Site search
sponsored by
Lahontan Valley News | Fallon Nevada News
 
Lahontan Valley News | Fallon Nevada News
avatar
Welcome,
Guest
 
advertisement | your ad here
 
Event Calendar
 
 
Top Jobs
 
advertisement | your ad here
Send us your news
<< back
Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Keep the College of Ag



Copyright 2010 Lahontan Valley News and Fallon Eagle Standard. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Lahontan Valley News and Fallon Eagle Standard March, 16 2010 6:54 pm

Keep the College of Ag



During the next three months, the University of Nevada's Board of Regents faces some excruciating decisions.

Based on the recent legislative action during the Legislature's special session in Carson City, the university system must trim $44 million from its budget, affecting seven academic institutions and the Desert Research Institute.

Yet, before the ink dried on the approved legislation coming out of Carson City, University of Nevada, Reno President Milton Glick had already released his wish list of budgetary hits.

One of the victims is the College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources. Rather than have a cohesive college dealing with Nevada's multimillion dollar agricultural industry, it appears the UNR hierarchy is happy to gut out the college, shift classes to within other colleges and piece together a dysfunctional program that may or may not survive this move.

Meghan Brown, executive director of the Nevada Cattlemen's Association said the university wants to eliminate CABNR because of the little impact agriculture provides to Nevada. No matter what happens with a designated college or a consolidation of programs under another roof, the NCA said “There still needs to be a department status or some other institutional framework to collect the teaching and research talents needed to provide education and research outputs that matter.”

Furthermore, Doug Busselman, executive vice president of the Nevada Farm Bureau Federation laments the proposal, saying in essence the same programs afforded to earlier generations during the “Golden Age” of the College of Agriculture are no more. The level of available programs has diminished during the years causing many students who want to pursue agricultural education to leave Nevada for greener pastures.

But we wonder if Glick has also looked at the benefits of the entire agriculture program in Nevada? After all, the Morrill Act of 1862 provided land for states to provide agricultural, mechanics arts and military programs.

Although the provisions of the Morrill Act did not stipulate the university build a specific college for agriculture, it made it clear the university must have these programs.

Agriculture encompasses more than just livestock and crops. The University of Nevada Cooperative Extension, which may or may not be severely affected by proposed cuts, provides assistance in other areas such as natural resources, horticulture, health and nutrition and community development.

We don't feel Glick, his staff or Board of Regents Chancellor Dan Klaich understand the importance of agriculture in Nevada. Before making any knee-jerk decisions, we encourage them to climb down from their ivory towers at the University of Nevada, Reno campus and take a trip to the rural side of the Silver State.

Once they do, Glick, Klaich and the others may discover that agriculture is integral to the state and so is the College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources.

Hopefully, they will change their minds to save CABNR as a college in one form or another.

Editorials are written by the LVN Editorial staff and appear on Wednesdays.


facebook Print
Comments
Previous Guide Line
Next Guide Line

© 2005 - 2010 Swift Communications, Inc.