Jan 06, 2026

UNL Chancellor Bennett to resign Jan. 12, almost six months short of 3-year contract

Posted Jan 06, 2026 2:10 PM

By Zach Wendling | Nebraska Examiner

Rodney Bennett was first campus leader to get ‘no confidence’ faculty vote in university history

 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Rodney Bennett speaks at University of Nebraska President Jeffrey Gold’s investiture ceremony. Sept. 5, 2024. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Rodney Bennett speaks at University of Nebraska President Jeffrey Gold’s investiture ceremony. Sept. 5, 2024. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

LINCOLN — University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Rodney Bennett will resign next week, he announced in a brief email to students, faculty and staff on Monday, leaving UNL nearly six months short of his initial contract.

Bennett, who started at UNL in July 2023, will resign Jan. 12. He led the campus through $27.5 million in budget cuts in the fall, including nearly $7 million in academic program eliminations or mergers approved by the University of Nebraska Board of Regents at a Dec. 5 meeting. The remaining cuts were still in progress as of last month.

“I am writing to share that I will conclude my service as chancellor on Jan. 12,” Bennett said in the opening line of his email. 

The UNL Faculty Senate meets in a special meeting to consider a “no confidence” resolution against Chancellor Rodney Bennett. Nov. 18, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
The UNL Faculty Senate meets in a special meeting to consider a “no confidence” resolution against Chancellor Rodney Bennett. Nov. 18, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

Bennett’s salary this year was $732,000.

Dr. Jeffrey Gold, president of the NU system, tapped Kathy Ankerson, who retired Dec. 31, 2024, after serving as UNL’s chief academic officer, as UNL’s next interim chancellor. Ankerson previously served as dean, associate dean and professor in UNL’s College of Architecture.

‘Well for the future’

In a separate message, Gold told the NU community he is grateful for Bennett’s service, including his work to stabilize UNL’s financial position, strengthen fundraising and advance student success and retention. Bennett highlighted that work, too, in his departure email. Gold said Bennett’s work has helped position UNL “well for the future.”

“We understand that the news about Chancellor Bennett is one change on top of many other changes,” Gold said. “It will be critical that every member of our UNL community has the opportunity to share their thoughts and help to shape our path forward.”

Katherine Ankerson, former University of Nebraska-Lincoln executive vice chancellor and dean of the College of Architecture. Oct. 5, 2021. (Courtesy of University Communication and Marketing)
Katherine Ankerson, former University of Nebraska-Lincoln executive vice chancellor and dean of the College of Architecture. Oct. 5, 2021. (Courtesy of University Communication and Marketing)

Gold said he and Ankerson plan to hold several listening sessions, details of which will be shared soon. He said he remains “confident” in UNL’s future, in part with campus budget challenges addressed and UNL nearing joint accreditation with the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

Bennett did not give a reason for leaving UNL but said he believes in the “transformative power of higher education.” 

He indicated he would remain in education, though he didn’t specify whether that would still be in the Cornhusker State. He came to UNL after serving nearly 10 years as president of the University of Southern Mississippi.

“I look forward to exploring opportunities on the horizon that will enable me to elevate mission and purpose in support of student success,” Bennett said.

Contract was set to expire June 30

In November, Bennett became the first UNL chancellor to receive a “no confidence” vote from UNL faculty. The historic vote overwhelmingly passed, 60-14, in part due to concerns over Bennett’s handling of budget challenges.

Bennett declined multiple times to directly address the UNL Faculty Senate action, telling the Examiner after December’s regents meeting UNL had “a lot of work to do” with implementation.

“We’re going to do that with a lot of care and concern for everybody who’s impacted,” he said last month.

President-elect Jeffrey Gold, center, is flanked by UNL Chancellor Rodney Bennett and UNO Chancellor Joanne Li on June 20, 2024. Gold was chancellor of the University of Nebraska Medical Center before becoming president July 1. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
President-elect Jeffrey Gold, center, is flanked by UNL Chancellor Rodney Bennett and UNO Chancellor Joanne Li on June 20, 2024. Gold was chancellor of the University of Nebraska Medical Center before becoming president July 1. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

Bennett’s contract was originally set to expire June 30. In October, he told the Examiner he desired a contract extension but did not know if or when that might occur.

Gold said at the time he supported an extension but cautioned that it was a decision ultimately left to the regents. In December, Bennett said the situation hadn’t changed.

“You got to talk to the boss about that,” Bennett said Dec. 5 when asked again if his contract would come up for a vote soon. It’s unclear what changed in the month since.

Regent Paul Kenney of Amherst, chair of the NU Board of Regents, said Monday that the board had not discussed Bennett’s contract as a group and that the board had heard “rumors” he might leave before July but “didn’t really know what would happen.” He called Bennett a friend and wished him well.

“I mean, he’s looking to do other things,” Kenney said of Bennett. “Kathy will be a very, very good acting chancellor in his absence, so we’re happy about that, so things ought to go pretty smoothly.”

‘Highest honor and privilege’

In his email, Bennett highlighted a UNL tenure he said stabilized campus enrollment after years of decline, set new records for first-year student retention and six-year graduation rates and enhanced research. He also touted innovation and creative scholarship, advancing statewide extension and natural resource development that includes agriculture and animal welfare, achieving record fundraising milestones and developing “a plan for financial sustainability.”

  Regent Paul Kenney of Amherst, chair of theNU Board of Regents. April 23, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)  
  Regent Paul Kenney of Amherst, chair of theNU Board of Regents. April 23, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)  

Bennett extended his “heartfelt gratitude” to faculty, staff, extension-based colleagues, members of the executive leadership team and NU system leaders. He also thanked alumni, donors and friends of UNL.

Addressing UNL’s “outstanding students,” Bennett said each brings to UNL, Lincoln and Nebraska energy, enthusiasm, optimism and determination that he said improves local communities, Nebraska and the world. He described them as“an inspiration to us all.”

“It has been my highest honor and privilege to have served as your chancellor,” Bennett said. “You are the reason we are all here, and I look forward to witnessing how you will embody our belief that every person and every interaction matters, as you change the world for the better.”