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Iowa State let Farm Bureau choose the head of the Leopold Center

by: desmoinesdem

Mon Jan 11, 2010 at 08:19:17 AM PST


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I lost a lot of respect for Iowa State University President Gregory Geoffroy after reading this piece by Alan Guebert for the Burlington Hawk Eye. The Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture has been looking for a director to replace the retiring Jerry DeWitt. An expert panel conducted a nationwide search and chose four finalists, whom you can learn more about here. Guebert explains how the search ended:

Iowa Farm Bureau made it known to ISU aggies that the leading candidate for the post, Ricardo Salvador, the program director for the Kellogg Foundation's Food, Health and Wellbeing program, was not its prime choice. It preferred Frank Louws, a plant pathologist at North Carolina State.

According to interview and program evaluations, Louws was a clear second to Salvador in almost every category commented on by evaluators. He had limited experience with Iowa commodities, no livestock experience, no "national or international reputation in sustainable agriculture," and a "lower scope of vision" for the Center than Salvador.

Despite these shortcomings, Iowa State President Gregory Geoffroy authorized ag Dean Wendy Wintersteen to offer Louws the job. Simultaneously, Wintersteen sent Salvador an email Dec. 2 that informed him he would not be Leopold director.

Why, asks Laura Jackson, a center advisory board member and a professor of biology at the University of Northern Iowa, was Salvador, "clearly the most qualified applicant interviewed," sent packing before Louws either accepted or declined the position?

Those who have seen the documentary King Corn might remember Salvador from a few scenes. He is highly regarded by sustainable agriculture experts inside and outside the U.S. and is an expert on one of Iowa's leading crops.

Guebert reports that Louws has neither accepted nor declined the position at the Leopold Center, so perhaps there is still a chance for Salvador to be offered the job. Either way, the episode doesn't reflect well on ISU, which already had a reputation for being less than welcoming to sustainable agriculture advocates.

When Fred Kirschenmann was hired as director of the Leopold Center in 2000, none of the agricultural science departments wanted him on their faculty for fear of angering corporate interests. So, Kirschenmann was appointed to the ISU Department of Religion and Philosophy. But at least the Farm Bureau was not allowed to veto his hiring. It's a sad day for a university when a corporate group can overrule the strong preference of a hiring committee.

desmoinesdem :: Iowa State let Farm Bureau choose the head of the Leopold Center
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the rule (4.00 / 2)
I thought this was more the rule than the exception. Ag corporations establish and operate their own centers on campuses, they determine (or strongly influence) curricula, etc. The fact that the Leopold Center is allowed to exist would be an anomoly if it actually did good work in this area. Does it? I'm not familiar with the Leopold Center, but it seems to me that a lot of lip service is given to sustainable agriculture on American campuses, with not much real result.

Ummm - not just the U.S. - Canada also.


the Leopold Center does good work (4.00 / 2)
which is kind of a miracle given the pressures you describe. They are under-funded, but make good use of what they have.

[ Parent ]
Thanks Desmoinesdem (4.00 / 3)
for writing this up. I intended to but spent much of the past few days deleting spam accounts on this site and taking care of my bf's kids instead of blogging.

I'll just add to this that I've met Ricardo Salvador and he's a delightful person. I'm also quite familiar with the Kellogg Foundation's work with food and they are AMAZING. It would have been fantastic to see Salvador get this job, and it's a loss to all of us that he did not.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


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