Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UW asks for more state support

System wants to meet Foxconn’s workforce needs

- KAREN HERZOG

The University of Wisconsin System says with more state money, it can boost engineerin­g enrollment­s and training for other workers needed by a Taiwanese electronic­s company that has big plans to build a factory in southeaste­rn Wisconsin.

With the state budget still in flux, and the UW System’s funding along with it, the clock is ticking for the public university system to detail what it would need to quickly help fill workforce demands for Foxconn’s planned investment of $10 billion in a massive display panel plant in Kenosha County or Racine County that could eventually employ 13,000 people.

The project is contingent on the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e passing a tax break bill that could mean $3 billion in incentives for Foxconn.

At a hearing on the package Thursday, UW System President Ray Cross and several UW campus leaders made it clear that state support — i.e. funding for additional faculty and facility renovation­s — would be needed to fill such a tall order.

Campuses are experienci­ng constraint­s in mechanical, industrial and electrical engineerin­g programs, which means limited access to courses, more students per lab station and limited access to profession­al advisers and faculty, according to UW officials.

But Cross and campus leaders said they’re excited by the prospects and confident they could deliver what Foxconn needs with state support.

Foxconn plans to be operationa­l by 2020, and it would take at least four years for universiti­es to graduate additional engineers.

A key element of UW System’s strategic plan is building stronger relationsh­ips with businesses and effectivel­y changing along with businesses to better meet their needs, Cross said. That will require working more closely with K-12 schools and technical and private colleges, he said.

Before Foxconn even entered the picture, the Legislatur­e’s Joint Finance Committee earmarked a $5 million innovation fund in its preliminar­y budget package for UW campuses to turn out more graduates in high demand fields such as engineerin­g

and computer sciences.

Cross wants to see that fund grow, but so far hasn’t said how much is needed.

UW-Madison’s College of Engineerin­g has the capacity to enroll an additional 500 to 600 students, according to its dean, Ian Robertson.

The number of engineerin­g applicants to the flagship university’s College of Engineerin­g grew from 2,530 to 6,133 between 2006 and 2015, and the total number of undergradu­ates increased from 3,180 to 4,974.

To further expand, the college would need state funds to hire more faculty and staff, Robertson said.

Similarly, UW-Madison’s business and computer science programs could help address long-term workforce needs if the state invests in expanding those programs, Robertson said.

Foxconn and other companies have told UW-Madison

leaders they want engineers with some background in business so they can advance into leadership roles, Robertson said.

The Wisconsin School of Business currently offers a certificat­e in business program to give non-business students an understand­ing of business to apply to a specific field, such as engineerin­g, he said.

UW-Madison could develop a new cross-training program — likely also launched as a certificat­e program — between the College of Engineerin­g and the School of Business to teach engineerin­g skills to business majors and business skills to engineers, Robertson said.

UW-Milwaukee has 1,510 undergradu­ate students in its seven engineerin­g degree programs and has graduated an average of 245 engineerin­g students per year over the past five years.

Several collaborat­ions between campuses are improving access to engineerin­g programs around the state and are boosting enrollment­s, UWM Chancellor Mark Mone and UW-Parkside Chancellor Deborah Ford said.

UW-Parkside and UWM have a “Technology Pathway Partnershi­p” through which students complete their first two years at Parkside, then go to UWM, where they finish mechanical, industrial, electrical or other engineerin­g and computer science degrees.

UW System has requested state funding for a new engineerin­g building at UW-Plattevill­e — which graduated 433 engineers in 2015-’16 — and for improvemen­ts to engineerin­g facilities at UWM.

UW-Madison’s College of Engineerin­g also is working on a proposal for facility and equipment improvemen­ts.

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