The University of Minnesota wants an additional $60 million to $80 million in annual state funding as the first step in a long-term plan to improve and expand academic health training programs, medical research and care provided at hospitals and clinics.
While specific priorities for the money would be set in conjunction with lawmakers, the funding might be used to recruit and retain more world-class doctors and researchers, the U says, while also expanding patient services and health professionals' training at the university's primary care and safety net clinics.
The longer-term vision includes the U obtaining greater control over the University of Minnesota Medical Center in Minneapolis and, eventually, building a state-of-the-art facility on the East Bank campus.
U officials outlined the proposal Wednesday at a meeting of Gov. Tim Walz's task force on academic health at the university. The group is developing recommendations by mid-January for how lawmakers might bolster the U's health professional training programs.
"This vision and plan are based on what we think needs to be a new partnership with the state," Myron Frans, the U's senior vice president for finance and operations, said during a meeting at the Capitol. "We believe that this partnership must really guide our actions, so that in the future we really touch all Minnesotans with the best health and health care we can provide."
Beyond more funding for academic health programs, the university wants the state to conduct a feasibility study that looks at capital spending needs at the current U hospital as well as other public facilities, such as those operated by Hennepin Healthcare and the Minneapolis VA Medical Center.
Frans noted that the state Wednesday issued a budget surplus projection of $2.4 billion. He also highlighted Mayo Clinic's announcement last month that it will spend $5 billion on an expansion of its Rochester campus.
"This news from Mayo really is a new marker of what it takes to deliver world-class care," he said. "We cannot be complacent for the rest of the state."