News
Charles Drew University of Medicine & Science Signs $43 Million Bond Offering for New Life Sciences Research, Nursing Education Building in South Los Angeles
New Facility Will Expand CDU’s Honored Scientific Research
Capabilities; Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing will be First New
Nursing School in Decades
Los Angeles, CA —
A new, state-of-the-art Life Sciences Research and Nursing Education
Building to significantly expand the resources of Charles Drew
University of Medicine & Science, funded by a $43 million bond
offering to be issued by the California Educational Facilities
Authority, was announced today by Dr. Susan Kelly, President and CEO of
the University.
“This is a
landmark event for Charles Drew University. What was once a dream of
extending our capabilities to better address this and other
communities’ health disparities is now a wonderfully positive reality,
and one with long term value for so many,” Dr. Kelly stated. “With our
financing secured through the approval of these bonds, we can now forge
ahead with our ambitious plans for the University’s first new building
in 24 years. Charles Drew University will now be able to do even more
of what it does best – train first-rate health professionals. The bond
approval also puts us in a position to help address the appalling
shortage of nurses that plagues California, but which is at its worst
in South Los Angeles. We believe in this community. This investment is
powerful proof of our community and the State’s confidence in us.”
“We
are very grateful to all the people who supported this project
wholeheartedly – but especially to State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, the
staff at CEFA, our own team and our local, tireless warrior,
Assemblyman Dymally,” she added.
The
planned two-story, 63,000-square-foot building will be located adjacent
to the University’s main administration building in South Los Angeles,
and is expected to be completed by August 2009. The scientific research
facility will encompass state-of-the-art space for laboratory, clinical
research and support functions for the College of Medicine and the
College of Science and Health, while the Mervyn M. Dymally School of
Nursing represents the first comprehensive nursing school to be built
in California in decades, and the first ever for South Los Angeles. It
is expected to open in August 2009, with an initial program accepting
40 individuals who already have a non-nursing degree in fall 2008 into
an 18-month accelerated Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing.
The
nursing school is named in honor of Mervyn M. Dymally, the renowned
California Assemblyman, and former State Senator, Lieutenant Governor,
and U.S. Congressman.
The new
research and nursing facility is a key component of a major growth
initiative by the University, which is also developing a four-year
medical school program, expanding partnerships with other medical
schools and increasing its already powerful research capabilities in
new and existing areas through additional grants. The University is
ranked among the top seven percent of 300 peer health and science
colleges receiving research funding from the National Institutes of
Health (NIH).
The Mervyn M.
Dymally School of Nursing will not only address the critical shortages
in this area but will bring more skilled professionals into the work
force with meaningful employment. California consistently ranks 49th or
50th nationwide in the number of registered nurses per capita, with 30%
fewer nurses than the national average. The Federal Health Resources
and Services Agency estimates that by 2010, California will need more
than 42,000 additional nurses to meet the demand, which it describes as
“a target that more than likely will not be met because of the
inability of the current nursing education program to prepare
sufficient numbers of professionals.” This shortage of nurses is
expected to grow to more than 120,000 by the year 2020. The $43 million
Variable Rate Demand Revenue Bonds carry strong long-term ratings of
“Aa1” and a short-term rating of “VMIG 1” by Moody’s Investor Service,
a leading bond rating agency. The California Educational Facilities
Authority has established an agreement with the University for the loan
of proceeds from sale of the bonds, underwritten by Piper Jaffray &
Co.
Charles Drew University
is the only academic health sciences center in an area of 1.6 million
people—the largest urban underserved area in the United States. The
university is also the nation’s only dually designated Historically
Black Graduate Institution and Hispanic Serving Health Professions
School. It was formally created from the ashes of the Watts Rebellion
in 1965. Since 1971, Charles Drew University has graduated over 500
medical doctors, 2,500 specialist physicians, 2,000 physician
assistants and hundreds of other, mainly minority, health
professionals. Research shows that the vast majority of these
professionals are still serving the people in greatest need a decade or
more after graduation. Additional data concerning Charles Drew
University may be found on its website at http://www.cdrewu.edu.