COLUMBIA, SC – The Order of the Palmetto was presented to Mike LeFever, former president & CEO of SC Independent Colleges and Universities, Inc. (SCICU), at the advocacy organization’s board meeting hosted by Presbyterian College on Sept. 26.
Virginia Crocker, former SC Representative and former SCICU trustee, presented LeFever with South Carolina’s highest civilian honor. The award recognizes lifetime achievements and contributions to the state and citizens of South Carolina.
LeFever was joined in the awards ceremony by his wife Malissa Burnette and daughter Grant LeFever (Presbyterian College Class of 2013).
The location for the presentation also held great significance to LeFever, as he is a 1969 cum laude graduate of Presbyterian College.
The most recent achievement cited in the presentation of the Order of the Palmetto involved LeFever’s 10+ years as president & CEO of SC Independent Colleges and Universities, Inc. (SCICU). LeFever advocated extensively on behalf of independent colleges and universities in the South Carolina General Assembly and the United States Congress. He retired from SCICU in August 2018.
As SCICU president & CEO, LeFever led the charge for supporting more than $83 million combined annually in SC need-based grants and SC merit scholarships, including Palmetto Fellows, LIFE, and HOPE scholarships, and another $73 million annually in federal grants. Through his leadership, SCICU sourced more than $5 million in student scholarships, student research project support, and faculty/teaching awards for its twenty member colleges and universities.
LeFever was instrumental in establishing a student transfer agreement between the SC Technical College System and seventeen (17) of SCICU’s twenty (20) member colleges and universities. The transfer agreement is just one of numerous collaborations that LeFever fostered and developed during his tenure as president & CEO of SCICU.
Prior to joining SCICU, LeFever served as director of four different state agencies and as deputy chief of staff for executive office programs and cabinet affairs for Governor Jim Hodges. His 30+ years of state government service included 13 years as the director of the Workers’ Compensation Commission.
After LeFever announced his retirement in early 2018, he was honored by a number of organizations. The South Carolina Senate recognized LeFever with a special presentation of a framed resolution on the Senate floor in April. Wofford College awarded LeFever an honorary doctorate in May.