June 08, 2007
UA Regents approve budget distribution, wrap up two-day meeting
For Immediate Release
Friday, June 8, 2007
The University of ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ Board of Regents approved the budget distribution for the
fiscal year starting July 1, honored UA researchers dedicated to the International
Polar Year and received numerous updates on university programs during a two-day meeting
that wrapped up in Fairbanks Thursday.
Regents and roughly 200 members of the ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ and Fairbanks community also attended a
naming and dedication ceremony of the Natural Sciences Building on the ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ campus
in honor of retiring provost Paul Reichardt, who taught and served in administrative
positions at ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ for 35 years.
The ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ Legislature recently approved a total of $292.5 million in state general
funds for the university's operating budget, up $10 million compared to the current
fiscal year but still $1.6 million shy of meeting the fixed-cost need in required
retirement payments and $16.3 million below the regents' request. Federal funding,
private donations, university receipts and other funding brings the total UA system
operating budget to $798.8 million for the new fiscal year, compared to $774.1 million
for the current year.
Board members agreed with a plan presented by UA President Mark Hamilton to squeeze
$2.5 million from across the system and reallocate it toward key workforce development
programs that were part of the regents' original request. Programs in allied health
and public health, nursing, construction management, mining, geography and engineering-at
the top of the regents' "Preparing ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æns for Jobs" category in the UA budget-all
will benefit from the reallocation.
"These workforce programs are critical for the economic health of our state," Hamilton
said. "While reallocations are difficult to do internally, they demonstrate a real
commitment on the part of this university and the board, and a willingness to bet
on the fact that state support will be forthcoming."
He emphasized that the reallocations are temporary. "The real problem will come in
a year or two if we fail to receive the necessary state funding for continuing the
programs," he said.
The board also approved spending the $13.8 million received from the Legislature's
capital budget on several projects, including maintenance, the
purchase of Homer City Hall for an expansion of the Kachemak Bay Campus,
planning money for a new UAA sports arena, and several other projects.
In other business, regents received an update from researchers involved in the International
Polar Year, a two-year, multinational effort that focuses on scientific research affecting
Earth's polar regions. The university recently hired 11 postdoctoral fellows throughout
the system to focus largely on global climate change research, with funds provided
by annual gifts to UA by BP and ConocoPhillips. In addition, UAA's Institute of Social
and Economic Research has a 12th polar year researcher funded separately through a
federal grant focusing on social science issues related to global climate change.
In addition to individual updates by many of the researchers during the board meeting,
the board and members of the community attended a public reception at the Museum of
the North on Wednesday.
Hamilton also presented UA's annual "Make Students Count" awards to staff members
from UAA, ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ, UAS and the statewide administration. The recipients, nominated by
fellow staff members for excellent service to students, each receive a check for $1,000
and two domestic airline tickets. Winners this year were Anissa Hauser of UAA; Mary
Parsons of ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ; Christopher Washko of UAS; and Mike Molnia of the statewide administration.
In other business, regents approved total project cost increases for two projects-renovations
to the Arctic Health Research Building on the ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ campus and the new Lena Point fisheries
facility in Juneau, part of ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ's School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences.
Due to a volatile construction market in Juneau, the Lena Point project requires an
additional $1.7 million than the funding level previously approved, bringing the new
total project cost, including construction, equipment and furnishings, to $26.2 million.
The Arctic Health renovations required an additional $2 million to allow for sprinkler
installation in the west wing, which until recently housed research animals, and additional
renovations to the east wing than the earlier level of funding would have allowed.
ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ will debt finance the additional renovations, bringing the total project cost
to $7.7 million.
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For more information, call Kate Ripley at 907/450-8102 or 907/388-3506.
For a 200 dpi photo of the Make Students Count award winners, go to http://www.alaska.edu/opa/images/studentscount-2007.jpg.zip.
Pictured from left to right are Mike Molnia, SW; Christopher Washko, UAS; Mary Parsons,
ÐÓ°ÉÔ°æ; and Anissa Hauser, UAA.
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