Lee Lambert is slated to be the next chancellor of the Foothill-De Anza Community College District, with the district's governing board set to take a formal vote on the hire at a June 12 meeting.
Lambert will replace Judy Miner, who has led the district for the past eight years and plans to retire on Sept. 5. The plan is for Lambert — who is currently the chancellor of Pima Community College in Tucson, Arizona — to start Aug. 1 and overlap with Miner, the district announced in a May 23 press release.
“I am so grateful to know that I am leaving Foothill-De Anza in good hands,” Miner said in the press release. “His diverse lived experiences have shaped him into a person of great emotional intelligence: He is a U.S. Army veteran, an educator devoted to equitable access and completion, and an administrator well versed in the complexities of community college operations. Students, employees, and community members will find in him a champion who leads with head and heart.”
Lambert has led Pima Community College since 2013. He previously worked for eight years as the president of Shoreline Community College in Washington, and before that he was the vice president for human resources and legal affairs at the school, according to Foothill-De Anza's press release.
“I am honored to have been selected by the Board of Trustees to be the next chancellor,” Lambert said in the announcement. “The district's commitment to student success and educational excellence driven by an equity agenda and guided by a set of core values rooted in integrity, inclusion care for students' well-being, and sustainability aligns with my personal and professional values.”
Lambert was born in Seoul, South Korea to a father of mixed African American heritage and a mother who is South Korean, according to the announcement. He grew up on three continents and was the first in his family to attend college directly out of high school.
Feeling unsure that he belonged in college, he left after a year and enlisted in the U.S. Army, according to the statement. Following his military service, he re-enrolled in school. Lambert ultimately earned a bachelor's degree in liberal arts from The Evergreen State College and a law degree from Seattle University.
Lambert was one of four finalists for the chancellor position who were announced last month. The district held public forums with each candidate that were available in person and online.
Once formally hired, Lambert's annual salary will be $448,047.12 with a contract running through June 2024, the release said.
Comments
Registered user
Cuesta Park
on May 26, 2023 at 4:17 pm
Registered user
on May 26, 2023 at 4:17 pm
The PA Daily Post started their coverage with 'he was controversial in how much he spent on foreign travel'. The FHDA Board my proactively quash that type of controversy here - Please Just include a Dollar-Limited travel budget in his contract! (not yet signed by Board)
It was nice how the Board held an Open Process hire for the finalists. This allowed the free press - to do some dig down on the finalist candidates. Very Good Open Governance Job!
This education administrator seems a good pick and very well qualified for this 2 campus (high rated) community college system.
Registered user
another community
on May 27, 2023 at 11:40 am
Registered user
on May 27, 2023 at 11:40 am
I regret to point out to Mr. Nelson that such a stipulation in Lee Lambert's contract will not work very well. Chancellor Lambert just loves to spend taxpayer money. Under his leadership, Pima Community College in 2017 spent about $2.5 million buying three derelict motels with the aim of converting them to office space. That PCC's enrollment has dropped in half over the last twenty years and already has a surplus of office space. That didn't seem to affect the decision. The plan was to spend an additional $10 million to renovate the to fit PCC's imaginary needs. The renovation bill is now up to $35 million, so PCC is holding public meetings about what to do about this mess. It seems the current idea is to tear down these historic motels to turn them into parking lots--at a time when PCC's 6 campuses are virtual ghost towns and the parking lots are empty. You may find these details by googling "Arizona Luminaria" which is an online newspaper.