UNC chancellor who has served during 'Silent Sam' controversy resigning

Image: Carol Folt
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt speaks on May 11, 2015 during the announcement of a partnership with pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline to accelerate the search for an HIV cure. Copyright Christine T. Nguyen The Herald-Sun via AP file
Copyright Christine T. Nguyen The Herald-Sun via AP file
By Janelle Griffith with NBC News U.S. News
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"There has been too much recent disruption due to the monument controversy," Folt said in the announcement.

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University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt on Monday announced that she will resign after graduation this spring. She also said, in the announcement on the university's website, that she has authorized the plaques and base from the campus' controversial "Silent Sam" Confederatemonument be removed intact.

"There has been too much recent disruption due to the monument controversy," Folt said in the announcement. "Carolina's leadership needs to return its full attention to helping our University achieve its vision and to live its values."

The confederate statue, known as "Silent Sam," had stood on a main campus quad from 1913 until it was torn down in August 2018 during a rally by hundreds of protesters who decried what they described as its racist origins. Folt was among the UNC leaders who had previously said state law prevented the school from removing the statue.

Police guard a Confederate statue, coined Silent Sam, on the campus of the University of Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill North Carolina on August 22, 2017.
Police guard a Confederate statue, coined Silent Sam, on the campus of the University of Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill North Carolina on August 22, 2017.Sara D. Davis

The statue remains gone from its prior site on campus but Folt said in her resignation she was also authorizing removal of its base and commemorative plaques.

The remaining parts of the monument pose "a continuing threat both to the personal safety and well-being of our community and to our ability to provide a stable, productive educational environment," she wrote. "As chancellor, the safety of the UNC-Chapel Hill community is my clear, unequivocal and non-negotiable responsibility."

Folt became chancellor of the university in 2013.

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