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“Our vision of YSU is to increase the educational attainment,
economic prosperity and environmental vitality of the region,”
said Sweet. “We are committed to a strong network of community
partnerships to achieve this vision.” (outquote)
And he is working with the Mayor George McKelvey of Youngstown
to devise an urban development plan, Youngstown 2010, that will
lead YSU and the city into the twenty-first century.
Sweet also has provided leadership in raising private funds to
support a new $12.1 million Andrews Student Recreation and Wellness
Center, the first one to be built entirely with private funds at
a state public university. Currently under construction, the center
is scheduled to open in the fall of 2005.
Prior to coming to Youngstown, Sweet was dean and professor of
the Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University
from 1978 to 2000. His success earned national recognition for the
college’s graduate program and its specialty of city management/urban
policy.
Dr. Sweet also is noted for his role in formulating and obtaining
funding for the Ohio Board of Regents’ Urban University Program
and serving as its chairman from 1979 to 2000.
Prior to his career as a university administrator, Dr. Sweet was
appointed by the governor of Ohio to a number of state cabinet posts,
including the State Department of Development. He also served as
commissioner of the Ohio Public Utilities Commission and head of
the state’s first energy agency. He also was director of regional
economic research at the Battelle Institute in Columbus.
Dr. Sweet has the distinction of being the only academic elected
to serve as president of the American Economic Development Council
(AEDC). He previously served as chairman of the board of the Northeast-Midwest
Institute, a Washington, D.C., policy research center. In 1998,
he was elected a Fellow of the prestigious National Academy of Public
Administration. He recently co-edited the book, “The New American
City Faces Its Regional Future.”
Dr. Sweet holds a Ph.D. from The Ohio State University, an M.A.
from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and a B.A. from
the
University of Rochester. He and his wife, Pat, live in Liberty,
Ohio, and have two daughters and two sons and six grandchildren.
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