WSU Today Article 4/12-07

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Nils Peterson

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Apr 17, 2007, 1:02:17 AM4/17/07
to SaveTheBus
Faculty: bus service is crucial

By Bill London, WSU Today

Fred Gittes likes the bus.

Gittes, clinical associate professor of physics at Washington State
University, knows that the intercampus bus service to the University
of Idaho and Moscow is important to his students and vital for their
education.

"Ten of the 28 students in my electrodynamics course (Physics 541) are
from the UI," Gittes said. "Their presence helps create a critical
mass for lively discussion benefiting all of us, and those students
come here on the bus. I am very pleased that the bus is expected to
keep running."

Continuation of the bus service was put in doubt when the UI announced
in 2005 that its annual $100,000 contribution would end this summer.

However, last month a tentative and temporary solution to the impasse
was announced. The city of Moscow, the UI and the Associated Students
of UI patched together a one-year commitment of $100,000 to join the
ongoing financial support from WSU of equivalent size.

That solution will continue the present service contract with
Wheatland Express, until the summer of 2008. In addition, the UI
funding must be approved by the Idaho State Board of Education at its
April 19 meeting in Moscow.

The lack of solid funding from Idaho leaves the long-term future of
the bus in doubt.

To seek solutions and maintain service between the two universities,
supporters (ONLINE @ www.savethebus.org) are continuing to gather
information about ridership and academic impact of the shuttle
service.

According to a February 2007 survey by Michael Kyte, director of the
National Institute of Advanced Transportation Technology at the UI, of
the 442 daily bus riders, 39 percent are UI students, 21 percent are
WSU students and 28 percent are WSU faculty and staff.

Mary Sanchez Lanier, associate dean of the College of Sciences, is
convinced that the bus has "incalculable value" to both universities.

"This shuttle bus service was born two decades ago when both our
universities recognized that we could best achieve our goals of
excellence by building programs that complemented one another,"
Sanchez Lanier explained. "Cooperative classes fulfilled that vision,
and the bus service was essential for transporting students to those
courses."

That spirit of cooperation has grown. Today, there are 172 WSU courses
offered to UI students. The universities have one joint degree program
(food science and human nutrition) and are planning another (Ph.D. in
statistics). Over the last 10 years, the universities were awarded
about $8 million in jointly administered grants, including a recent $1
million grant from the National Science Foundation to Scott Nuismer of
the UI and Richard Gomulkiewicz of WSU.

The bus, Lanier summarized, is "a vibrant link between two otherwise
isolated university communities."

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