The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper
W E D N E S DAY, F E B R UA R Y 4 , 2 015
Delegates to review U Pay It Forward
Athletic dept reports $3.5M operating loss for past year Officials: Future Big Ten revenue, increased ticket sales will help
Bill could require USM to study new tuition plan
By Aaron Kasinitz @AaronKazreports Senior staff writer
By Jon Banister @J_Banister Senior staff writer
This university’s athletic department reported about $3.5 million in operating losses during fiscal year 2014 at a University System of Maryland Finance Committee meeting Thursday, a number that adds to mounting debt but hasn’t concerned administrators. Though operating losses nearly tripled from fiscal year 2013, Damon Evans, the athletic department’s chief financial officer, said he expected the increase. Evans said the department has a plan in place that should produce a budget surplus by 2018 and maintained that the losses from the past year don’t hinder progress toward that goal. This university will use its Big Ten revenue installments to trim the athletic department’s debt, Evans said. He also cited a 25 percent increase in football ticket sales this past season as well as the men’s basketball team’s recent resurgence as reasons for optimism. “It’s a combination of things,” Evans said. “We have increased benefits from the Big Ten, and when you’re seeing an increase in ticket sales, you can drive money to the institution, and that will help allow us to reach a surplus.” After university President Wallace Loh announced this university’s move from the ACC to the Big Ten in November 2012 — a decision rooted in economics — he approved a plan by a president’s commission to ensure that the athletic department would repay its debt.
james levin/the diamondback
— sky high — University, flight safety advocates clash over building heights By Joe Zimmermann @JoeMacZim Senior staff writer The College Park Airport, the world’s oldest airport still in continuous use, could see less air traffic as more construction projects sprout up along Route 1 and on this university’s campus. Standing on the historic runway where the Wright brothers once helped train the first military pilots, longtime pilot Kurt Schneckenburger pointed in the direction of the campus. “You’ve got the [University] View there. Then Clark Hall will come next to it. And [the
Hotel at the University of Maryland] will be next to that,” said Schneckenburger, a Beltsville resident. “You’re building a wall.” Though not directly adjacent to the airport, these three buildings would stretch across the horizon in front of the airport runway. So many buildings, Schneckenburger said, could be difficult to fly around, especially on hotter days when planes have less lift. If it is too much of a challenge to fly planes from the 105-year-old airport, he said, it could go into disuse. The View is currently the only completed
The House of Delegates is considering a bill to study a Pay It Forward program that could dramatically change the way students pay for college. Under a Pay It Forward program, high school graduates would not have to pay any upfront cost to attend college. Instead, they would agree to pay a percentage of their income after graduation for a set number of years. In Oregon, which will be the first state to test a pilot of this program in the 2016-17 academic year if it passes an Oregon General Assembly vote this spring, 4,000 randomly selected students will pay between 1.5 and 4 percent of their income for 20 years after they graduate. While this bill would only commission the Board of Regents to study the possibility of implementing such a program in this state, the bill’s sponsor said it’s an important first step. “This state has a lot of untapped potential in students that would be great in college and will be able to come back and really contribute to our economy, but they just can’t afford to go upfront,” Del. Kirill Reznik (D-Montgomery) said. “This program would open up that funnel of opportunity and be able to let anybody who wants to go to college get into college on their merits and succeed in college.” Student Government Association President Patrick Ronk testified in favor of the bill at a House appropriations
See BUILDINGS, Page 2
See athletics, Page 2
See FORWARD, Page 3
Student group calls for better water policies
Resident Life strategic plan restructured amid budget cuts 15-year plan includes new dorms, dining hall
MaryPIRG advocates Senate water act review
By Morgan Eichensehr @MEichensehr Staff writer
By Josh Magness @josh_mag Staff writer As members of Congress consider expanding the scope of the Clean Water Act, some students at this university are working to strengthen the CAMERON JackSON holds a “Save the Bay” sign outside of Stamp Student Union yesterday to show support for extending the Clean Water Act. A Senate committee will hold a hearing today. josh loock/the diamondback act’s protections. The Senate Committee on Envi- gress to consider in response to a 2001 ruling that a body of water must ronmental and Public Works and the pair of Supreme Court decisions be “navigable by boat” to be protectHouse Committee on Transporta- in 2001 and 2006 that limited the ed. The changes would redefine the tion and Infrastructure are holding a bodies of water protected by the definition of federal waters so that smaller bodies of water are protected, hearing today to discuss intensifying Clean Water Act. According to Morgan Folger, the even if they are not navigable. federal regulation of waters under the “The proposed rule change is going law, which governs water pollution. campaign co-coordinator for MaryPIRG’s Clean Water Champions camThe Environmental Protection Agency proposed changes for Con- paign, one such limitation was the See WATER, Page 3
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As a result of the state-mandated $15.6 million budget cut to this university, planned renovation and construction projects will have to be re-evaluated, Department of Resident Life officials said. Resident Life’s On-Campus Student Housing Strategic Plan, first presented to the university community in April, details more than $700 million in expected housing construction and renovations over the next 15 years. The largest housing project outlined in the plan, Academic Village, will now have to be rescheduled
because there will not be the necessary funds available to complete the Academic Village when originally expected, Resident Life Director Deb Grandner said. Construction of the Academic Village, a private-public partnership housing project that would include three new dorms with 1,500 new beds and a dining hall in Lot 1, initially was scheduled to begin in summer 2016 and conclude by 2019. It is expected to cost about $170 million, Resident Facilities Director Jon Dooley said. “Originally, we were going to pursue the Academic Village first,” Grandner said, “but we may be reorganizing the project flow.” Instead, Resident Life will first pursue a smaller, less expensive building project slated for the varsity practice fields near the Ellicott Community,
Celebrate the fine art of basketball. See PLAN, Page 3
Celebrate the fine art of basketball.
SPORTS
OPINION
BOUNCING BACK
STAFF EDITORIAL: Pay It Forward model
Despite a recent string of poor play, Terrapins men’s basketball coach Mark Turgeon remains confident in his squad entering tonight’s bout with Penn State P. 8
The higher education funding bill could help with tuition P. 4
Celebrate the fine art of basketball.
DIVERSIONS
HIGH TECH AT SUNDANCE Films are getting a dose of virtual reality P. 6
The Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center is proud to support Maryland Basketball.
Go Terps!
Celebrate the fine art
of basketball.
The Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center is proud to support Maryland Basketball.
Go Terps!