Dear UMBC Community,
With deep gratitude for his extraordinary career of service to UMBC, I write to share with you the news that Jack Suess ’80, M.S. ’95, will be retiring from his role as vice president for information technology and chief information officer. We do not have an official retirement date for him yet because he has graciously agreed to stay on until a search for his successor is completed.
In conversations about UMBC’s strategic plan and a vision for the future, Jack and I determined together that this would be the right time for a transition in leadership in the Division of Information Technology (DoIT). A new leader will join at an opportune time, able to align the division with a new set of strategic priorities for the university and contribute meaningfully to advancing those goals. I am grateful to Jack for his characteristically unselfish thinking about how best to position DoIT to lead us toward our vision for the university, in service to our mission and our students, staff, and faculty.
Jack has always had the best interests of UMBC in mind, and he personifies the spirit of this community’s devotion to one another and to UMBC. He has served in his current role since 2005 and has led the division since 1997, but his affiliation with the university goes back much longer.
Jack came to UMBC as a first-generation college student in 1976. He studied mathematics and computer science, but it was a student job in information technology that would set the course of his life. In 1980, when he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in math, his student job became a full-time role that blossomed into a career of leadership and service at UMBC. He is a big part of why UMBC is known as an innovator; he and the university were among the early adopters of Internet2 in 1997, and he has spearheaded initiatives in advanced networking, cloud computing, and more. His email address—jack@umbc.edu—screams “early adopter,” but, more than that, it conveys a big part of who he is. Jack, at UMBC.
He did not want this message to be all about him, of course. He wanted it to be about the culture of service and partnership that permeates DoIT, and about UMBC’s active—often leading—voice in national conversations and collaborations concerning technology in higher education and research.
As to the former, Jack is proud of the work of his team in advancing the research enterprise at UMBC, in helping faculty leverage technology in their teaching, and in supporting the administrative functions of the university. He also is gratified by the role that many DoIT staff members have played in the life of the university, including serving in shared governance roles. He set a good example and a high bar for such participation, serving on many UMBC planning groups, steering committees, and advisory boards over the years. For his outstanding service, Jack has been honored with both a UMBC Alumni Award and a Presidential Staff Leadership Award. Nationally, Jack has been honored with the prestigious EDUCAUSE Leadership in the Profession award and the Internet2 Presidential Leadership in the Community award.
Today, Jack’s own experience as a student-employee-turned-staffer is one among many stories of alumni whose successful career arcs—at UMBC and around the world, at Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and many more—began as student employees in DoIT.
As to UMBC’s leading role in technology in higher education nationally, there is much to celebrate. Going back to 1997, UMBC was among the first 50 universities to participate in the National Science Foundation (NSF) high-speed network program, vBNS. Decades later, in 2014, it was among 100 universities selected for NSF’s CC*IIE program to advance 100Gb technology. Jack was the principal investigator (PI) on both of those NSF grants, and he has been a co-PI on an NSF grant to increase the representation of women in information technology. He and others in DoIT have served in numerous leadership roles in national information technology groups, including InCommon, Internet2, and EDUCAUSE.
That combination of service and innovation is at the heart of the division that Jack has led for three decades, and UMBC is all the better for it. We will share more about a search for Jack’s successor soon. Today, please join me in congratulating Jack on his remarkable career and in thanking him for his immeasurable contributions to our beloved UMBC community.
Sincerely,
President Valerie Sheares Ashby