Opinion editor's note: Star Tribune Opinion publishes a mix of national and local commentaries online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.
•••
Myron Frans carried plenty of heavy legislative loads while dodging political brickbats during 10 years as a top-tier commissioner in the Mark Dayton and Tim Walz administrations.
The persuasive dexterity Frans developed then has been on full display at the State Capitol again this year. Frans is now the University of Minnesota's senior vice president for finance and operations and its de facto lead lobbyist, in what is shaping up as the most consequential legislative session for the university in a generation.
The consequences are substantial for Minnesota, too. Plenty of economists have told me that as goes this state's ability to attract brainpower, so will go its performance in today's knowledge-based economy. And there's no bigger or better brainpower magnet in these parts than the University of Minnesota.
That's the connection that drew Frans to the U in 2020 after six years as state management and budget commissioner and four years as commissioner of revenue. It's the idea he's pushing hard at the Capitol, where getting legislators to open the state's well-stuffed coffers for the U is requiring a surprising amount of heavy lifting.
Frans is coming to legislators with three goals:
- Keeping the university's hospital and medical enterprise in Minnesota hands, should the U's 26-year partner Fairview Health Services consummate a proposed merger with South Dakota-based Sanford Health;
- Averting downsizing and/or significant tuition increases beginning next year, which will be the unavoidable consequence of a budget-blowing post-pandemic enrollment dip unless the state comes to the rescue; and
- Catching up on long-postponed updates to facilities.
Those aren't small aims. The price the U has attached to the rescue of its hospital from South Dakota clutches is nearly $1 billion — $300 million (at most, Frans says) to take back full control of the hospital from Fairview; $650 million to transition to a new university-led medical system.