Christie backs overhaul of New Jersey's university system

January 26, 2012|By James Osborne, Inquirer Staff Writer
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  • Gov. Christie announces his plan, with Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno and Sol J. Barer, chairman of the UMDNJ advisory committee. "Rutgers is good but not great, and we can't compete with good and not great," Christie said.
  • Gov. Christie announces his plan, with Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno and Sol J. Barer, chairman of the UMDNJ advisory committee. "Rutgers is good but not great, and we can't compete with good and not great," Christie said. (MEL EVANS / Associated Press )
  • Barer discusses the recommendations of the panel he chaired for overhauling the state's university system. Tension was high on some campuses.

Gov. Christie offered a proposal Wednesday to overhaul the state's university system, merging schools from Rutgers University and the University of Medicine and Dentistry, and creating a research university in South Jersey.

Rowan University - just 20 years ago a former teachers' college known as Glassboro State - would take over Rutgers-Camden. The combined campus would include a soon-to-open medical school affiliated with Cooper University Hospital in Camden.

The mergers would represent a historic change to the structure of higher education in New Jersey. Whole institutions would shift between universities, and schools with decades of history and extensive alumni networks would disappear in name.

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And staff at the universities, hospitals, and affiliated institutions - which numbers in the thousands - could face layoffs as programs are reconfigured.

"Let there be no doubt about it, this change is going to happen," Christie said at a news conference in Trenton. "I'm going to put the full force of the governor's office behind these recommendations."

UMDNJ would cease to exist in name; University Hospital in Newark, the osteopathic school in Stratford, and other institutions would operate under the banner of a New Jersey Health Sciences University, to be based in Newark.

The school, plagued by scandal over the last decade, would lose the Robert Wood Johnson School of Medicine, the School of Public Health, and the Cancer Institute of New Jersey to the Rutgers system.

Christie painted the mergers as a means to improve a mediocre state university system that has failed to attract research dollars to the degree of other institutions.

"Rutgers is good but not great, and we can't compete with good and not great," he said.

Led by Democratic leader and Cooper chairman George E. Norcross III, South Jersey political and business leaders have pushed for a southern research university as a means to grow regional industry.

"This is a once-in-a-generation thing," said Cooper chief executive officer John Sheridan. "This part of the state has been underfunded for years in terms of higher education."

In Glassboro, news that Rowan's student body could soon grow from around 11,000 to almost 17,000 stirred the imaginations of university officials.

"It will enable us to do the many, many things we couldn't do before: graduate professional degree programs like medicine, public health, biomedical engineering," interim President Ali A. Houshmand said. "It's an exciting time."

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