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Home > Departments > Facilities Planning & Design > Projects > FP&D Project Archive > Spring 2007 Project Archive Spring 2007 Project ArchiveFaculty Senate Executive Committee was briefed at its final meeting of the semester yesterday from Sean P. Sullivan, associate vice president for academic planning and budget; James A. Willis, interim executive vice president for finance and operations; and Joseph J. Zambon, professor of periodontics and endodontics in the School of Dental Medicine. Sullivan outlined the list of current capital projects at UB—all of which are in at least the planning phase—including:
Faculty senators had several questions about the projects on the list, with the plans to build new student housing drawing the most questions. H. William Coles III, assistant vice provost for the Educational Opportunity Program, expressed concern about the shortage of student housing, saying that in the recent past, students who have been told "there's no room at the inn" have left UB and gone to other colleges. Willis said that this fall, UB again will turn to renting hotel rooms for students and other options, but added that all students will have a spot by the beginning of spring semester 2008. Gayle A. Brazeau, associate dean for academic affairs for the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, noted that the Jewish Community Center's plan to phase out one of its buildings on North Forest Road in Getzville could present an opportunity for UB to acquire the space for use as a recreational facility or a health facility. Merrill T. Dayton, professor and chair of the Department of Surgery, asked whether the research facilities in the Cary-Farber-Sherman complex are at capacity. Sullivan said they are, and that research space is "a major aspect" of the planning for the buildings' renovation. Of course, there also were the inevitable questions regarding parking and classroom shortages, especially in the midst of construction and renovation. Willis said that both are ongoing issues that are included in UB's master planning process, and that in the case of parking, the university has begun a dialogue with the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority in order to best address that problem. Coles also asked how UB plans to fund all these projects, and Satish K. Tripathi, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs who also attended the meeting, assured the FSEC that UB has received positive feedback from SUNY administration, as well as from the Legislature, regarding these proposals. "We don't really want to take that road to grow unless we have the resources to grow," Tripathi said. Later in the meeting, senators discussed how to identify troubled students on campus and the issue of emergency response in the wake of the tragic shootings earlier this month at Virginia Tech. Willis said that like many other schools, UB is holding meetings to review its response plans to various emergencies. He added that in addition to training for staff and students, the issue of widespread communication in such emergencies tops the list of issues being discussed. He said that implementing the voice-over IP system at UB "gives us a vehicle to essentially ring every phone on campus instantaneously," a valuable tool especially in these times when "we estimate between 90 and 95 percent of our students show up to campus with cell phones." "FSEC's thoughts turn to construction" www.buffalo.edu 26 April 2007 http://www.buffalo.edu/ubreporter/archives/vol38/vol38n32/articles/FSEC.html |