Skorton was named as the 12th president of
Cornell University on January 21, 2006. He stayed at the University of Iowa for the duration of the 2006 spring semester and officially assumed the Cornell presidency on July 1, 2006. In 2014 Cornell announced that he would be departing to join the Smithsonian Institution, with his final day as president being June 30, 2015. Skorton has been cited as one factor in increased donations to the university. During his tenure as president, Cornell's capital campaign raised over $4 billion in six years' time. According to Cornell University, Skorton's base salary as president was $686,683 for 2009–2010. Skorton held two academic positions while serving as president: a professor of pediatrics and internal medicine at
Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, and a professor of biomedical engineering at Cornell's College of Engineering on the Ithaca campus.
Education reform Skorton chaired the Business-Higher Education Forum and the Task Force on Diversifying the New York State Economy through Industry-Higher Education Partnerships. He also writes monthly guest columns for the independent student newspaper,
The Cornell Daily Sun, a bi-monthly column for the Cornell Alumni Magazine, and blogs for Forbes.com and the Huffington Post.
Cornell NYC Tech In 2011, Skorton led Cornell's effort to build a new applied sciences campus in New York City, in response to a competition designed by Mayor Michael Bloomberg to boost the city's technology startup sector. In partnership with the
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Cornell was selected as the competition's winner on December 19, 2011. In exchange for free land and $100 million for infrastructure upgrades, Cornell promised to invest over $2 billion in the new campus, called Cornell NYC Tech, over the next three decades. On May 21, 2012, Skorton appeared at Google's New York headquarters to announce that the tech company would donate up to 58,000 square feet of space to house
Cornell NYC Tech until the campus opened on Roosevelt Island in 2017. and specifically to allow more skilled immigrants to live and work in the United States.
Higher education finances Skorton argued that preserving college affordability must be a major priority of universities and Congress. Cornell substantially increased need-based financial aid under his tenure to off-set tuition increases.
Greek life and hazing Skorton took national public positions on
fraternity hazing and
suicide prevention. Skorton pledged to end hazing in the
fraternity and sorority system, and wrote an op-ed on the topic in
The New York Times.
Suicide prevention In 2010, Skorton responded to three student suicides by speaking out nationally for
suicide prevention, as well as authorizing the construction of barriers on the bridges over
Cornell's gorges and increasing resources for counseling on campus. Skorton also spoke out about the continued importance of the humanities to society. The barriers were removed in favor of nets that were installed under each major bridge - a historically common place for suicides at Cornell.
Gun violence Skorton joined eight other University presidents in signing a statement addressing gun violence in January 2013. The document called for the United States to "confront its culture of violence, particularly violence perpetrated by guns". == Smithsonian Institution ==