April 24, 2006

U seeks 5-in-1 deal for new labs

Lawmakers debate whether bioscience merits special break

April 24, 2006
Pioneer Press
BY BILL SALISBURY

While a plan to construct a University of Minnesota football stadium was grabbing headlines and sparking water cooler conversations in recent weeks, another university building request that could make a far bigger hit on Minnesota's economy has been quietly marching through the Legislature.

The U wants $366 million to build five bioscience research laboratories in the next 10 years.

The big question lawmakers must answer is whether to make a 10-year commitment to construct all five buildings. That would break with the legislative tradition of requiring the university and all state agencies to ask for construction money one building at a time in bonding bills passed every two years.

University officials, Gov. Tim Pawlenty, legislative leaders and biotech industry executives all agree the research done at these facilities would produce medical and scientific breakthroughs that promote health, save lives and give rise to dozens of new businesses and thousands of jobs.

"I think this is an investment in the future of the biosciences industry in the state of Minnesota," Dr. Frank Cerra, the university's senior vice president for health sciences, said last week.

The Legislature is likely to at least make a down payment on the project this spring. The House and Senate have passed bonding bills that provide $40 million for the first of the five research buildings. The U would be required to contribute $20 million for the facility.

"It was the most important project in the bonding bill," said Senate Capital Investment Committee Chairman Keith Langseth, DFL-Glyndon. "I think it's our future."

Under the U's plan, the Legislature would create a separate Biomedical Sciences Research Authority and authorize it to issue $330 million in general obligation debt through bonding to finance the lab buildings. The authority could finance construction of one building every two years.

Bills to create the nine-member authority are ready for quick legislative action, said the sponsors, Sen. Richard Cohen, DFL-St. Paul, and Rep. Ron Abrams, R-Minnetonka. "I hope we can get a jump-start" from Pawlenty and House and Senate leaders of both parties to get the bills moving, Abrams said.

Here's the rub for some legislators: The $330 million under the authority's control would count against the state's borrowing limit for other projects.

House Capital Investment Committee Chairman Dan Dorman, R-Albert Lea, enthusiastically supports building the labs, but he questions whether they should get special treatment in the bonding process.

"Why should we put them at the front of the line ahead of every other bonding project?" he asked. That would require the Legislature to "give up its rightful role" of setting construction priorities.

This university project needs the kind of long-term commitment that the current bonding process doesn't provide, Cerra said, because it takes several years to recruit top-shelf researchers and design and build technologically sophisticated labs.

"We need the ability to plan in a stable environment," he said. The U couldn't guarantee that stability if it had to go back to the Legislature every two years to request funding for the next building.

He said the state needs to make a commitment to the project now to compete with fast-growing bioscience initiatives on the East and West coasts and worldwide.

The competition is fierce. More than a dozen states already have started big scientific research programs. California voters approved spending $3 billion on stem cell research. Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle launched a $750 million initiative, with more than half the money earmarked for biomedical research facilities at the University of Wisconsin.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/news/local/14413144.htm

Posted by john5091 at 11:49 AM | Comments (10)

April 12, 2006

The House is scheduled to vote today on its biggest bill of the session...

April 12, 2006
Pioneer Press

The House is scheduled to vote today on its biggest bill of the session, a measure that would finance $999.9 million in construction projects across the state.

The bonding bill, which would authorize borrowing $949 million and charging user fees to pay the rest, would pay for college classroom and laboratory buildings, parks and trails, bridges and dams and prisons and hospitals for sex offenders.

The bill could determine the fate of such high-profile projects as the Central Corridor light-rail line between the St. Paul and Minneapolis downtowns; additions to prisons in Stillwater, Faribault and Shakopee; and the first step in a 10-year, $366 million plan to build biomedical sciences research laboratories at the University of Minnesota.

Barring a big surprise, the House will pass the bill and send it to a House-Senate conference committee, where negotiators will try to resolve differences between that measure and the Senate's $1 billion capital projects bill. Gov. Tim Pawlenty had proposed spending $931 million on capital improvements.

View the entire story at: http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/politics/capitol/14320942.htm

Posted by reas0011 at 10:58 AM | Comments (7)

April 10, 2006

House offers solid bonding bill

Minnesotans who watch their Legislature closely saw something last week that they haven't seen at this stage of the last several legislative sessions -- a glimmer of hope. This year, for a change, the Legislature is on track to deliver creditable results, on time.

Things began to look up on Tuesday, with two positive developments: the unveiling of a solid, larger-than-expected House bonding bill, and the defeat in a Senate committee of a proposed constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage and civil unions. Thursday also brought welcome House passage of a bill enabling the University of Minnesota to build an on-campus football stadium.

Trouble was expected between the Republican House and the DFL Senate over the size and scope of the bonding bill, this session's raison d'ĂȘtre. That worry lifted when the House presented a building projects package totaling $949 million, only $41 million south of the Senate's figure and a good $104 million more than proposed by Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty. House Republicans apparently want to bring home some bacon this election year, and won't let the governor get in their way.

The House-Senate conference committee on bonding that's expected to convene after the Easter/Passover break will still have plenty to argue about. The Senate, true to form from previous years, was especially generous to higher education. The House tends to favor roads, bridges, water treatment and similar infrastructure projects , and did again this year.

Compromise will involve both sides giving a little from those most-favored lists. We're rooting for the Senate to hang tough where the University of Minnesota is concerned. Inexplicably, the House bill is even more stingy with the university than Pawlenty was. It shortchanges the university's repair and maintenance budget, and says no to a student services building on the Twin Cities campus that would do much to help students find their way through the big institution's bureaucracy. The state's higher education flagship deserves better stewardship.

But, to its credit, the House agreed with the Senate that the next phase of a biosciences building program needs to go forward. With the House and Senate in accord on putting up the state's $40 million share of a $60 million building, Pawlenty ought to fall in line.

View the entire story at: http://www.startribune.com/561/story/358593.html

Posted by reas0011 at 01:22 PM | Comments (7)
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