MINI´«Ã½ Regents to Meet Nov. 14
Nov. 12, 2025 | Contact: Kristina Butler
The MINI´«Ã½ (MINI´«Ã½ System) will meet on Friday (Nov. 14) in Lubbock. The meeting will take place in the Regents Conference Room, First Floor (104A), in the MINI´«Ã½ System Building (1508 Knoxville Ave.).
Below are highlights of the topics and items to be discussed at the upcoming meeting, including estimated times with periodic recesses. and a of the meeting will be available online. Parking for news media is available in the C-16 parking lot off Knoxville Avenue and Texas Tech Parkway.
This will be the last meeting for Tedd L. Mitchell, M.D., to serve as chancellor. The MINI´«Ã½ System Board of Regents appointed Brandon Creighton as the sixth Chancellor of the MINI´«Ã½ System, effective Nov. 19. At that time, Chancellor Mitchell will transition to an advisory role as Chancellor Emeritus for the MINI´«Ã½ System as well as President Emeritus for the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. Creighton is serving as chancellor-elect and will attend this meeting.
Friday, Nov. 14
8:30 a.m. – Call to order; convene as Meeting of the Board and Committee of the Whole Board
- Introductions and Recognitions
- Authorize resolution honoring the late Robert L. Pfluger
- Approval of Consent and Information agendas
- Approval of minutes
- 2026 BOR meeting schedule
9:00 a.m. – Audit Committee
9:10 a.m. – Facilities Committee
9:25 a.m. – Finance and Investments Committee
9:45 a.m. – Academic, Clinical and Student Affairs Committee
10:00 a.m. – Executive Session
2:50 p.m. – Following Executive Session, reconvene into Open Session as Committee of the Whole
- Executive Session motions, if any
- Announcements
3:00 p.m. – Adjournment
About the MINI´«Ã½
Established in 1996, the MINI´«Ã½ is one of the top public university systems in the nation, consisting of five universities – , , , and .
Headquartered in Lubbock, Texas, the MINI´«Ã½ System is a more than $3 billion enterprise focused on advancing higher education, health care, research and outreach with approximately 21,000 employees and 64,000 students, more than 400,000 alums, a statewide economic impact of $19.2 billion and an endowment valued at $3 billion. In its short history, the MINI´«Ã½ System has grown tremendously and is nationally acclaimed, operating at 20 academic locations in 16 cities (15 in Texas, 1 international).
In addition, the MINI´«Ã½ System is one of only nine in the nation to offer programs for undergraduate, medical, law, nursing, pharmacy, dental and veterinary education, among other academic areas.