BUFFALO, N.Y. -- University at Buffalo President Satish K.
Tripathi today praised the passage of Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s
NYSUNY 2020 bill as a major accomplishment in the pursuit of
academic excellence at UB and for economic development efforts
vital to Western New York.
“Today the university and all of Western New York share in
an achievement that puts our community on a path toward a promising
future,” Tripathi said. “I extend my sincere gratitude
and appreciation to all those who helped make this possible: Gov.
Cuomo, the Western New York delegation, Senate and Assembly
leadership, business, labor and community leaders and UB alumni,
faculty, staff and students.
“We have worked together successfully over the past
several years to make the case that a stronger university will
benefit students, families and all of Western New York.”
The bill, Tripathi said, will have a “transformative
impact” on UB and public higher education in New York
State. Moreover, it offers a historic new model for investing
in public higher education during a period of declining state
funding support.
The bill authorizes all SUNY campuses to implement a rational
tuition plan that gives the campuses the ability to raise tuition
up to $300 annually for five years. In addition, as a
component of the NYSUNY 2020 Challenge Grant Program, the four
University Centers in Buffalo, Albany, Binghamton and Stony Brook
are authorized to raise tuition 10 percent for out-of-state
students.
Importantly, the bill prevents the state from cutting funding to
SUNY an amount equal to the revenue generated by tuition increases.
This was a long-standing practice in Albany following SUNY tuition
increases.
Read more about the content of the NYSUNY
2020 bill.
These critical resources will provide the revenue needed for UB
to implement the next phase of the UB 2020 plan for academic
excellence, under the NYSUNY 2020 Challenge Grant Program, Tripathi
said.
The three main interrelated objectives of UB 2020’s next
phase, Tripathi said, are “enhanced educational and research
excellence, improved health care for Western New York and creation
of an innovation economy that will produce regional job
growth.”
UB will use funding provided by the bill to offer students the
very best academic programs, hire new faculty in a variety of
academic disciplines across the university and spur regional
economic development through groundbreaking faculty research and
education of a talented workforce.
“UB 2020 is first and foremost a plan for building a great
university; it’s a plan to advance the academic and research
enterprise of our university so we can make the world, locally and
globally, a better place,” Tripathi said.
New York State low-income students who qualify for maximum
financial aid through the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) will not
be impacted by tuition increases authorized by the bill. To ensure
equitable access to UB, the university also will invest a portion
of tuition revenues into need-based financial aid.
“The financial-aid program authorized by the bill, and
UB’s financial-aid plan, will assure that a UB education
remains accessible to low-income and middle-income students,”
Tripathi said. “Even with tuition increases, UB will
remain one of the most affordable public universities in the
U.S.”
By authorizing capital funding from the governor’s NYSUNY
2020 Challenge Grant program and other sources, this legislation
also enables UB to move forward with its plans to relocate the UB
School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences in downtown Buffalo.
With the hiring of new faculty, the university will realize
significant academic benefits, including expanded course offerings
throughout the university, smaller class-sizes and enhanced
research opportunities for students -- all of which will improve
students’ educational experience and their time to degree
completion.
Location of the UB medical school to downtown Buffalo will
stimulate an already vibrant Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus and its
surrounding neighborhood. And it will more closely align UB
with Kaleida Health and Buffalo’s other major health care
institutions. This will create new educational opportunities
for medical students, improve regional patient care and boost the
region’s emerging biotechnology industry.
As UB implements the next phase of UB 2020, as presented last
month to state leaders, university officials anticipate creating
1,325 new jobs at UB (410 faculty and 915 staff to support clinical
care, service, teaching and research); 1,740 new jobs in the
community resulting from UB's research growth (based on U.S.
Department of Commerce estimates); and 200 jobs in 10 start-up
companies developed from UB research and partnerships. In
addition, more than 1,600 construction jobs would be created to
build a new UB medical school in downtown Buffalo.
Read about the details of UB’s plan to move to downtown
Buffalo under the NYSUNY Challenge
Grant.
Please refer to this FAQ
for additional information about the bill’s impact on the
university and Western New York.
UB Student Association President JoAnna Datz said she is pleased
that UB students will benefit from expanded and improved
educational programs and activities.
“The NYSUNY 2020 plan to grow the university and improve
the quality of our education will benefit students in the
future,” Datz said. “UB students will have the
opportunity to access academic programs comparable to those at the
nation’s best universities, UB will remain one of the most
affordable schools in the country and the value of a UB degree will
increase as UB becomes known as a great university.”
UB faculty member Joseph A. Gardella, professor and Larkin Chair
of Chemistry, praised the passage of the bill and said the hiring
of new faculty, staff and assistants will add strength to UB's
research, teaching, economic development and civic engagement
efforts.
“UB 2020 is known nationally as a plan that expands our
human resources by hiring the best new faculty and staff,”
Gardella said. “This legislation provides predictable tuition
increases for students and parents. And, importantly, it
gives the university resources for hiring faculty who will serve
our students and our community and contribute to research and
knowledge that impact Western New York, U.S. and global
communities.”
The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public
university, a flagship institution in the State University of New
York system and its largest and most comprehensive campus. UB's
more than 28,000 students pursue their academic interests through
more than 300 undergraduate, graduate and professional degree
programs. Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo is a member of
the Association of American
Universities.