LJ World
April 25, 2011
Despite the state’s budget woes, higher education officials are  hoping that when legislators reconvene this week, they will approve a  high-dollar initiative to produce more engineers.  
The push to boost engineering graduates has been one of the “bright  spots” of the 2011 legislative session, said Kansas University  Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little.
“We need to increase engineers by 50 to 60 percent,” she said. “At  KU, we must expand our teaching facilities. We would recruit more  (engineering students) if we had a place to put them.”
The Kansas Senate has approved a plan that calls for spending $4  million in the fiscal year that starts July 1, 2012, and $7 million for  each year after. The state funds would come from casino gambling  revenues, and the universities — KU, Kansas State and Wichita State —  would have to provide matching funds.
The bill would also allow the issuance of $195 million in bonds to  build engineering facilities.
Supporters of the proposal say the demand for more engineers will  increase in the next few years, especially with the announcement that  Boeing will build the next generation of air refueling tankers, and with  the growing bioscience and renewable energy industries.
Today, legislators, industry executives, members of the Kansas Board  of Regents and representatives from KU, K-State and Wichita State are  meeting at AGCO Corp. in Hesston to discuss the initiative.
On Wednesday, the House Appropriations Committee will hold a hearing  on the proposal as the Legislature reconvenes.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Kansas higher education officials pushing initiative to produce more engineers
Labels:
Education,
Investment,
United States
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