By Bob Plain in Rhode Island’s Future
URI President Dooley signs agreement with Navatek CEO in 2013. Still going strong, the deal has produced dozens of well-paid jobs for URI graduates. (Photo by Will Collette) |
One is a $25.5 million
upgrade to Bliss Hall, a prominent classroom building on the Quadrangle at the
center of campus that was built in 1929, and “hasn’t really been renovated
since then,” said URI President David Dooley in a recent interview with RI Future.
“The exterior will
look exactly the same except the air conditioners won’t be sticking out the
window anymore because we will have state-of-the-art HVAC,” Dooley explained,
“and there will be an addition on the back facing all the new engineering construction
that will be going on behind Bliss Hall starting next year.”
The Bliss Hall
renovation is part of an overall $150 million project, started under Governor
Chafee, to upgrade the engineering program and its facilities, which Dooley
described as a major area of growth at URI.
“We know it is one of
our fastest growing colleges,” he said, noting there are more than 30 local
businesses started by graduates of URI’s engineering school.
“We know that
every year we have more applications to the College of Engineering than we did
the year before. We know we can’t accommodate all the qualified applicants that
want to come here to become engineers.”
The second part of
Question 4 would direct $20 million to fund “innovation campuses” – or
partnerships with the private sector.
“We want to do things that broadly build a robust and successful economy in this state and in the nation,” Dooley told me.
“I do think we know
enough about the importance of innovation and growing the American economy and
keeping America competitive in an increasingly competitive global economy and
we know enough about how innovation can fuel not just economic prosperity but
also enhance the social fabric of the state and the nation to know that these
kind of centers – which are well-precedented, and there are a wealth of success
stories out there – can work, can be a magnate for investment in Rhode Island
and can attract new talent into Rhode Island as well as create a wealth of new
opportunities for the Rhode Islanders that are already here.”
Companies would apply
in a public process, that has yet to be defined, and provide matching funds.
The $20 million could go to several companies, or just one.
“We know that they
are going be selected on the basis of what looks like a good return on Rhode
Island’s investment in terms of new jobs, new businesses and economic growth,”
Dooley said. “How those get translated into very specific points is yet to be
determined. We certainly expect to play a role in that because we think we have
a lot of expertise to share in those areas.”
URI already has such
partnerships with companies such as Amgen, Hasbro, Ratheon and Schneider
Electric.
“We’ve already got
some examples of companies that have come to Rhode Island specifically because
they wanted to work closely with URI,” Dooley said, mentioning Navitek in
Wakefield. “They are a Hawaii-based company. They opened up their second office
right here in proximity to URI just so they could work with URI faculty and
students on ocean engineering.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: That Peacedale company is Navatek which has created dozens of VERY high-paid jobs, nearly all held by Rhode Islanders, including my nephew Chris. CLICK HERE for more details. It's quite an extraordinary but under-publicized story.
It wasn't tax credits or corporate welfare that lured Navatek to set up its first mainland USA to build here in Rhode Island, but the chance to get first dibs on the top graduates from URI's Engineering programs. They created several dozen jobs for Rhode Islanders that came with great pay and benefits, giving graduates a reason to stay here in RI.
This is a clear demonstration of the fact that investing in higher education really pays off! Over the past three years, it has amazed me that the Navatek success story hasn't publicized as proof of how to do real job creation. - W. Collette.
It wasn't tax credits or corporate welfare that lured Navatek to set up its first mainland USA to build here in Rhode Island, but the chance to get first dibs on the top graduates from URI's Engineering programs. They created several dozen jobs for Rhode Islanders that came with great pay and benefits, giving graduates a reason to stay here in RI.
This is a clear demonstration of the fact that investing in higher education really pays off! Over the past three years, it has amazed me that the Navatek success story hasn't publicized as proof of how to do real job creation. - W. Collette.
Dooley said he was
comfortable, both professionally and personally, if a defense contractor
started an innovation campus with URI.
“To a degree, I can be
comfortable with that because I do think we have a responsibility as the
world’s leading democracy to provide leadership and in our 21st Century world
that continues to mean that in addition to all the robust diplomatic efforts
you can mount, you have to have the military capability to say this is what
needs to happen or to intervene, if necessary,” he said.
“That’s how I think
about it individually, as the president I think about it as our responsibility
is really to serve all the people of Rhode Island and therefore that includes
individuals who are working in the defense industry here in Rhode Island.”
Dooley said he doesn’t
worry that the matching funds will incentivize the university to educate for
the market, rather than for enlightenment. He said URI’s general education
requirements guarantee that can’t happen.
“It is the kind of
investment that I think Rhode Island needs to continue to make in order to
build not just an economy but a society that is robust and vibrant,” he said.
“It’s about driving education, driving research forward and driving innovation.
Because that nexus of innovation, the research, development transfer component
of innovation been such a source of growth for the American economy ever since
World War II, frankly.”
Bob Plain is the
editor/publisher of Rhode Island's Future. Previously, he's worked as a
reporter for several different news organizations both in Rhode Island and
across the country.