Notes from the Oct. 26, 2001 Regents Meeting
by George Zamora
SOCORRO, N.M., October 30, 2001 -- New Mexico Tech's planned Magdalena Ridge Observatory
(MRO) stands to receive an additional $12 million in federal
funding for the 2002-2003 fiscal year, Tech President Daniel H.
López recently told the university's governing board of
regents, after having returned from a successful lobbying trip
to Washington, D.C. to garner further fiscal support for the state-of-the-art
optical observatory.
"Considerable efforts have once again been mounted by
U.S. Representative Joe Skeen, as well as U.S. Senator Pete Domenici,
to secure adequate funding for the construction and operation
of the MRO facility," López said.
In addition, the MRO also will receive budgetary managementassistance
from the Office of Naval Research, the university president recently
told regents at their monthly board meeting.
Construction of the MRO is scheduled to begin next year atop
the Magdalena Mountains in central New Mexico, near New Mexico
Tech's Langmuir Laboratory
for Atmospheric Research.
Once completed, the observatory will be situated along the
main ridge of the Magdalena Mountains at an elevation of 10,600
feet above sea level, making it the fourth highest observatory
site in the world.
At its October 26 meeting, the board of regents also were
briefed by Tech President López on "very preliminary"
enrollment figures which indicate a downturn in the numbers of
both student
applications received and paid applicants for next academic year,
when compared to applications received last year from freshmen
and transfer students during the same time period at the state-supported
research university.
"We continue to struggle in this area," López
conceded, "however, our graduate student enrollment continues
to climb, which in terms of state funding makes a big impact in
making up
the difference."
López further informed the regents that, in an effort
to avoid having to close down the university's Children's Center,
he recently had appointed a joint campus/community committee to
explore different options, with the goal of having the child-care
facility generate enough income to pay its own operating costs.
The Tech Children's Center has operated under annual budget
deficits for as long as eight years now, the president said.
After some discussion of the issue, the Tech Board of Regents
voted to pass a resolution which recommends that President López
and his administration continue to work to find a way to keep
the on-campus Children's Center open.
In another presentation made by a Tech administrator to the
board, the regents were given an update by Steve Bobinsky, director
for advancement, on draft policies on naming, planned
giving, and investments which will be generated through the university's
upcoming capital fund-raising campaign.
The regents voted to accept all of the policies, along with
a revision to the investment policy, which would put it in concurrence
with a newly approved revision the board previously made to New
Mexico Tech's general investment policy.
Marisa Wolfe, coordinator of Tech's community college, also
gave the regents a brief overview of the university's community
college, an educational division of Tech which she described as
being "for the community and by the community."
Also during the meeting, State Land Commissioner Ray Powell
presented a report on new activities and facilities initiated
by the State Land Office on state-owned lands.
As New Mexico's designated steward of state lands, the State
Land Office holds in trust more than nine million acres of public
land, and is charged with distributing income generated by those
properties to 22 beneficiaries, including New Mexico Tech and
all the other state universities.
"New Mexico Tech is a crown jewel, not only for New
Mexico, but for the entire nation," Powell emphasized several
times during his talk.
In other matters considered at its monthly meeting, the New
Mexico Tech Board of Regents approved the following measures:
- a resolution to allow the university to participate in the
New Mexico State Highway and Transportation Department's Local
Government Road Fund Program;
- a bid for the purchases of $150,000 of telecommunication
supplies and materials used to maintain and expand the telephone,
Internet, and other communications lines on campus;
- the appointment of Jorge Hygino Braga Sampaio, Jr. to the
full-time faculty position of assistant professor of petroleum
engineering;
- the granting of the title of "professor emeritus of
mineral engineering" to recently retired Tech professor
Kalman Oravecz;
- additional funding of $650,000 for scholarships from funds
generated from an endowment established through the New Mexico
Tech Research Foundation, along with $100,000 for marketing the
university; and
- an agreement between the New Mexico Tech Research Foundation
and the New Mexico Tech Board of Regents.
After conducting the meeting as the New Mexico Tech Board
of Regents, the members convened as trustees of the New Mexico
Tech Employee Benefit Trust, and were given a status report.
-NMT-
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