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From the VP: Dispatch from Denver

IMG_0561 IMG_0562Each year the Seattle Metro Chamber of Commerce takes a delegation of political, business, education and non profit leaders to visit another U.S. city to learn how they are growing their economy and addressing challenges all big cities face from transportation to homelessness.

This year I’m proud to be joining the Chamber’s intercity study mission to Denver — like Seattle a fast growing and vibrant city that is also dealing with the same issues Seattle is struggling with as a  result of their hot economy.

This morning we heard from a panel of business leaders about how they formed a regional economic development organization that works on behalf of nine counties in the Denver area — a true regional approach that the central Puget Sound cities and counties are just now working to create.

This afternoon we are visiting The Commons on Champa — a former police facility that now is an epicenter of Denver’s startup community.

Like Seattle too, Denver benefits from a strong higher education community anchored by the University of Colorado that has a strong presence in the city even though the main campus is located in nearby Boulder.

Our delegation wraps up our visit tomorrow afternoon.

UW celebrates groundbreaking of new Population Health Building

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Yesterday, University of Washington marked the official groundbreaking of the university’s new 290,000-square-foot Population Health Building, a facility that will house the Population Health Initiative launched by the UW in 2016. The Population Health Initiative is a 25-year effort to create a world where all people can live healthier and more fulfilling lives. The UW defines population health as revolving around three major pillars — human health, environmental resilience, and social and economic equity.

As part of the initiative, the new building will create a space for interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation to better understand and improve all the factors that influence the health and well-being of populations here and across the globe. The Institute for Health Metrics and EvaluationDepartment of Global Health and portions of the School of Public Health all will be located in the building.Read more from UW News.

Redefining reality at CoMotion

At the UW’s CoMotion Labs Lacey Leavitt and Joe Jacobs of Electric Dream Factory, a virtual content studio, are helping shape an inclusive future for the virtual reality industry. COMotion Labs is part of CoMotion, the UW’s collaborative innovation hub and a place that is about technology and the people technology serves. Learn more about this Electric Dream Factory and about CoMotion Labs here.

 

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Photo: Photo courtesy of CoMotion

FY 2018 Federal Funding update

Wondering how your federally funded program fared in the FY 2018 omnibus? Our Federal Relations team has a spreadsheet for that. Find more information on their website.

From the VP: Has Higher Education Become a Partisan Issue?

When I first started as a young legislative staffer in California in the early 1980’s, I got my very first upfront taste of partisan divides on a variety of policy issues between Democrats and Republicans.  Big government or small government?  Longer prison sentences or more rehabilitation?  Increased or decreased welfare payments, they argued about most everything.  But over the years, as I progressed in my career and relocated back to Washington, I noticed that when it came to higher education, both sides of the aisle seemed to agree it was a good thing.

Perhaps there wasn’t enough money every budget cycle to fund the system appropriately, but the idea that everyone who was qualified should have the opportunity to earn a college degree wasn’t a partisan issue.  And more importantly, universities were seen as a trusted source for information and research.

So this latest Gallup Poll has me concerned.  Confidence in U.S. colleges is quite different depending on your political orientation with more than half of Democrats having a great deal of confidence in higher education and only a third of Republicans feeling the same way.  According to Gallup, much of Republicans low confidence stems from a belief that universities are liberally biased and don’t allow students to think for themselves or be allowed to advocate a more conservative agenda.  Democrats with low confidence in U.S. colleges point to skyrocketing tuition and deteriorating quality.

While there are surely some colleges and universities that fit one or some of these partisan stereotypes, my experience is that public research universities like the UW are much more open and tolerant of a variety of viewpoints and certainly of both high quality and more affordable than the average voter might think.

The challenge of course for all of public higher education is getting this message out to taxpayers and prospective students and their families.  Given these sobering poll results, it’s a challenge we cannot afford not to address.