WTS

Join us for an evening Meet & Greet with Boise State University President Dr. Marlene Tromp! WTS SW Idaho is very excited to hold this rescheduled event in the New Year. Plan now to visit with Dr. Tromp and network with transportation industry colleagues on January 18th at Hillcrest Country Club from 5:00 - 7:00 p.m.

We'll also be holding a silent auction as a scholarship fundraiser at this event. Come ready to bid on prizes including a spa package and cabin retreat!

Registration is $30 for current WTS members and $35 for non members. All are welcome to attend! Spread the word and register by January 11th at 1:00 p.m.

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Dr Tromp smiles

More about Dr. Tromp:

On July 1, 2019, Dr. Marlene Tromp became the seventh President of Boise State University. Since her arrival, she has developed an endowment for the Presidential True Blue Scholarship to assist more Idaho residents with the opportunity to attend college. She has spearheaded the Community Impact Program, providing educational opportunities to Idaho’s rural communities and the Hometown Challenge, which helps students return home to give back in their communities. She formed strategic partnerships with industry, higher education and government by launching the Institute for Pervasive Cybersecurity and the HUB, a site of institutional and industry partnership. She oversaw a record breaking year of $68 million in research awards. She propelled Boise State as a national thought leader through efforts focusing on student well being: including serving as a founding member of REP4, a national effort to engage students in redesigning higher education, so it works better for them; creating Project Launchpad Summit, a collaborative national effort to respond to the challenges our students are facing; and supporting Bronco Gap Year, which has provided students with a low-cost, flexible and individualized college learning experience. She deepened Boise State’s community engagement through the creation of a President’s Professor of Public Scholarship and Engagement and the Institute for Advancing American Values.

She presently serves as the Vice Chair of the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities, one of the nation’s six higher education accrediting bodies. She is one of 24 members of the NCAA Division I Board of Directors from the hundreds of Division I institutions across the country. She is one of a handful of presidents selected by the Federal Reserve Chair of San Francisco to consult on higher education. She also supports our local community by serving on the Community Planning COMPASS Board, the Alzheimer’s Association Board of Directors, and on the City of Boise’s Economic Recovery Taskforce.

Prior to joining Boise State, Dr. Tromp was the campus provost and executive vice chancellor at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Before entering the University of California system, Dr. Tromp served as Arizona State University’s vice provost of the West campus and dean of the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences. 

 She grew up in Green River, Wyoming, a trona mining town along Interstate 80 that saw its population jump three-fold in the 1970s when nearby trona mines led an economic boom. Her father worked at one of the mines and then in a regional power plant. Neither of her parents were college graduates, but they supported their two daughters’ college aspirations – especially when Tromp decided she was going to become a doctor. She earned scholarships to Creighton University, nearly 800 miles away in Omaha, Nebraska, but the financial challenges remained tangible.

Though bound for medical school, she fell in love with literature and exploring the human condition and social issues. Instead, she went on to earn her bachelor’s degree in English, came home to Wyoming to complete a master’s degree and then studied for her doctorate at the University of Florida. There, she wrote a dissertation on Victorian novels and the new laws being written then on domestic violence.