Reflecting on Dr. Richard A. Hanson’s Presidency

A nationwide search to choose a successor for Dr. Richard A. Hanson, who announced that he would retire in June after six years as president of Bemidji State University and Northwest Technical College, will soon conclude. Three finalists for the position will visit campus March 21-23, and the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities Board of Trustees will vote on Chancellor Steven A. Rosenstone’s recommended selection at its April 20 board meeting.

A version of this story originally appeared in the Fall/Winter 2015 edition of Bemidji State University magazine.

Hanson received a standing ovation from faculty and staff following his Aug. 18 retirement announcement at BSU’s traditional All-University Meeting to kick off the new academic year.

“This is the best job I’ve ever had at the best place I’ve ever been,” Hanson said. “This is a fabulous institution, and we are on the verge of even greater things.”

Minnesota State Colleges and Universities Chancellor Dr. Steven Rosenstone visited Bemidji on Sept. 30 to ask campus and community stakeholders what qualities will be most important for the next BSU-NTC president to possess.

He said he expected the search process to yield a successful candidate who not only has outstanding experience and credentials but is the right fit for Bemidji and the culture of the two campuses.

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Dr. Steven Rosenstone
MnSCU Chancellor

BSU staff who met with Rosenstone said they are looking for someone who is an innovative thinker, a steward of philanthropic support, an expert at increasing student recruitment and retention, and a confident financial strategist.

Rosenstone appointed a 17-member search committee with representatives from BSU and NTC employee bargaining units, administrators, students and community members. Dr. Connie Gores, president of Southwest Minnesota State University is committee chair.

Hanson said his decision to retire at the end of his current contract was inevitably difficult, but he looks forward to more time with his wife, Dianne, and their family. He joked about getting a break from frequent four-hour trips to attend meetings at MnSCU headquarters.

“I’ve still got some gas in my tank, but I don’t want to use it driving to St. Paul,” Hanson said.

Hanson’s tenure in Bemidji has included leadership of BSU’s first-ever comprehensive fundraising campaign, Imagine Tomorrow, which has already met its initial goal of $35 million for scholarships and academic investment. He also has placed renewed emphasis on international recruitment and education abroad, increased administrative integration and academic partnership between BSU and NTC, and championed BSU’s distinction as a north woods campus that offers students a unique and transformative residential experience.

Major improvements to the BSU campus have also been a hallmark of Hanson’s years, including installation of artificial turf in Chet Anderson Stadium, renovation of Memorial Hall, a public-private project to build a 56-unit student apartment building called University Heights, and the planned replacement of Hagg-Sauer Hall, a project that includes renovation of six other campus buildings.

Hanson also has placed a priority on increasing BSU’s community visibility and engagement, including such steps as establishing an office in the Mayflower Building, an economic development hub in downtown Bemidji, and agreeing to maintain a BSU gallery in the Watermark Arts Center for visual art, also in downtown Bemidji.

In addition, he has strengthened the connections between Bemidji State and NTC, fostering greater academic collaboration in addition to efficiencies gained from dual responsibilities for many administrators and staff. In August 2014, Dr. Hanson initiated a comprehensive process of review for NTC known as “reinvention” that produced streamlined academic programs aligned directly with workforce needs in northern Minnesota.