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University Of Kentucky Approves New $7 Million Industry-Funded Dorm Named After Coal

Posted by Amanda Terkel, Think Progress at 9:15 PM on October 28, 2009.


Sadly the university is taking a step backward.

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You can’t make this stuff up, as this Think Progress repost makes clear.

A group led by Alliance Coal CEO Joseph Craft recently proposed donating $7 million to the University of Kentucky for a new dorm for the men’s basketball team. The catch, however, is that the dorm would have to be named after Craft’s true love: coal. The proposed change sparked intense protests from local environmentalists and students. One professor said that as universities become “models for new energy sources,” putting “coal” on a prominent building could “make it difficult to attract top students and faculty members to the university.”

[JR:  Yes, coal industry will spend millions for a new dorm -- and yet Massey Energy refused to fund a new school so students can move away from coal processing plant!]

Yesterday afternoon, the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees voted 16-3 to approve the proposal for the new dorm, which will be named the “Wildcat Coal Lodge.” Significantly, two of the “no” votes were from faculty representative Ernie Yanarella and Student Government President Ryan Smith, who said he opposed the motion “as a voice for the student body.”

Students in the audience were reportedly not allowed to speak at the meeting. After the vote, people began chanting, “Move forward, not backward,” forcing the trustees to temporarily recess. More on the events at the meeting:

 

The vote set off shouts from about 30 protesters, mostly students, who attended the meeting.

Big Coal is about to go down, and the university’s going down with them,” said Cor de Jong, who described himself as “a Lexingtonian and a basketball fan.”

A statement from students was passed out to board members moments before the vote. “They did not read our statement,” said Katie Goldey, a senior majoring in international studies. “They weren’t even given a chance to read it.”

 

Ironically, because the building costs more than $5 million, it is required to “meet the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards.”

coal-for-dummies.jpgThe coal industry has been taking a greater “public role” in the University of Kentucky lately. While Craft has already donated millions of dollars and has a basketball practice facility named in his honor, this is the first time that coal is being specifically recognized. Last weekend, however, there was a “students only” basketball practice “sponsored by Joe Craft and the Friends of Coal.”

The battle over America’s clean energy future is increasingly being fought on college campuses. As Greenwire reported recently, environmentalists are turning to student activists to get the word out about dirty coal, while American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity — the coal industry’s biggest lobbying group — “spent the summer sending activists to 264 cities in eight states, where they attended community events and visited college campuses.” More here and here on efforts to get dirty coal off U.S. campuses.

Digg!

Tagged as: coal

Amanda Terkel is Deputy Research Director at the Center for American Progress and serves as Deputy Editor for The Progress Report and ThinkProgress.org at the Center for American Progress.


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Well at least the cleaning staff can make claims about "clean Coal"
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on Oct 28, 2009 9:28 PM   
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They will be the only ones who can say it honestly.

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No surprise there.
Posted by: Lex Thomas on Oct 28, 2009 10:17 PM   
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If it's money they want, it's money they'll get no matter how dirty.

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as long as we are talking dirty energy, lets talk about nuclear waste
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on Oct 28, 2009 10:20 PM   
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Dr. Kathy McCarthy pretends there is an answer, DOE

Reality is a little less cheery.

Waste Management

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Do you want to live in a cave?
Posted by: jdlark on Oct 29, 2009 4:50 AM   
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Can't we quit bashing a naturally occurring substance like coal, and at least talk realistically about our energy needs? I thank those who sound the trumpet on pollution and things like it, but can't we come to a middle ground somewhere? Its a great fuel that is plentiful and cheap. I for one like electricity and its modern benefits. Let's make it as clean as possible and use it, unless of course some of you want to quit sucking up all the electricity and live in the wild somewhere. Oh, but what fuel would you use then?

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WHY
Posted by: berta on Oct 29, 2009 9:35 AM   
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do a dozen or so basketball players need a new $7 million dorm all for themselves? Are they too good to live among the "regular" students? Or maybe the university needs to isolate some of them who need extra help [re: grades] so they can remain eligible to play?

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Did we forget...
Posted by: Tim Brown on Oct 29, 2009 10:20 AM   
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...FedEx Field, Lincoln Financial Field, Wrigley field, Forbes Field, Busch Stadium, Wachovia Center...in fact, 3/4ths of the sports stadiums are named after a corporate entity. At least he didn't insist on naming it Promise Keepers Arena...

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links of london
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The reality of decreased tax revenues
Posted by: doneman2000 on Nov 12, 2009 3:54 PM   
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Living in the state in question, Kentucky, for a good many years, I'm abit familiar with this. U.K. basketball is king in a state where there are no pro franchises of any kind, except maybe a triple A baseball team. Back in the mid seventies a coal company built Wildcat Lodge the basketball dorm. After the team settled into their new surroundings the NCAA came in and made them brick up the firplaces, take out the pinball games etc. and had them move in some "regular" students. The whole idea was to make the Lodge more like a regular dorm since a player shouldn't have anything better than a regular student according to the NCAA. There was some bickering back and forth about the extra long beds and I don't remember if they had to take them out. My son started school there in 2003. I believe tuition at that time was about $2500 a semester. It has gone up about 15% every year since that time. If the school is in need of a building it almost has to be funded by outside interests. Like so many other states Kentucky is hamstrung by falling tax revenues and a half billion dollar budget deficit. Higher education is only one service were cuts were a necessity. Coal is still a very important commodity as it employs thousands across the bluegrass state with jobs that pay well and have good benefit packages. If there is some way to utilize coal without the pollutant discharge it will be found by researchers at someplace like U.K. I have no problem with the company spending $7 million. The Fortune 500 and well healed indiviuals donate money all the time to colleges. As long as the NCAA is o.k. with it why should anyone else have a problem?

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Coal
Posted by: Fashionista on Nov 17, 2009 8:31 PM   
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I agree with the previous comment. Coal is still an important commodity. Besides, who can afford to turn down such an offer? First Class, very interesting and important assessment & analysis.
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