On March 11, 2014,
Henry B. Eyring, First Vice Chairman of the
BYU Board of Trustees, announced that effective May 1, 2014, Worthen would succeed
Cecil O. Samuelson as the president of BYU. Worthen was officially inaugurated as BYU's 13th president September 9, 2014, in a special devotional assembly. Eyring gave the installation charge and spoke at the event. Other members of the board were also in attendance, along with former BYU presidents and presidents of other universities. In late 2016, Worthen was pressured by Air Force officials to make an exemption to the honor code so the person the Air Force chose could be placed as head of the ROTC division at BYU, but Worthen refused to budge from the code. In December 2017, Worthen announced a 10-year-deal that would give BYU students free ridership on the regional bus and commuter rail transit system. In the fall of 2017, as a follow-up to remarks given by Worthen at the university conference in 2016, BYU created an office of experiential learning, to coordinate and increase internships, volunteer positions and other opportunities to apply learning and professionalize degrees.
Title IX regulations In April 2016, Worthen announced the appointment of a BYU advisory committee to investigate how to improve handling alleged sexual assault situations involving students. In August, the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights investigated the university. ==Personal life==