Contact: Mark
Johnston at 605-773-3212 or Janelle Toman at 605-773-3455
Public Higher Education Looks to the Future in Sioux
Falls
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. –
Gov. Mike Rounds says he will ask the 2006 Legislature to
approve acquiring land in northwest Sioux
Falls to create a permanent location
for the state’s public university system. The governor,
joined by members of the South Dakota Board of Regents,
announced Tuesday he will also ask legislators to
appropriate $8 million for construction of an instructional
classroom building at the new site.
“The bottom line is public higher education is critical
to Sioux Falls and South
Dakota’s long-term future. A strong Sioux
Falls economy benefits all of South
Dakota,” Rounds said. “But to plan
for that future, public higher education in Sioux
Falls must have permanent space to
grow to meet these needs.”
The public university system currently leases space in
parts of two buildings on the Southeast Technical Institute
campus. “That space already is at capacity and allows us no
room for further expansion,” said Regents President Harvey
C. Jewett. Jewett said state transportation department
property adjacent to Interstate 29 and a mile south of I-90
provides approximately 210 acres of usable land for
the incremental growth and development of facilities needed
to meet Sioux Falls’
needs well into the future.
Pointing out that Sioux Falls is
estimated to grow to more than 300,000 people by 2040, with
another 60,000 in the four-county metropolitan area, the
governor said he is concerned to hear that only 20 percent
of the city’s adult population has a college degree. “In
order to grow our economy, which will be based on innovation
and new knowledge development, we must provide a lot more
access to higher education,” Rounds said.
Rounds said his vision of South
Dakota as a leader in research and
technology development also demands a greater presence for
public higher education in the state’s largest city.
Jewett said the Great Plains Education Foundation Inc.
has agreed to provide the Board of Regents with $5.8 million
to acquire the DOT property at market value, but legislative
approval is needed to complete the transaction. Jewett said
the location near two interstate highways is ideal for
commuter students, and public infrastructure services are
readily available. “More importantly, the city of Sioux
Falls and this community’s leaders
support the plan, which should accommodate growth and
related development for the next century or more,” Jewett
said.
Jewett stressed that the location would not become a
separate accredited university. It will continue as an
instructional site for public higher education, offering
courses, degrees and programs from the six existing public
universities in the state’s system.
Dave Link,