From president_office at plattsburgh.edu Mon Feb 2 19:00:00 2026 From: president_office at plattsburgh.edu (Office of the President) Date: Mon, 2 Feb 2026 14:00:00 -0500 Subject: [Important Information for Students] SUNY Chancellor Honors Black History Month Message-ID: Dear Campus Community, As we begin Black History Month, I join the Chancellor and the SUNY Board of Trustees in recognizing the profound and enduring contributions of African Americans to our nation’s history, culture, and civic life. Black history is American history. It is a history marked by resilience and leadership, by injustice and progress, and by the ongoing pursuit of freedom, equity, and opportunity. As a public university, SUNY Plattsburgh carries a responsibility not only to educate, but to ensure that access, inclusion, and academic excellence remain central to our mission. I encourage you to read the statement below from Chancellor King and the SUNY Board of Trustees, which speaks to these values and to the role of higher education in advancing a more just and equitable society. Sincerely, Dr. Alexander Enyedi President ******************************************************* _ _ _[image: blog.png] *Chancellor King and SUNY Board of Trustees Statement on Black History Month* *For Immediate Release: Thursday, Feb. 1, 2024* Contact: Holly Liapis, Holly.Liapis at suny.edu, (518) 477-0757; or Conall Smith, Conall.Smith at suny.edu, (518) 565-9580 “This Black History Month, we celebrate the theme of ‘African Americans and the Arts,’ and pay homage to the significant contributions Black creators have made to the arts since, and even before, our nation’s founding. For Black college students, the arts serve as a powerful medium for cultural expression, affirmation of identity, and a means to voice their unique experiences and challenges. They provide therapeutic benefits, fostering mental well-being and creating spaces of community and belonging amidst often predominantly white institutions. Additionally, the arts act as a vehicle for activism and social change, enabling Black students to advocate for equity, justice, and visibility within and beyond the academic environment. And most of all, they bring us joy, bring us together, bring peace of mind when it is called for, lay out pleas for justice, assuage pain, and expose truths. “At SUNY, we think of the trailblazing novelist and former University at Albany faculty member Toni Morrison, the immensely talented, up-and-coming, Grammy Award winning jazz singer, and Purchase College alumna, Samara Joy, as well as the accomplished actor/producer and University at Buffalo alumnus, Winston Duke, to name just a few members of the SUNY family who have truly made an artistic and cultural impact on our nation. “Thanks to the diversity that has been at SUNY’s core for all of its 75 years, we’ve been surrounded by artists and art. We will continue to foster an environment that allows great creative talent to flourish without limits, as evidenced by the success of our alumni and the promise of our students. “While there are those who wish to undo the significant progress made to advance racial inclusivity and equality, we as the nation’s largest comprehensive system of public higher education will always make clear that there is a place at SUNY for every New Yorker. We will not waver in our mission to provide an educational environment where diversity, equity, and inclusivity thrive. While we understand there is more work to do to right the wrongs of the past, we are proud of the steps we have already taken and will continue to take to ensure that SUNY is a welcoming place for all.” ### -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: