With a grim financial picture ahead, the University of Alaska Southeast, seen here on Monday, May 25, 2020, could be merged with one of the other two schools in the system. (Peter Segall | Juneau Empire)

With a grim financial picture ahead, the University of Alaska Southeast, seen here on Monday, May 25, 2020, could be merged with one of the other two schools in the system. (Peter Segall | Juneau Empire)

Opinion: Save Alaska’s universities

  • By Art Petersen
  • Tuesday, June 2, 2020 11:40am
  • Opinion

The University of Alaska Board of Regents should preserve Alaska’s three universities. Reasons for doing so are many, but four seem most important.

First, a university campus is a regional economic and cultural engine. Its ability to attract and retain businesses and families are well known. Removing a university from any city would diminish its identity and cultural vitality and deal it a brutal economic blow. As Juneau is the smallest city with a university, the blow to Juneau, especially in this economic downturn, would be the most brutal and doubly so. Thankfully, shuttering any university should not and does not need to happen.

[City opposes UAS absorption]

Second, as “the present” is not static, plans made today must include tomorrow. A vaccine for the coronavirus may come as soon as November. However, a year will be needed before production and distribution can be well underway, and then another year before a careful return to normalcy begins. Within two or three years, though, demand for the full benefits of higher education will return. A few years is not too long to keep the universities intact so that they can recover.

Third, in the meantime, many students are still deciding where to attend college for the fall. During the COVID-19 pandemic, demand for higher education closer to home is an option that students and their families are considering. Talk of closing any campus at this time or letting accreditation lapse will discourage students in Alaska from attending college here. The Board should not trigger this effect. It should promote stability for all three universities no matter how lean it may have to be.

Fourth, if University of Alaska Southeast or any university campus is closed, to rebuild it will take about 25 years. In 1975, I came to Alaska to teach at the new Auke Lake Campus of two buildings and few classrooms. Over many years, UAS added classrooms, program faculty, a fine library and professional staff, student advising, financial aid with community links to scholarships, student housing, food service, medical services and supremely effective distance delivery. Accreditation standards require all of these services to be not just present but of high quality. Shutting down UAS or any university campus will destroy all that has been built over many decades.

True, the plant will remain but as a ghost town. To be functionally alive, a campus needs higher education enterprise that involves students, faculty, staff, and a community in a hundred ways. UAS faculty and staff know their institution, their students, and have the knowledge and skill to deliver instruction and services that meet the high and exacting standards of national accreditation. They built courses that meet regional needs and accreditation standards. A campus plant cannot be brought back to

accredited life in less than a generation because that life would need to be regrown to maturity all over again.

The present is never permanent. The only constant is change. Alaska’s university regents should plan for tomorrow through survival today. “Retrenchment” in education is synonymous with sacrifice, but shuttering an accredited higher learning is synonymous with “annihilation.” Demand for the full benefits of higher education will return. It’s inevitable because Alaskans want self-development, careers, and upward mobility in a competitive, 21st century society. For this return, every region of Alaska deserves equal treatment of its higher education centers. Each university has strengths that merit support and preservation. Alaskans are depending on its Regents to preserve each of the regional universities, however lean that support may be, so that they survive today in shape to recover and prosper tomorrow.

• Art Petersen is a former faculty member of University of Alaska Southeast and a 45-year resident of Juneau. Columns, My Turns and Letters to the Editor represent the view of the author, not the view of the Juneau Empire. Have something to say? Here’s how to submit a My Turn or letter.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, many Louisiana homes were rebuilt with the living space on the second story, with garage space below, to try to protect the home from future flooding. (Infrogmation of New Orleans via Wikimedia, CC BY-SA)
Misperceptions stand in way of disaster survivors wanting to rebuild safer, more sustainable homes

As Florida and the Southeast begin recovering from 2024’s destructive hurricanes, many… Continue reading

The F/V Liberty, captained by Trenton Clark, fishes the Pacific near Metlakatla on Aug. 20, 2024. (Ash Adams/The New York Times)
My Turn: Charting a course toward seafood independence for Alaska’s vulnerable food systems

As a commercial fisherman based in Sitka and the executive director of… Continue reading

People watch a broadcast of Former President Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, delivering a speech at Times Square in New York, on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Graham Dickie/The New York Times)
Opinion: The Democratic Party’s failure of imagination

Aside from not being a lifelong Republican like Peter Wehner, the sentiment… Continue reading

A steady procession of vehicles and students arrives at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé before the start of the new school year on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Let’s consider tightening cell phones restrictions in Juneau schools

A recent uptick in student fights on and off campus has Juneau… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Alaskans are smart, can see the advantages of RCV and open primaries

The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan organization that neither endorses… Continue reading

(Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire file photo)
10 reasons to put country above party labels in election

Like many of you I grew up during an era when people… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letters: Vote no on ballot measure 2 for the future of Alaska

The idea that ranked choice voting (RCV) is confusing is a red… Continue reading

A map shows state-by-state results of aggregate polls for U.S. presidential candidates Donald Trump (red) and Kamala Harris (blue), with states too close to call in grey, as of Oct. 29. (Wikimedia Commons map)
Opinion: The silent Republican Party betrayal

On Monday night, Donald Trump reported that two Pennsylvania counties had received… Continue reading

(Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Election presents stark contrasts

This election, both at the state and federal level, presents a choice… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Supporting ranked choice voting is the honest choice

Some folks are really up in arms about the increased freedom afforded… Continue reading

Tongass National Forest. (U.S. Forest Service photo)
My Turn: Why I oppose privatization of the Tongass rainforest

Sen. Lisa Murkowski has been trying to privatize the Tongass for years.… Continue reading