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Dec. 19, 2007
Columbia, Local Development Corporation Reach
Long-term Collaboration Agreement on Enhanced Education,
Health Care, Jobs, Affordable Housing and Other Civic Programs
Generational commitment to supporting West Harlem future including educational benefits in collaboration with the community
Columbia University and the West Harlem Local Development
Corporation today joined in a collaboration aimed at enhancing
the vitality of both the University’s academic mission
and the community’s quality of life for decades to come.
The core of the agreement between Columbia and the Local Development
Corporation is a commitment by the University to investing
in a comprehensive set of community needs.
“Flourishing universities are the source of two of the essential
elements of New York’s historic uniqueness: attracting the great
creative minds who come here to pursue ideas that make a difference
in our society, and creating the good jobs that provide sustained economic
opportunity for a wide diversity of working people,” said Columbia
President Lee Bollinger. “This can be an extraordinary
opportunity for Columbia and our local community to work together on
enhancing the many educational and health care services the University
already provides, as well as supporting the local community so it can
be full participants in the economic opportunities that our expansion
will create. With support from the Bloomberg administration, Congressman
Rangel, and many others, this commitment to our Harlem community is
central to what it means for us to be a great urban university in the
21st century. We thank LDC chair Pat Jones and her fellow members
for their extraordinary hard work in reaching this agreement.”
The University and community have joined together to develop a wide
array of existing and new programs that enhance the human potential
of local citizens and further community goals. This programmatic commitment
will come not simply by the investment of funds, but through the enhanced
engagement of Columbia’s globally renowned intellectual resources
in local neighborhoods over the life of the expansion project.
Some examples of proposed programmatic enhancements by Columbia in
the field of basic and secondary education include a new PreK-8 New
York City Public School to be developed in partnership with the local
community by Columbia-affiliated Teachers College.
This comes in addition to the Columbia-assisted public secondary school
for math, science and engineering that will have a permanent site in
Manhattanville and has already opened for grade 6 in temporary space;
as well as the School at Columbia, a private school with half of its
enrollment comprised of children from the local community.
The agreement with the Local Development Corporation also includes
the previously-announced University commitments to affordable housing:
- $20 million in seed capital for an affordable housing
revolving loan fund, which could preserve or create up to
1,100 affordable units locally over time
- A $4 million fund to expand support for tenant legal services,
including protection from unlawful eviction and harassment
Columbia has taken a number of other steps to address concerns about
affordable housing, such as the commitment to building nearly 1,000
units of new housing for faculty and graduate students – 800
of these within the proposed expansion area. This critical housing
for University affiliates will minimize the projected demand for rental
housing in the immediate area generated by new jobs created on campus.
Columbia has also committed to providing equal or better housing for
the small number of current residents in some 130 apartments located
within the proposed expansion area and has secured local sites for
new replacement housing that will provide a net increase in such affordable
units.
With respect to support and enhancement of community facilities, the
Columbia has previously agreed to support playground improvements at
IS 195. As part of this agreement it will also develop a plan
for community access to University facilities and youth athletic clinics.
The University-Community collaboration has been developed to provide
support to a long-term approach that will be both strategic and comprehensive.
The University has therefore pledged to provide expertise in support
of community stakeholders, civic and elected leadership, and the private
sector as they develop strategies with integrated objectives that provide
a framework for the future allocation of services and resources.
“We want to ensure that our wisely planned long-term expansion
provides both the facilities we need for Upper Manhattan to remain a
world center for teaching, academic research and patient care, and the
opportunity for Columbia to augment its already significant engagement
of intellectual resources in improving the quality of life for the people
of Harlem and New York City,” said Bollinger. “Columbia
and our local community can move forward to create a new platform for
enhancing the breadth and depth of educational, economic, cultural and
civic partnerships that are so central to what it means to be a great
urban university in a great City.” |