Quote:
Originally Posted by Keith P.
Let me help you understand then.
There are any number of reasons why. The first is what Jet mentioned above. Using public funds to build a real estate portfolio and amass land in the south end of Halifax is not the optimal use of funding for an educational institution. First and foremost, Dal exists to provide students with a university education. Sprawling, excessive buildings cost lots of money, raise the cost of education, and do little to nothing to improve the quality of that experience. Priorities.
I would be happy to see all our universities become private because they would be managed much, much more efficiently and not be such a burden on our provincial budget. But to your specific example, it is clearly a straw man. Students live on campus and need food. Dal contracts the provision of that necessity out. You and I do not go there to eat. It is different from them opening up a space on Queen St called "Tom Traves' South End" to compete with Tom's Little Havana or "La Florizone" to compete with La Frasca. Nor should they be opening up commercial space for lease to compete with Fares and Halif and Chedrawe. They are using public funds in part to do that, clearly unfair. We do not see the province building shopping malls. This is the same reason why the cafe spaces in the palatial library were a bad idea. That was not a necessity and drove up the cost (not that anyone seemed to ever worry about that in that example).
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The university has limited real estate on the traditional Studley campus.
So, if it needs to expand, to provide students with, you know, appropriate facilities in its educational mission, then what should it do, Keith?
Lease out office space downtown? Because that would be a
really efficient use of public funds.
The university is expanding to an area that has land available, close to its main campus, which it acquired to do the expansion.
No one is competing with any commercial enterprise, unless Tom's Little Havana plans to offer degrees in health administration. There will be ground level space for commercial enterprise that will provide services to students, like typical services in the Student Union Building. Those offerings will also be offered to the public, the same way anyone can walk into the Student Union Building and buy a Tim's coffee or a Pete's bagel.
But yes, go on. Let's hand wring more about this great, brooding, sputtering tempest in a teapot.