, providing a 24-hour helpline for support.

The Family Place, a domestic violence shelter, wants men in abusive relationships to know that they have a place to turn to for help.

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