Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Assembly speaker will push construction bond measure

$500 million yearly would top what Atkinson had asked for

By Benjamin Parke

Daily Bruin Contributor

Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys, will carry a bond measure that would fully fund the UC’s $500 million-a-year need for construction projects, partly to meet the needs of Tidal Wave II.

Hertzberg will hold a press conference next week to announce his support of the bond measure to fund the projects, said his education advisor, Melinda Melendez.

The measure would provide a yearly $500 million disbursement to the UC over a period of four years, and would be put to voter approval on the March 2002 ballot if passed by the legislature and agreed to by the governor.

The influx of an expected 63,000 more students into UC by 2010, nicknamed Tidal Wave II, has university officials working to accommodate the expansion. Construction projects are also needed to make seismic improvements and replace obsolete structures.

Currently, the UC receives a little more than $200 million a year from Proposition 1A, the current bond proposition that funds public colleges and universities in the state. That money is scheduled to run out after the final disbursement for the UC’s 2001-02 budget.

“The speaker is intent on trying to secure the bond in the amount that covers the need as opposed to rationing out a smaller amount,” Melendez said.

UC President Richard Atkinson’s original plan was to request a bond totaling around $300-350 million – making up the difference with state, federal and other sources of support. UC spokesman Brad Hayward said it was too soon to speculate how Atkinson’s original plan would mesh with Hertzberg’s.

“We are appreciative of the speaker’s efforts, which send an important signal about the magnitude of our facilities needs,” said Hayward.

As chair of the Council on Planning and Budget in UCLA’s Academic Senate, Professor Richard Goodman of The Anderson School at UCLA said Tidal Wave II will mean more construction funding will be necessary. Professors will need more office space, and departments will need labs, he said.

Goodman also said that UC Merced, the system’s planned 10th campus, will have to open soon if it is to mitigate any of the crowding.

“We have argued strongly that there is a major capital improvement issue to Tidal Wave II,” said Goodman.

“The obstacle is that neither the governor nor the legislature has as yet reacted to this pressure,” he added, speaking prior to the news of Hertzberg’s plans.

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