Folt says she's leaving UNC Chapel Hill with Silent Sam pedestal going, too | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal, and written by Lindsay Marchello and Kari Travis.


'Silent Sam' no longer stands on his pedestal at the UNC-Chapel Hill campus in this photo taken Aug. 21, 2018. (CJ photo by Don Carrington)

    UNC Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt will leave her job at the end of the academic year, and Silent Sam's pedestal is going with her, she announced to the UNC Board of Governors in an emergency closed session meeting Jan. 14.

    Folt cited security concerns as the primary reason for the decision to remove the remaining parts of Silent Sam, the campus' controversial Confederate statue, from McCorkle Place. The pedestal and commemorative tablets will go into storage until their fate is decided.


UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt. (Image from UNC Twitter account)

    "The presence of the remaining parts of the monument on campus poses a continuing threat both to the personal safety and well-being of our community and to our ability to provide a stable, productive educational environment," she said in a news release.

    Crews removed the pedestal and plaques from McCorkle Place early Tuesday morning, WRAL reports. University officials did not disclose immediately where they were stored.

    UNC BOG Chair Harry Smith said Folt didn't give warning to the board before making her announcement public.

    "We are incredibly disappointed at this intentional action. It lacks transparency and it undermines and insults the Board's goal to operate with class and dignity," Smith said in a news release.

    A Jan. 15 media availability with Spellings and incoming interim President Dr. Bill Roper was canceled immediately following Folt's announcement.

    Folt, 68, took her place as chancellor of UNC Chapel Hill in 2013, and has weathered several storms while at the helm of the system's flagship school. The NCAA academic scandal, which Folt inherited from her predecessor, Holden Thorp, drew criticism from the beginning of her administration.

    Yet it was Silent Sam, and the protests surrounding it, that signaled the end for Folt. On Aug. 19, protestors toppled the confederate monument while police stood back and watched. The event led to months of debate over whether the statue should return to campus.

    UNC President Margaret Spellings Oct. 3 said Folt was in no jeopardy of losing her job, despite the fact the chancellor was under fire for her response to the event.

    "I'm her boss, and she has one of - if not the hardest - job in the system. Period. I don't think any chancellor would like to have to deal with Silent Sam. It's very thorny, and safety has to be right at the top of our list of things to consider," Spellings said.

    Spellings announced her own resignation Oct. 26. When chancellor raises were doled out in November, Folt was passed over with the explanation that she was eligible for her quadrennial review in March.

    Dec. 3, Folt presented to the BOT a proposal to place Silent Sam in a $5.3 million historical center to be built in Odum Village. While Folt, UNC trustees, faculty, and students wanted the statue off campus, the law prohibits any historical monument from being removed without express permission from the N.C. Historical Commission and the General Assembly. Folt said the proposal to put Silent Sam in a campus historical center would comply with the law.

    The BOT approved the proposal, but it was widely criticized by both those who wanted Silent Sam returned to McCorkle Place, and those who didn't want the statue to return to campus at all.

    At its Dec. 14 meeting, the UNC BOG rejected the proposal as being too expensive and instead created a five-member task force to help the UNC-Chapel Hill administration devise a new plan for the statue.

    Despite Folt's planned departure, Smith said the timeline for determining Silent Sam's fate remains unchanged.

    Folt has walked a tightrope trying to satisfy campus constituents while navigating big-picture politics, some say.

    "She is on our side on this," Leslie Parise, the chair of the UNC-Chapel Hill Faculty Council said at a meeting Jan. 10. "She puts 150 percent effort in to try and move this campus forward in so many ways."

    Editor's note: This story was updated to report the pedestal's removal.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




State Health Plan Primer Statewide, Government, State and Federal NC General Assembly getting organized; work begins on 1/30/19


HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

The Missouri Senate approved a constitutional amendment to ban non-U.S. citizens from voting and also ban ranked-choice voting.
Police in the nation’s capital are not stopping illegal aliens who are driving around without license plates, according to a new report.
House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) is looking into whether GoFundMe and Eventbrite cooperated with federal law enforcement during their investigation into the financial transactions of supporters of former President Donald Trump.
Far-left Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) was mocked online late on Monday after video of her yelling at pro-Palestinian activists went viral.
Daily Wire Editor Emeritus Ben Shapiro, along with hosts Matt Walsh, Andrew Klavan, and company co-founder Jeremy Boreing discussed the state of the 2024 presidential election before President Joe Biden gave his State of the Union address on Thursday.
Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said this week that the criminal trials against former President Donald Trump should happen before the upcoming elections.
Vice President Kamala Harris ignored recommendations while attorney general of California to investigate an alleged pyramid scheme at a company linked to her husband, according to documents obtained by The New York Post.
'The entire value add of Hunter Biden to our business was his family name and his access to his father, Vice President Joe Biden'

HbAD1

 
Back to Top