Sunday, July 5, 2015

OSU-Cascades 4-Year campus site prep underway



            Heavy equipment has begun clearing land for what will be Central Oregon’s first four-year university campus on Bend’s west side -- even as a group opposing the selected site takes its case to the state Court of Appeals after setbacks in earlier appeals.
            OSU-Cascades officials announced June 18 they would start construction “as soon as required permits” were issued by the City of Bend.
            By the week of June 29 equipment was on site and workers were cutting trees and moving dirt for construction roads. The date was significant in that it was the deadline for a group of mostly west side residents opposed to the campus to file an appeal with the state Court of Appeals.
Site preparation is underway at the OSU-Cascades campus
            The site opponents, acting under the umbrella Truth in Site, had earlier lost appeals of the city’s approval of the first phase campus by the city, and a subsequent appeal rebuffed by the state Land Use Board of Appeals.
            One spokesman was reported by local media to say the opponents would take their fight to the Oregon Supreme Court. However, by July 4 the latest action item posted on the Trust in Site website was before the LUBA decision.
            OSU-Cascades has already delayed start of the proposed campus on 10 acres on the northwest corner of NW Chandler Avenue and NW Century Drive pending the earlier appeals.
            To accommodate the first group of approximately 100 students in Fall of 2015 the university will provide classes and housing at facilities of Central Oregon Community College and other classes at the OSU-Cascades Graduate & Research Center on Colorado Avenue.
            In a statement issues June 18, OSU President Ed Ray noted that every delay of construction would mean, “..another group of young people leave Central Oregon to seek a four-year university degree, and many never return.”
            Bend and Central Oregon is has the largest population of any area in the state without a university, Ray emphasized, but a 30-year “aspiration...is finally being realized.”
            OSU Cascades Vice President Becky Johnson said the start of construction could make it possible for students could attend classes and live on the new campus site by the Fall of 2016.
            The initial 10-acre campus will have two buildings, one a 113,000 square foot dormitory and dining center and the other a 43,650 square foot academic building, altogether designed to accommodate 1,890 students.
            At issue with opponents of the site is the lack of a master plan for an adjacent 46-acre site, known as the pumice mine property, on which the university has a purchase option.
            Although opponents argued the university should have developed a master plan including the larger site, both the hearing officer and state LUBA decisions ruled otherwise.
            Even with the appeal to the state Court of Appeals, Johnson said in announcing the start of construction that, “Oregon state is confident that significant construction progress can be made while a potential appeal is being considered and still allow the university to adjust to changes that could result from an unlikely remand or reversal by the Court of Appeals.”