The University of Kentucky Was Built for the People. Let's Not Forget That.
In 1862, in the middle of a civil war, Abraham Lincoln signed the Morrill Act, a radical bet that higher education shouldn't be reserved for the wealthy. Every state would get federal land to establish a university whose mission was clear: serve the working people. Teach agriculture, mechanical arts, and the practical sciences. Lift up communities that had never seen the inside of a college classroom.
The University of Kentucky exists because of that promise.
Not because of a business plan. Not because of a revenue model. Not because someone saw an opportunity to build a brand. UK was born from the idea that a public university belongs to the people of the Commonwealth, the coal miner's daughter in Harlan County, the farmer's son in Christian County, the first-generation student in any of Kentucky's 120 counties who dared to believe education could change the trajectory of a family.
That mission is sacred. And it's worth saying plainly: “it is being eroded.”
When a land-grant university begins operating more like a holding company than an institution of learning, spinning up LLCs, layering subsidiaries, embedding consultants so deeply they become indistinguishable from leadership and something fundamental shifts. The question stops being “How do we serve Kentucky?" and starts being "How do we grow the enterprise?"
Those are not the same question.
When transparency gives way to complexity. When organizational charts require a forensic accountant to interpret, when public dollars flow through structures that obscure rather than illuminate, the people who own this university lose their ability to hold it accountable. And accountability isn't a bureaucratic inconvenience. For a land-grant institution, it's the whole point. The public trust IS the product.
Kentucky ranks near the bottom nationally in educational attainment, health outcomes, and household income. These aren't abstract statistics, they represent the very communities the Morrill Act was designed to serve. Every dollar, every decision, every partnership should be measured against one standard: “Does this move the needle for the people of this Commonwealth?”
Not for the consultants. Not for the contractors. Not for the executives. For the people.
A university can pursue excellence and still honor its soul. It can modernize without corporatizing. It can grow without forgetting who it grows for. But that requires intentionality. It requires leaders who understand that a land-grant charter isn't a historical footnote, it's a living covenant.
The University of Kentucky doesn't belong to its administration. It doesn't belong to its board. It doesn't belong to the firms it contracts with or the subsidiaries it creates.
It belongs to Kentucky.
And Kentucky deserves to know that the institution built in its name is still being run in its interest.
@GovAndyBeshear