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URI racks up $400M in delayed capital projects, maintenance

Chris Curtis

Issue date: 4/8/09 Section: News
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04/08/09 - The University of Rhode Island has about $400 million worth of deferred campus maintenance projects, and according to Vice President of Administration Robert Weygand, there's no end in sight.

The $400 million figure comes from a Sightlines report, a Connecticut-based facilities management consulting firm hired by URI to review the physical condition of campus buildings and the costs associated with improvements.

The university should be spending $9 to $13 million on maintenance, but is given closer to $4.5 million per year from the state, Weygand said. The total figure for this year was $4.4 million.

The figure represents the gradual buildup of the difference between the amount of money spent each year and the amount that should be spent, he said.

"Every year we're falling behind $7 million, $8 million, and you just build up over a period of time because after 20 years all of a sudden it's real money," Weygand explained.

The best course of action in addressing the problem would be to set aside university money to supplement the state funds, Weygand said.

But because of a decrease in state funding, this money would have to come from increases in tuition and fees, "which we don't think we can do at this time," he said.

This means that the university will continue to delay projects, and the maintenance deficit will continue to grow.

Though Weygand said the state of maintenance on the campus is similar to those of other universities, the University of Connecticut, a comparable institution of higher education, has about $218 million in deferred maintenance and capital projects on its Storrs campus as of March 2009, according to its Web site. UConn has approximately double the number of buildings on its Storrs campus than URI does on its Kingston campus.

He compared the campus to an old automobile. "[The car] still runs pretty well … but you know that in a little bit that muffler's going to go, or you need to do some things there, and we're just pushing off the inevitable," Weygand said. "And we shouldn't be doing that, but unfortunately, because of our fiscal situation we must."
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mayfly

Dr. Patrick Logan

posted 4/08/09 @ 8:36 AM EST

This is truly an astounding and dismaying backlog, but no surprise given the visible state of campus buildings; URI administration and maintenance staff have done well with what they have, but the annual shortfall and cumulative decay point to a dysfunctional state funding mechanism. (Continued…)

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