Saturday, 6 April 2019

Prof Rufus Black Plays Another Card

This turned up yesterday. Also an item on ABC TV news yesterday with the smiling VC. And for those with nothing else to do, a New Game: "VC! Pick the Vocab  Crap!" Instructions - find as many buzz words as you can. Give yourself 
one point per word. Add up the number of points, You win! so give 
yourselves a clap!

NB: Tis might just turn out to be 'FAKE NEWS' AND you will all note that UTAS will "pay its way in Hobart' whereas Launcestonioans have been screwed over by their Council and UTAS. Launceston gifts UTas land now worth $10Million plus and not a word about paying its way as in Hobart. 

NB: NO SUCH COMMITMENT TO PAY RATES IN LAUNCESTON NOT A SAUSAGE ALL COST FALL UPON THE RATEPAYERS

The good Prof Black is talked about elsewhere as "an ethicist", so there is another game you can play. Find the "moral compass in all this" and when you've done so, use it to find the "ethics." 

ABC REPORT: Click Here
GOOD LUCK AND CAREFUL READING!!

University of Tasmania commits to $600m move into Hobart CBD JIM ALOUAT and JAMES KITTO, Mercury April 5, 2019 5:52pm ...................... IN a move destined to change the Hobart CBD forever, the University of Tasmania will move away from its Sandy Bay campus and consolidate its future in the city....................... The game-changing plan will see UTAS develop a city-centric campus in the heart of Hobart during the next 10 to 15 years. It will cost the university $600 million to build its new campus....................... UTAS EXAMINES ‘CITY-CENTRIC’ MODEL IN HOBART...................... UTAS TO REVIEW CAMPUS SITE OPTIONS...................... The campus will run from the original home of the university at the Domain, along Melville St. At the heart of the inner-city campus will be a new central library and public square at the former Webster building and carpark bounded by Melville, Argyle and Bathurst streets....................... In a relief to many, the university will also enter an agreement with Hobart City Council to pay general rates on all its existing and future inner-city buildings for the next decade....................... The decision was announced late on Friday afternoon after a meeting of the UTAS Council in Burnie....................... ttps://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/729c3d69e84cdc17809ce6f561157737?width=1024 The University of Tasmania’s Sandy Bay campus....................... University Chancellor Michael Field said the university had decided on a long-term strategic direction to shift to the city....................... “This will be a long, thorough and deliberative process....................... “We will consult carefully along the way to produce a campus which is a source of great pride for both our university community and the people of greater Hobart.”...................... UTAS will act as steward for the existing Sandy Bay campus land into the future....................... In reaching its decision, the university weighed up two broad directions: the city-centric approach and a distributed model....................... The distributed model would have cost the university $575 million under which ageing Sandy Bay operations would be redesigned and rebuilt in a smaller footprint on the lower part of the existing campus....................... Two-thirds of the Sandy Bay buildings need replacement because of poor ratings for “building condition and functionality”, according to university documents....................... UTAS will retain ownership of the Sandy Bay campus and has plans for its future too. Vice-Chancellor Professor Rufus Black said it would invest in the Sandy Bay campus as a home for its students for the next decade. “In the long term, it will stay as the home for our sporting facilities, accommodation and specialist research facilities. “We will develop it over the long run so it has an appropriate mix of institutions, housing and preserves the green spaces.” ttps://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/4d1ad5f7998b6b885bcaef45a3841ba4?width=650A  map showing the proposed new University of Tasmania precincts. Professor Black said a critical factor in its decision was allowing students living across New Norfolk, Brighton/Bridgewater, Midway Point, Glenorchy and Huonville better access to the uni....................... “University council members saw that as very important,” he said. “It’s critical that more Tasmanians have access to higher education at all stages of life,”...................... The university already owns a significant amount of real estate in central Hobart....................... In the past four years, the uni has spent almost $80 million across properties on Argyle St and Melville St, the former Forestry building and the MidCity, Fountainside and Theatre Royal hotels....................... It has its media school, medicine school, a future performing arts centre and the School of Nursing and Midwifery in the Hobart city precinct. MORE UTAS NEWS:...................... UTAS SPLASHES THE CASH IN BUYING SPREE...................... ‘SIMPLIFICATION AGENDA’ IN UTAS’ SAVINGS BID STUDENTS CHALLENGED EVEN BEFORE CLASS STARTS Professor Black says a city campus would enhance the Hobart CBD and be great for city businesses....................... “It will bring a large number of people into the city for a 24/7 period,” he said. “I think it will help the city sustain and grow.” Reactions have been largely positive to the move....................... Hobart Lord Mayor Anna Reynolds welcomed the news, in particular the university’s 10-year commitment to pay general rates for all its inner-city properties....................... “It provides the council and Hobart community confidence that the university is going to pay its way investing in public infrastructure that will be needed to support this move into the city,” she said. “As Lord Mayor I have discussed with Vice-Chancellor Black the need for a clear agreement on city planning and the adequate funding of infrastructure, so I welcome his comments....................... “It is important that we continue to work together to meet the future requirements of the city.” ttps://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/12814aa60167a2051268724162432a5c?width=1024Hobart Lord Mayor Anna Reynolds has welcomed UTAS’s proposed move and its commitment to pay general rates. Picture: PATRICK GEE Professor Black said the University would now consult with stakeholders to help inform its detailed masterplanning and building design. “Our first step on this journey will be to pause, to listen to our Aboriginal community and ensure our new campus honours the values and history of our first people,” Professor Black said....................... Professor Black said concerns surrounding traffic management, parking and access to family services such as child care would be addressed. Tasmania University Union state council president Sharifah Zaliah Syed-Rohan called on UTAS to continue to consult with students....................... “This consultation must be student-centric and sincerely reflect the diverse perspectives and needs of our student body,” she said. “We believe that the new facilities must be purpose-built to ensure that our students are able to work and study in an environment that facilitates their development and educational demands.” \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ Cautious welcome for UTAS's city move THERE are pros and cons to the University of Tasmania’s impending shift from Sandy Bay to Hobart’s CBD, business and community leaders have said. Overall the feeling is positive but some leaders have cautioned about the logistical challenge the move might bring. Real Estate Institute of Tasmania state executive Tony Collidge said the shift was a win for Hobart but only if the university was paying council rates and not leaving Hobartians “to pick up the tab for all the council costs”. “The other issue is ensuring that there is going to be enough accommodation available once the move happens and that it doesn’t pressure existing rental stock.” Tasmania Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Michael Bailey said UTAS’s CBD student accommodation, including the apartment block at Elizabeth St, brought economic energy to the area and he said he expected additional student learning spaces to do the same. “Looking at it from the HCC’s perspective, I would imagine the council would be seeing the economic benefit the CBD move would bring to Hobart,” he said. Mr Bailey said the shift, which he called “a boon for Hobart”, would need to bring with it some “work on traffic flows and congestion around the CBD”. RACT community and membership general manager Stacey Pennicott said the announcement underpinned the need for a long-term holistic vision for the future of mobility in Greater Hobart. “An increase in students and staff living, working and studying in the CBD will bring great benefits to this area, but also increase pressure on the existing infrastructure and public and active transport networks,” she said. Mrs Pennicott said RACT’s 30-year Greater Hobart Mobility Vision would be launched in the coming weeks. “We look forward to working closely with the University of Tasmania on how our vision works with theirs to make a sustainable future for all Tasmanians,” she said. Tasmanian Small Business Council executive officer Robert Mallet said the UTAS move to the city “wouldn’t be good for anyone”. “The CBD is about shopping, administration, Government, and business and very shortly it’s going to look like an overgrown high school,” he said “People can argue the economic benefits with having more people on the streets, but they are only students who don’t have the same amount of disposable income as many others.” A National Tertiary Education Union report released last month, which surveyed its Tasmanian-based members on the relocation, indicated the majority of those surveyed did not support a move. Of the 48 per cent of members who returned the survey, 75 per cent chose the distributed model (Sandy Bay campus), 16 per cent favoured the CBD model, and 7 per cent were undecided. Independent candidate for Nelson Madeleine Ogilvie said UTAS’s decision was “extremely disappointing” and would “create a gap in the cultural, intellectual, and creative life of the Sandy Bay community that would be very hard to fill”.

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