What the Exxon Valdez Teaches Us About Higher Ed Right Now

Paul Liebman, Chief Compliance Officer at Vanderbilt, shares lessons from the front lines of federal oversight and analyzes the bind that higher ed is in right now.

By: Campus Docket

What does it really mean to build a culture of compliance in higher ed? For Paul Liebman, Vanderbilt’s Chief Compliance Officer, it’s about influence, credibility, and the hard work of building systems that prevent harm, protect resources, and align with institutional values.

In the latest episode of Campus Docket, hosts Scott Schneider and Eric Kelderman dig into a recent Supreme Court decision that complicates how universities challenge canceled federal grants. The case highlights the government’s growing leverage over higher ed, raising questions about institutional autonomy and the cost of compliance when hundreds of millions in research funding are at stake.

Against this backdrop, Liebman joins to share lessons from a career spanning Exxon, Dell, Baylor, Harvard, and now Vanderbilt. He recalls building compliance programs in the wake of crises, from Exxon Valdez to Baylor’s Title IX reckoning, and how those moments shaped his philosophy. Compliance, he argues, isn’t about proximity to the president’s office. It’s about access, influence, and building programs that simplify complex regulations into actionable safeguards.

The conversation moves beyond technical obligations to the human side of compliance. Liebman emphasizes preventing death or serious injury as the top priority, followed by criminal liability and financial risk. He describes the relentless assessments, from campus safety walks to vulnerability audits, that make universities some of the safest spaces in their cities, even if public perception lags behind.

As the discussion circles back to Columbia’s $200 million settlement and rumors of Harvard facing half a billion in penalties, Schneider and Kelderman reflect on the sector’s precarious position. If government pressure can dictate compliance at this scale, what red lines must universities hold firm to?

Liebman’s take is pragmatic: leaders make the existential calls, his job is to operationalize their decisions. 

The Docket

Campus Docket

Campus Docket

Podcast

Campus Docket cuts through the week’s headline‑grabbing lawsuits and federal actions to explain how fast‑moving legal shifts are rewriting the playbook for higher education.

 

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