Politics & Government
Expansion on Horizon for Rowan After Passage of Higher Ed Bond
The Gloucester County university has big projects ready to set in motion once bond funds begin rolling in.
During last week's general election, New Jersey residents voted to approve the Building Our Future Bond Act by an overwhelming majority, with 62.8 percent of the voters saying yes. And although the Bond Act passed just one week ago, Rowan University already has plans on how they want to spend the money.
Rowan wanted the bond to pass to secure funds to expand their capacity. University representatives claimed that they have had to turn away qualified students in recent years because of overcapacity.
Rowan President Ali Houshmand in particular highlighted capacity limitations during a visit by state Senate President Steve Sweeney in October.
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“We've had to turn away very qualified students from our engineering department,” said Houshmand in October. “Not because they weren't good enough, but because we had no where to put them.”
Expansion of the school's engineering building and South Jersey Tech Park top Rowan's wishlist of projects completed with the bond money. The Bond Act stipulates that designated research institutions, like Rowan, will receive a total of $300 million.
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Houshmand said his university's lofty expansion goals include an overall goal of expanding Rowan so that it can someday hold 20,000 students. He explained that bond money is necessary to do this, as tuition increases alone cannot provide adequate funding for these projects.
Rowan now waits for the bond money to roll in. The State of New Jersey has not yet made public how or when the funds will be distributed to the individual schools.
