Contact: Sid Salter
STARKVILLE, Miss.āĻć½¶Ö±²„ Provost and Executive Vice President David R. Shaw and interim Ļć½¶Ö±²„Division of Agriculture, Forestry, and Veterinary Medicine (DAFVM) Vice President Reuben Moore jointly announced plans today [May 13] for the interim restructuring of DAFVMās administration.
At the direction of Ļć½¶Ö±²„President Mark E. Keenum, Shawāthe universityās chief academic officerāsaid the new administrative structure āreflects the growth and sophistication of MSUās agricultural units and the need moving forward for a strong and consistent focus on a unit by unit basis.ā
Another factor in the reorganization came when MSUās George M. Hopper, dean of both the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and the College of Forest Resources, earlier this year announced his plans to retire this summer, effective June 30.
Hopper also has led MSUās Forest and Wildlife Research Center (FWRC) and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station (MAFES). He has been a senior administrator within DAFVM since joining the university in 2005.
Mooreāthe universityās top agriculture administratorāwill continue his service as interim vice president of DAFVM and will assume the additional duty of interim director of MAFES.
āAt this juncture, given the immediate challenges facing Mississippiās pivotal agribusiness economy, it is imperative that all of MSUās agricultural teaching and research units have dedicated, focused leadership,ā said Moore. āIt is particularly important that MAFES be able to focus on our vital relationships with state and federal partners and with the stateās agricultural and forestry leaders to meet their needs in a nimble and responsive manner.ā
Shaw praised the qualifications and academic credentials of the new leadership team.
Under the new DAFVM administrative structure, Scott Willard will serve as the new interim dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, while Wes Burger will serve as interim dean of the College of Forest Resources and interim director of MSUās Forest and Wildlife Research Center. Kent Hoblet continues to serve as dean of the Ļć½¶Ö±²„College of Veterinary Medicine. The three deans will continue to report to both Shaw and Moore.
An associate dean of CALS since 2013, Willard is the former head of the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology and Plant Pathology. Willard earned a bachelorās degree in animal, veterinary and fisheries science at the University of Rhode Island, Kingston.
He earned masterās and doctoral degrees in physiology of reproduction at Texas A&M University. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship in cell biology and anatomy at the Medical University of South Carolina before coming to Ļć½¶Ö±²„in 1999.
After earning B.S. degrees in mathematics and biology from Murray State University and masterās and doctoral degrees in wildlife biology from University of Missouri, Burger served as associate director of MAFES and associate director of FWRC and was named a Giles Distinguished Professor of Wildlife Ecology in 2018.
Hoblet was named dean of MSUās College of Veterinary Medicine in 2006. Hoblet earned his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree and masterās degree at Ohio State University. He was in private practice for 12 years in Ashland, Ohio before joining the OSU faculty in 1983. He served as chair of the OSU Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine and as OSUās Extension veterinarian for dairy cattle.
Gary B. Jackson continues to serve as director of Ļć½¶Ö±²„Extension, reporting to Moore. Jackson earned bachelorās and masterās degrees in agricultural and extension education at Mississippi State. He holds a doctorate from Pennsylvania State University, with a major in agricultural education and a minor in communication.
Jackson has led Ļć½¶Ö±²„Extension for a decade and formerly served as an associate vice president of academic affairs in MSUās Office of the Provost.
Moore also announced the appointment of longtime Ļć½¶Ö±²„agricultural economist Keith Coble as special assistant to the vice president of DAFVM.
Coble is a Giles Distinguished Professor and head of MSUās Department of Agricultural Economics where he focuses on agricultural policy, insurance, and agricultural data analytics. He served as the chief economist for the minority staff of the U.S. Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee during the 2013-2014 farm bill debate.
āI am pleased with the outstanding team assembled to lead MSUās agricultural units as we move forward into a time of great uncertainty in the nationās agricultural economy,ā said Keenum. āThe common denominator among this group of administrators is experience and a keen knowledge of Mississippiās specific agricultural and forestry base. With those skills, they can help MSUās agricultural and forestry units lead Mississippi forward in an effective manner.ā
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