|
JACKSON BAKER, the Memphis Flyer, September 22, 2005
“This project is going forward,” said Governor Phil Bredesen to tumultuous applause
Thursday night. The subject was a proposal for state funding to begin the process
of transplanting the law school of the University of Memphis to a downtown location,
upgrading it in the process.
The audience which heard this happy news, at a fundraising event for Bredesen at the
East Memphis residence of city councilman Jack Sammons, included many representatives
of the University of Memphis, who hatched the relocation project earlier this year
in an effort to shore up the school’s long-term accreditation.
The American Bar Association had put the university on notice that its present law
school facilities on Central Avenue were considered inadequate.
The move, into the landmark Post Office building on Front St., which would be extensively
renovated for the purpose, would ultimately cost some $41 million, said Law School
dean Jim Smoot, one of several university officials to have lobbied the governor on
the point.
“I think this is what you call a full-court press,” said the governor about the university
group’s efforts.
Bredesen kept a smiling and relaxed demeanor despite the presence across the street
of demonstrators protesting his paring of the TennCare rolls, a move he defended again
Thursday night as necessary for budgetary reasons.
“Inviting me is one way to get demonstrators to show up at the end of your driveway,”
joked the governor, who said he had spoken with several of the protesters and urged
the attendees at the fundraiser to do so. “These are good people,” he said.
The governor’s appearance in Memphis came at the end of a day in which the members
of his recently appointed Citizens Advisory Panel on Ethics held the last of several
statewide meetings at the university’s Fogelman Center.
|