Jay A. Perman, M.D., named fifth Chancellor of the University System of Maryland
Perman will become the fifth chancellor of the USM when he succeeds Robert L. Caret.
November 8, 2019
![perman](/news/images/perman-sq.jpg)
University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) President Jay A. Perman, M.D., has been named
the next chancellor of the University System of Maryland (USM) by the USM Board of
Regents. Perman will become the fifth chancellor of the USM when he succeeds Robert
L. Caret, who has previously announced he will leave the position by the end of his
contract.
A nationally recognized pediatric gastroenterologist, Perman has been president at
UMB since 2010 where he has worked to strengthen that institution’s ties to the city
of Baltimore and enhance both economic development and the health and well-being of
its closest neighbors. Over his time at UMB, Perman has also been a national leader
in higher education on issues including accreditation, ethics and integrity, community
engagement, affordability and access, diversity and inclusion, and interprofessional
education.
In 2014, he established the Office of Community Engagement to coordinate UMB’s varied
outreach projects—with special emphasis on West Baltimore—and to leverage resources
so that the university may respond quickly and effectively to identified community
needs. In fall 2015, Perman opened the UMB Community Engagement Center in West Baltimore
and expanded it earlier this year in ways to provide direct health, employment, legal,
financial, and social services to nearby residents and to engage with them in neighborhood-strengthening
advocacy projects.
Perman has also focused on economic development and innovation in Baltimore, and as
UMB president expanded the reach and influence of the UMB BioPark—a biomedical research
park adjacent to the UMB campus and due west of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard that
provides a community for life science companies and academic research centers that
are commercializing new drugs, diagnostics and devices and advancing biomedical research.
Beyond Baltimore, Perman’s leadership has improved the state and regional economy.
With Wallace Loh, president of the University of Maryland, College Park, Perman leads
the University of Maryland Strategic Partnership: MPowering the State (MPower), a
collaboration between the state of Maryland’s two most powerful public research institutions
that leverages the sizable strengths and complementary missions of both institutions
to strengthen Maryland’s innovation economy, advance interdisciplinary research, create
opportunities for students, and solve important problems for the people of Maryland
and the nation.
Perman has worked on statewide issues with a number of USM institutional partners.
He led the Maryland Healthcare Workforce Working Group, a two-year effort to examine
and strengthen the healthcare workforce in Maryland. The group included the presidents
of Salisbury University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Frostburg University,
University of Baltimore, and Coppin State University and produced a report examining
the USM’s response to the state’s healthcare workforce demand and education. Perman
has also been instrumental in expanding academic programs at the Universities at Shady
Grove, including that center’s new BSE building, which will bring a significant placement
of dentistry and oral health sciences and dental education to Montgomery County, including
a dental community clinic to the region. His work also included leadership of the
Eastern Shore Center for Interprofessional Education (ESCIPE), which has led to improvements
in healthcare training on Delmarva—work that involved Salisbury University and the
University of Maryland Eastern Shore.
Perman has also positioned the work of UMB globally—its Center for Vaccine Development
and Global Health (CVD) and its Institute of Human Virology (IHV) have worked domestically
and internationally to develop, test, and deploy vaccines to aid the world’s underserved
populations. This includes the treatment of HIV/AIDS and other chronic viral diseases,
such as Hepatitis C, Hepatitis B, and the Human Papilloma Virus Infection.
“In our search for a new USM chancellor we were looking for a nationally recognized
leader—ideally someone who had run a large and complex institution, an innovator committed
to economic growth and development—but above all a person with a passion for education
and committed to shared governance, transparency, and diversity. Fortunately for
us that we found all of those things right in our own backyard,” said USM Board Chair
Linda Gooden. “Jay Perman embodies these attributes. He is warmly regarded by his
fellow USM presidents and greatly respected in Annapolis. I know I speak for every
regent in saying we are delighted that he has agreed to take on this new and important
challenge. And I also know that every regent would like to thank Chancellor Caret
for his service to the USM.”
“I am deeply humbled to be called to this responsibility,” Perman said. “It will be
a privilege to work as chancellor with our outstanding USM institutions to ensure
that Marylanders—today and tomorrow—have the opportunities I was so fortunate to be
given in gaining a higher education.”
Leaders throughout Maryland have been quick to praise Perman’s appointment.
“Jay has served with distinction as president of the University of Maryland, Baltimore,
and has a strong record of empowering students and communities,” said Governor Larry
Hogan. “A dedicated educator and civil servant, Jay is the right choice for this critical
position, and I look forward to working with him to continue advancing our world-renowned
university system.”
“Dr. Perman and I have worked together for many years on education issues and I have
always found him to have a collaborative approach, which is critically important at
this time of transition for the University System,” said Speaker Adrienne A. Jones.
“Dr. Perman is a stabilizing force and I look forward to working closely with him
to maintain college affordability and improve partnerships and programming to prepare
our students for this global economy.”
“Dr. Jay Perman is an excellent choice to become the USM’s next chancellor,” said
Senate President Mike Miller. “He is a proven commodity and is highly regarded by
the Maryland Senate. We look forward to working with Dr. Perman in this exciting new
role and wish him great success.”
Perman’s appointment as president of UMB in 2010 marked a return to the campus. He
chaired the Department of Pediatrics in the university’s School of Medicine (1999-2004),
before leaving to serve as dean and vice president for clinical affairs at the University
of Kentucky College of Medicine (2004-10).
Perman received a Doctor of Medicine degree with Distinction in 1972 from Northwestern
University. After his residency in pediatrics at Northwestern University Children’s
Memorial Hospital (1975), he completed a fellowship in pediatric gastroenterology
at Harvard Medical School and at the Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Boston
(1977).
From 1977 to 1984, Perman was an assistant professor and associate professor of pediatrics
at the University of California, San Francisco. He first came to Baltimore to work
at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (1984-96), serving as a professor
of pediatrics and head of several divisions. Perman was then named the Jessie Ball
duPont Professor and Chair in the Department of Pediatrics at Virginia Commonwealth
University’s Medical College of Virginia (1996-99).
Perman’s career includes service on many national and regional boards and committees,
including Chair of the Maryland Life Sciences Advisory Board, as well as the boards
of the Association of American Medical Colleges Council of Deans, the Children’s Cancer
Foundation, and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. He is immediate past-chair of the
Downtown Partnership of Baltimore. Perman has also been active on issues involving
specialized and regional accreditation—serving as Chair of several Middle States review
teams—and has played an active role in governance issues as chair of the USM Council
of University System Presidents for the past four years.
Perman is a past president of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology,
Hepatology and Nutrition, a former section chair of the American Gastroenterological
Association, and a former executive committee member of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
He has been listed among “The Best Doctors in America” since 2001.
A native of Chicago, Perman and his wife, Andrea, a research nurse, have four adult
children, nine grandchildren and reside in Baltimore.
Perman's appointment follows a four-month, national search led by a 16-member search
committee that was co-chaired by Regents Chair Gooden and Vice Chair Barry Gossett.
Witt/Kieffer, an executive search firm, assisted the search committee in its work.
The University System of Maryland comprises 12 institutions: Bowie State University;
Coppin State University; Frostburg State University; Salisbury University; Towson
University; University of Baltimore; University of Maryland, Baltimore; University
of Maryland, Baltimore County; University of Maryland, College Park; University of
Maryland Eastern Shore; University of Maryland Global Campus; and the University of
Maryland Center for Environmental Studies. USM also includes three regional centers: Universities
at Shady Grove, University System of Maryland at Hagerstown, and University System
of Maryland at Southern Maryland, at which USM universities offer upper-division (undergraduate
junior- and senior-levels) and graduate courses.
Systemwide, student enrollment exceeds 176,000. USM and its institutions compete successfully
for more than $1 billion in external grants and contracts annually. USM institutions
and programs are among the nation's best in quality and value according to several
national rankings. To learn more about the University System of Maryland, visit www.usmd.edu.