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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, Oct. 17, 2002
James Grant
UC Merced
(209) 724-4406
james.grant@ucop.edu
NOTED UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATOR ESTEBAN
SORIANO NAMED VICE CHANCELLOR AT UC MERCED
MERCED - Esteban Soriano, a noted university
fund-raiser and management consultant, has been named vice chancellor
for University Advancement at the University of California, Merced.
It was announced today (Oct. 17) by Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey.
The appointment is subject to the approval of the University of
California Board of Regents.
Soriano’s background includes many years
of service in fundraising, communications, and government relations
for a variety of institutions including UC Riverside and UC Berkeley.
His most recent position was Vice President for University Advancement
at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, where he began
service in 1998
“I am delighted to have Esteban Soriano
join the UC Merced family,” said Tomlinson-Keasey. “His
extensive background in university advancement, and his experience
as a professor and researcher will provide many opportunities for
the University to enhance its resources and profile here in California
and beyond.”
Soriano, who earned his doctorate degree from
Stanford University, is an expert in communication strategies, economic
impact studies and assessments, methodology, and research design.
He has been designated as a “high-level expert” by US
Department of Labor and Department of Education when representing
US interests before the European Union, and was selected as small
business expert representative for a US delegation to the international
Organization for Economic and Community Development hearings in
France.
As Vice Chancellor for University Advancement,
Soriano will oversee development, government relations, community
relations, alumni relations, communications, and special events
at UC Merced. Soriano will begin his duties on November 1, taking
over from James Erickson, who is retiring from his position as vice
chancellor.
Soriano said that he was attracted to UC Merced
because of the challenges and opportunities presented by creating
the 10th campus of the UC system.
“The collection of excitement, enthusiasm,
commitment, and enterprise that has already been created at Merced
is an unshakable magnet. One cannot help but be attracted to it,”
he said. “The community and regional support for the university
is a marvelous asset, and it will be an honor to help create the
next great research university in America.”
Before his work at Pomona, Soriano founded and
headed The Resource Group, a Riverside-based development services
and strategic communication firm. The company provides resource
development services, strategic communications, image enhancement,
and marketing outreach to colleges, government entities, and the
private sector. From 1987 with the firm’s founding, to 1998,
Soriano served nearly 700 clients, including almost 150 cities,
more then 50 local and regional agencies, nearly one dozen state
and federal agencies, almost 100 colleges and universities, and
several hundred companies.
Soriano has a long history of commitment to the
San Joaquin Valley. He was born in Madera to a migrant farm worker
family, and was the first in his family to complete college, and
earned his bachelor’s from CSU Fresno. He earned a master’s
degree and a doctorate degree in communications from Stanford.
He has held a variety of professorial and instructional positions
in communications and marketing, including service as an assistant
professor at Stanford, a lecturer at CSU Fresno, a professor at
Cal Poly Pomona’s school of business, and a visiting professor
at the American Indian tribal institution, D-Q University.
Soriano was for several years employed in the
Fresno area, where he was a reporter/photographer for UPI, an announcer/director
for KFSN-TV, and section editor of several community-based small
newspapers.
Later, Soriano was director of research and development
for the West Side Planning Group in Fresno, where he assisted the
organization in increasing rural development opportunities through
small-business funding.
In his professional career, he has been awarded
designation as Ford Fellow, National Research Fellow, Fulbright
Scholar, and J. H. Sanders Marketing Fellow.
He has served three U.S. Presidents on national boards and commissions.
He served the Carter administration on the national task force focusing
on the communications needs of rural America. He served the Reagan
administration as a member of the Teacher in Space Selection Panel.
He served the Clinton administration as the presidential appointee
to the National Skill Standards Board.
Soriano also has extensive experience relating to electric and water
utilities. In Riverside he served for seven years on that city's
municipal utility board and was chairman of the electric committee,
chairman of the finance committee, and overall Board Chairman. He
served on the public policy advisory board of the American Public
Power Association for two years.
Soriano and his wife Judy, a redevelopment specialist,
intend to make their home in the Merced area. They have three grown
children.
Expected to open in fall of 2004 to serve 1,000
students, UC Merced is the 10th UC campus. Over the coming decades,
the campus will grow to become a vibrant, comprehensive research
university with 25,000 students and approximately 6,000 faculty
and staff. In addition to the main campus, UC Merced will leverage
digital technology to develop an educational network throughout
the San Joaquin Valley. UC Merced currently operates educational
and outreach centers in Merced, Fresno and Bakersfield.
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