Joel Bloom should not be confused with Joel Blum.
Joel Bloom | |
Order: | 10th |
President of NJIT | |
Term Start: | January 2012 |
Term End: | June 2022 |
Predecessor: | Robert Altenkirch |
Birth Date: | 1947-05-10 |
Alma Mater: | Hunter College (BA & MA) Teachers College, Columbia University (MA and EdD) |
Joel Bloom was the eighth President of New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT). He became President in 2012 and retired in 2022.
Bloom did his undergraduate studies at Hunter College in New York City, where he also earned a master's degree. He then went on to earn both a master's degree and a doctorate from Teachers College, Columbia University. Bloom held various positions in the New York Public school system. Between 1984 and 1990 he was an assistant commissioner in the New Jersey Department of Education. After joining NJIT in 1990,[1] he was appointed president in 2012 after serving as interim president when the former president, Robert Altenkirch, moved to the University of Alabama in 2011.[2] [3]
Joel Bloom is the first NJIT President without a tenured faculty position at the university.[4] It is a requirement for the position according to the NJIT Faculty Handbook.[5] In contrast to standard processes of finding university presidents, no candidates were interviewed by the time NJIT's Board of Trustees settled on Bloom in an internal process.[6] [7] The five-year contract with NJIT is reported worth roughly $5.3 million, or over ten million during the decade of leadership. This figure is higher when including pension, health insurance, and chauffeur. Among the details of his contract, there is included:
President Bloom's contract takes top spot among New Jersey college presidents, making him the highest paid state employee in Newark, where the per capita income of residents is $20,000 annually and 27% of residents fall below the poverty line.[9]
During his time at NJIT, President Bloom oversaw construction of a new 200,000 sq. ft. multipurpose Wellness and Events Center costing over $100 million, which was financed through a mixture of student tuition increases and taxpayer money.[10] NJIT out-of-state tuition increased from $25,334 in 2011 to $33,386 in 2020 ($13,974 to $17,674 in-state tuition).[11]
During this time, NJIT also demolished several landmarked structures around its campus, among them the Warren Street School that had been considered for the National Register of Historic Places.[12] The landmarked school was built from 1892 to 1908 by Newark-based architect Jeremiah O'Rourke. Other demolitions during this period included brownstones and two landmarked brick factories on Newark's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. As a result, the neighboring James Street Commons Historic District was listed as one of the "ten most endangered" historic places in the state by the non-profit organization Preservation NJ.[13]
On October 6 2023, NJIT renamed the "Wellness and Events Center" to the "Joel and Diane Bloom Wellness and Events Center" to honor the contributions of former NJIT president, Joel Bloom.[14]
Joel Bloom is married to Dr. Diane Bloom.[15] They live in Monmouth Beach Borough, New Jersey with their son Ean S Bloom.[16]