FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, March 20, 2001
Contact: James Grant
UC Merced Communications
209-724-4406
james.grant@ucop.edu
www.ucmerced.edu
PACKARD FOUNDATION DONATES MORE THAN $11
MILLION TO UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA FOR ACQUISITION OF PROPOSED
MERCED CAMPUS SITE
Gift transforms
educational and environmental landscape of the San Joaquin Valley
* 5,780-Acres of vernal pool habitat to be
protected
* Virginia Smith Trust to bolster educational
endowment
Merced -- Education, the environment, and
student access to funding for higher education are bolstered as
a result of an historic agreement announced today by the David and
Lucile Packard Foundation and the University of California.
With a grant in excess of $11 million from
the Packard Foundation, UC will acquire the 7,030-acre Virginia
Smith Trust parcel northeast of the city of Merced, Packard Foundation
President Richard T. Schlosberg III and UC Merced Chancellor Carol
Tomlinson-Keasey announced today (Tuesday, March 20).
Schlosberg and Tomlinson-Keasey said that
the Packard Foundation's grant provides the means to achieve several
important goals, including:
* Securing the proposed site for the new
2,000-acre UC Merced campus;
* Enhancing access to the UC system for the
children of the San Joaquin Valley;
* Supporting the regional planning approach
including UC, the county and city of Merced, and the public, and
setting a new standard for large-project and growth management in
the San Joaquin Valley;
* Creating a 5,030-acre preserve of sensitive
vernal pool habitat and facilitating creation of a 750-acre UC natural
reserve for scientific study in rolling ranchland northeast of the
city of Merced;
* Providing a direct contribution to the
Virginia Smith Trust's educational endowment that benefits college-going
students from Merced County;
* Supplying the means for the Virginia Smith
Trust to invest in the planned university community nearby the proposed
campus; and
* Triggering the release of $15 million in
state-approved habitat acquisition funds from the Wildlife Conservation
Board to ensure the conservation of key wetland and vernal pool
resources in the surrounding area.
Under the terms of the agreement, the University
of California will use funds from the grant to acquire the entire
Virginia Smith Trust parcel, including the Merced Hills Golf Course,
which is owned and operated by the trust, and make a contribution
of several million dollars to the trust's endowment. The final total
of the gift will be dependent upon a coming valuation of the land
transaction.
After acquisition, the university plans to
set aside 5,030 acres as a conservation preserve that would protect
vernal pool habitat in perpetuity. The remaining 2,000 acres would
be used for the proposed new UC Merced campus on the southwest portion
of the Virginia Smith Trust lands; the campus portion would include
a 750-acre natural reserve of vernal pool habitat protected from
development.
The Virginia Smith Trust will use proceeds
from the acquisition to add to its scholarship endowment, invest
in the future proposed university community and pay off long-term
loans on the golf course property.
Schlosberg called the grant a landmark in
the university's creation of UC Merced, UC's 10th campus. "We
see this as a major opportunity for the Packard Foundation to assist
the university in enhancing access to the children of the San Joaquin
Valley to the UC system. At the same time, it's a chance to foster
responsible development and environmental stewardship.
"On a highly visible project like this
one, it is important to find ways to conserve valuable landscapes
while also supporting economic development. We needn't choose between
the two, and this project can be proof of that fact."
Tomlinson-Keasey added: "David Packard
was known for his vision in technology, in conservation and in building
a global enterprise. This marvelous support from the foundation's
trustees is similarly visionary. We are deeply appreciative of this
gift from the Packard Foundation, which has a special commitment
to the environment and to preserving California's natural heritage.
The funds from this grant will allow us to create a world-class
research university in Merced at the same time that we protect unique
natural habitats of eastern Merced County."
In the current decade, the UC system must
absorb more than 60,000 additional students. The new UC Merced campus,
scheduled to open in fall 2004, will have an important role in assisting
this effort. In addition, the San Joaquin Valley has been under-represented
in the UC system; currently, students from the region matriculate
on UC campuses at less than half the statewide average of 7.8 percent.
Comprehensive planning hailed by Packard
Packard's Schlosberg said the new proposal
for location of the campus and the associated community help provide
a regional approach to land use and development planning.
"Bringing UC to the San Joaquin Valley
is an urgent goal," said Schlosberg. "But combining the
creation of the Merced campus with a unique package of environmental
conservation measures is especially noteworthy. We think those who
work to conserve open space, farmland and natural areas should also
be willing to constructively engage in decisions about the best
ways to accommodate our growing population. In this case, it's clear
that many have done this, and the end result will be a much better
campus development."
Schlosberg said the planned development and
natural preserve created by the Packard gift would augment the efforts
taken last year by Gov. Gray Davis and the state Legislature to
create a $30 million fund for purchase of conservation easements
in eastern Merced County. Packard's grant is conditioned upon several
milestones being met, including the release of $15 million of these
funds for immediate acquisition opportunities.
"The university and the county have
made a firm commitment to embracing a thoughtful, long-term planning
process," Schlosberg said. "We want to see the city of
Merced included in this planning and will encourage the Great Valley
Center to assist on key design and land use issues. All of these
groups are considering the campus and new town as one development,
putting it all in the context of a regional conservation planning
process, including the state-funded conservation plan that ultimately
could protect as many as 60,000 acres of vernal pool habitat. This
fits with the Packard Foundation's notion that the valley and its
rich open lands cannot be protected piecemeal."
He added: "We should have the highest
of standards. Every new development in the valley, large or small,
should bolster the local economy, make for more livable communities
and protect or restore natural landscapes. If that sounds ambitious,
it is. And why shouldn't it be? We should be especially ambitious
when it comes to a project associated with the University of California."
The Packard Foundation has played a leading
role in helping local organizations conserve lands in the Central
Valley. Its five-year, $175 million Conserving California Landscapes
Initiative has supported the Great Valley Center, the San Joaquin
River Parkway Trust, the California Waterfowl Association and others.
"With this latest grant to the university,
the Packard Foundation is once again showing its leadership role
in environmental stewardship," said Tomlinson-Keasey. "The
foundation has become pre-eminent in its support for preservation
in the San Joaquin Valley and beyond."
Environmental groups respond positively
Prominent environmental groups welcomed news
of the Packard Foundation gift. The Nature Conservancy of California
played an important role in assisting the Packard Foundation and
the university in coming to the agreement.
Graham Chisholm, director of the Nature Conservancy,
said: "Kudos to the Packard Foundation for leading the way
to protect endangered wetlands. By their actions, some of California's
most important vernal pool habitats will be preserved. If these
wetlands disappeared so would some of the state's rarest species.
That's why this project is a high priority for us all."
Dan Taylor, executive director of Audubon-California,
the official state program of the National Audubon Society in California,
said: "The Packard Foundation has made another spectacular
gift to California. Through this bold move we have our best chance
ever to arrive at a siting solution for the UC Merced campus that
serves California's two greatest treasures, our kids and our environment."
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation was
created in 1964 by David Packard (1912-1996) and Lucile Salter Packard
(1914-1987). David and Lucile Packard shared a deep and abiding
interest in philanthropy.
The foundation provides grants to nonprofit
organizations in the following broad program areas: conservation;
population; science; children, families, and communities; arts;
and organizational effectiveness and philanthropy. The foundation
provides national and international grants, and also has a special
focus on the Northern California counties of San Mateo, Santa Clara,
Santa Cruz and Monterey.
The foundation's assets were $9.8 billion
as of Dec. 31, 2000. Grant awards totaled approximately $600 million
in 2000.
UC Merced currently employs almost 65 educators
and professionals. The university's main campus in Merced is expected
to open in fall 2004 to serve 1,000 students. The campus will grow
over coming decades to serve 25,000 students. UC Merced contributes
to educational access through the entire San Joaquin region via
special educational and outreach centers in Fresno and Bakersfield.
A new UC Merced center will open in Modesto later this year.
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