The Richmond Register

EKU News

September 29, 2009

Chandler lavished with praise for EKU funding

Eastern Kentucky University and state officials lavished praise on U.S. Ben Chandler, D-Sixth District, on Tuesday as he visited the campus to get an update on EKU’s bio-fuels partnership.

In December, Chandler announced $4 million in federal funds he had “earmarked” for the project.

In addition to the federal government and General Atomics of San Diego, the partners include local governments in Clark County, the LexTran bus system in Fayette County and BioFuel of Estill County.

If successful, the project would use algae to produce motor fuels by consuming cellulose found in switchgrass and other plants, according to Dr. Bruce Pratt, who chairs the EKU agriculture department.

“This is a long-term project that could take 10 years or more to yield results,” he said.

At present, the partners are using the federal funds to conduct technical and economic research that eventually could lead to construction of a bio-fuels plant in Clark County, he said.

Ideally, the plant would use switchgrass grown by farmers within 50 miles of the plant that algae would convert to motor fuel, Pratt said. The process also may be able to consume farm wastes such as corn stover, saw dust and pulp-mill residues.

The fuel would be consumed within the region where it is generated. Researchers also will study whether the algae oil could be used to manufacture pharmaceuticals, plastics and other products.

The switchgrass, which is not a food product, likely will be grown on land where tobacco once grew and even on former strip mines, Pratt said. Thereby, the project will not compete with food production, he said.

EKU President Doug Whitlock said Pratt will be leaving his agriculture post to head a newly created Center for Renewable and Alternative Fuels (CRAFT).

The project is an interdisciplinary effort also involving EKU’s chemistry, biology and economics departments, the president said.

By this spring, research crops will be planted at EKU’s Meadow Farm and by the Clark County Industrial Development Authority, according to information provided by the university.

Other research will focus on determining optimal crops, land availability and transportation needs.

Whitlock said he believed that the CRAFT project had helped propel EKU from a third-tier to a first-tier institution in recent ranking published by some national magazines.

Chandler recalled the 1970s when “there was a great rush to do something” about energy costs. “But (before) too long, gas prices went down, the lines (at service stations) went away and we didn’t do what ought to have been done.” After $4-plus gas prices of a year ago, “we now understand again how important it is to be independent.”

In addition Chandler’s $4 million earmark, CRAFT has received $350,000 from the Appalachian Regional Commission, $270,000 from the Kentucky Agriculture Development Board, and $27,000 from the Carl D. Perkins Fund.

Three other sizable federal grant requests are pending with the Department of Energy and the Department of Defense, according to information from the university.

The “earmark” label is applied to funds for specific projects that members of Congress have written into federal spending legislation.

The practice has gotten a bad name, said Whitlock, who asked, “How can money that does so much good get a bad name?”

“Who better to decide how tax dollars are spent than people the citizenry has elected to represent us?”

That process is to be preferred over “unelected bureaucrats deciding how to spend our money,” the president said.

“We are 100 percent dedicated to demonstrating that we will be wonderful stewards (of federal, state and other funding) and that the outcomes will be significant,” Whitlock said. “We’re fortunate to have a governor and Sixth District congressman who both see this as an opportunity for Kentucky to be in the forefront of something.”

As Chandler arrived for the 9 a.m. program in EKU’s Keen Johnson Building, two student protesters sat near the Daniel Boone statue holding a sign that read, “Ben Can’t Win 2010.”

When the congressman departed more than an hour later, the students had moved across University Drive to the campus ravine, where they were joined by two other students, one of whom held a sign reading, “My Old Kentucky Town Hall 2009?”

Stuart Warren of Harrodsburg said they were protesting Chandler’s failure to hold public meetings with constituents during the late-summer congressional recess.

At “town hall” meetings around the country, U.S. senators and representatives were confronted by hecklers who oppose the Obama administration’s health-care and climate-change initiatives confronted.

Asked about their change of location, Warren said the students had been told by EKU Police Chief Mark Merriman to register with the Student Life office and move to a “free speech zone” on campus.

Warren was joined in the ravine, a designated free-speech zone, by Jacob and Josh Hamm of Richmond and Jordan Yurt of Lexington. As Chandler entered a vehicle to depart from campus, he ignored the student’s chant, “Ben can’t win 2010.”

Bill Robinson can be reached at brobinson@richmondregister.com or at 624-6622.

Text Only
EKU News
  • EKU professor authors ‘Great Civil War Stories of Kentucky’

    A century and a half after the first shots of the Civil War were fired, Dr. Marshall Myers, professor of English at Eastern Kentucky University, reminds readers of the harsh realities of war, and how it affected soldiers and civilians alike in his new book, “Great Civil War Stories of Kentucky.” 

    June 24, 2011

  • Presidential debate delegation visits EKU

    A three-member delegation of the Commission on Presidential Debates visited Eastern Kentucky University on Thursday.
    EKU, which submitted a bid earlier this year to host a debate, is one of 12 colleges and universities nationwide competing to host four debates in 2012 — three presidential debates and one vice presidential debate. It is expected that the site selections will be announced this fall.

    May 27, 2011

  • EKU co-op program first in state to earn accreditation

    Eastern Kentucky University’s Cooperative Education Program has become the first co-op program in the Commonwealth and only the 12th nationally to receive accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Cooperative Education.

    April 22, 2011

  • A chance for grads and bands to reunite

    Eastern Kentucky University alumni and friends are invited to visit the campus April 29 through May 1 when EKU hosts its annual Alumni Weekend, highlighted this year by performances from former members of bands that played at Speck’s, the legendary nightspot previously in downtown Richmond.
    Friday, April 29 will offer an evening of live music from the Speck’s bands, including former members of “The Maroons” and “The Exiles,” from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Perkins Building.The cost of $22 includes beverages, appetizers, the live music and dancing.

    April 22, 2011

  • EKU EKU tuition, meals on the rise, again

    Eastern Kentucky Univer-sity expects the state’s Council on Post-secondary Education to allow regional universities to raise in-state tuition by 5 percent for the coming academic year, according to EKU President Doug Whitlock.
    On Monday, the EKU regents voted to take the maximum the council will allow and delegated its academic affairs committee to impose the increase after the council’s Thursday meeting.

    April 19, 2011 1 Photo

  • Spring fling Spring fling

    Morgan Jolly, Miss Kentucky Teen 2011, and an Eastern Kentucky University freshman education major from Versailles, prepares to pop bubbles Monday with Sanjay Blevins, a special education student at Model Laboratory School. Jolly and about 19 others who reside in EKU’s education majors’ Living and Learning Community and 14 Model special-ed students enjoyed an hour of fun at the college students’ invitation. Such events outside of their school setting helps special-needs children developmentally, said Jolly, who planned the event with roommate Amanda Hubler.
     

    April 19, 2011 1 Photo

  • California Schemin’ California Schemin’

    Amanda West, from left, Micah Daniel Bennett, Alyssa Will, Marshall Manley and Whitlie Rose rehearse a scene from Eastern Kentucky University Theatre’s production of “California Schemin’” Performances continue tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Gifford Theatre of the Jane F. Campbell Building. To reserve or purchase tickets, students and senior citizens are $5 and adults are $6, call the box office at 622-1323.

    April 15, 2011 1 Photo

  • EKU to host Science, engineering fair

    Eastern Kentucky University will host the 9th annual Kentucky Science and Engineering Fair on Saturday at Alumni Coliseum. This is the state fair in which middle school and high school students from throughout the Commonwealth will be participating.
    The event will feature the research of more than 215 students who have advanced through local and regional competitions across the state. They will be competing for ribbons, trophies, scholarships and special awards from corporations and various organizations.
    The high school students who are selected as the Best of Fair will be a member of Team Kentucky that will represent the state at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Los Angeles in May.
    The public can view the student’s work from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday inside Alumni Coliseum on EKU’s campus. The awards ceremony will begin at 4 p.m. in Brock Auditorium in the Coates Building.

    April 1, 2011

  • ‘Brain Rules’ author to speak at EKU

    John Medina, author of the New York Times bestseller “Brain Rules,” will present a public lecture Tuesday, March 29 at Eastern Kentucky University.
    His talk, “Brain Rules for Teaching,” will begin at 6 p.m. in Walnut Hall of the Keen Johnson Building. There will be a question-and-answer period following the session.

    March 28, 2011

  • Environmental ‘Hero’ to speak at EKU

    Graciela Chichilnisky, recognized by Time Magazine in 2009 as one of the “Heroes of the Environment,” will speak at Eastern Kentucky University Thursday, March 31.
    Her presentation titled “Avoiding Extinction” will begin at 7:30 p.m. in O’Donnell Hall of the Student Success Building. It is part of the University’s year-long Chautauqua lecture series and serves as the sixth-annual Distinguished Lecture in International Studies and keynote address for Women’s History Month. The event is free and open to the public.

    March 25, 2011

Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Former Komen Exec Defends Funding Cut Skip the Coffee Cup and Inhale Your Caffeine Fix Calif. Gay Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional Jury Selection for Ex-UVa Athlete Enters 2nd Day Raw Video: Giants Celebrate Another Super Bowl Cab Driver Helps Wis. Family Escape House Fire Greek Leaders Seek Deal As Bankruptcy Looms Bernanke: Recovery Depends on Consumer Spending Staff Removed at LA School During Abuse Probe Eastwood in Super Bowl Ad 'Compassionate' Stranded Fishermen Rescued From Bay of Green Bay Analyst: Outside Troops Won't Intervene in Syria Police: Father Planned Deadly Fire for Some Time US, UK Pressure on Syria; More Homs Violence Raw Video: Mass Killer Wants Medal, Freedom Court Strips Contador of Tour De France Title Runaway Goat Leads Police on Wild Chase And the Winner for Best Super Bowl Ad Is... Romney Latest Poll to Join Let-me-explain Club
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Poll

Have you ever attended a meeting of a local government agency or taxing district?

Yes
No
     View Results