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For Immediate Release
December 10, 2002
Cooley,
WMU Alliance Brings Law School to Downtown Grand Rapids
Grand Rapids, Mich. An alliance between the Thomas M. Cooley Law School and Western
Michigan University will bring a law school to the downtown Grand Rapids
Arena District and give area residents a chance to begin working locally
toward earning a law degree as early as May 2003.
The presidents of Cooley Law School and WMU unveiled plans today to open
a Cooley branch campus in conjunction with WMUs Graduate Center-Downtown.
The four-step process will begin this January, with classes offered to
current Cooley students in existing classroom space at WMUs East
Beltline campus. Class offerings will be expanded to include new students
in May and will be offered at the Graduate Center-Downtown. By September,
Cooley programs will move to the law schools own satellite campus13,600
square feet of space leased from WMU and customized to meet Cooleys
needs in a $1.6 million build-out of the Graduate Centers fourth
floor.
By 2005, Cooley plans to open a full branch campus in a newly renovated
building at 38 Oakes, adjacent to WMUs downtown center, which is
located at 200 Ionia Ave., S.W. At that point, Cooley will offer a complete
degree program that could lead to the first law degrees being awarded
to area residents in 2006.
For 30 years, students from West Michigan have commuted to Lansing
or moved there to attend law school, said Don LeDuc, president of
Cooley. Today, some 700 Cooley graduatesabout 7 percent of
our alumnipractice law in the Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo area. Legal
education is clearly a priority for this community and we intend to fill
the need that has long been expressed by members of the Grand Rapids bar.
LeDuc said his schools Grand Rapids plans have been in the works
for more than a year. Since 1986, Cooley has offered a number of courses
in Grand Rapids for its students, but the area is one with a need for
a full degree program and he said he expects the new campus to attract
students from across West Michigan.
The Grand Rapids metropolitan area is one of the most vibrant in
the nation and is comparable in population to a number of cities, such
as Providence, Memphis and Austin, that are home to thriving law schools,
LeDuc noted. Because the downtown location is so accessible, we
expect our new campus to attract students from Kalamazoo and from as far
north as Traverse City.
For WMU, the partnership with Cooley is a natural outgrowth of its longtime
role of providing the Grand Rapids area with graduate and professional
education, says WMU President Elson S. Floyd. The move also builds on
a relationship launched by the two schools in Lansing. Students there
can earn a joint degree in public administration and the law through Cooley
and WMU.
Weve established a dynamic working relationship with Cooley
and are working on additional plans to bring joint degree programs to
Grand Rapids that will serve the needs of the entire West Michigan area,
said Floyd. We have a deep commitment to the professional and business
communities here, and were delighted that this new development will
allow us to enhance our existing graduate offerings and expand opportunities
for all of the citizens of this area.
The plans unveiled by LeDuc and Floyd will take place on the following
timetable:
- In January, Cooley will
offer three elective classes for current Cooley students from West Michigan
at WMUs East Beltline campus, which is located at 2333 East Beltline,
S.E.
- In May, Cooley will offer
first-semester evening classes at WMUs Graduate Center-Downtown.
Applications for admission are now being accepted.
- By September, Cooley plans
to open its satellite campus at the Graduate Center and will offer first
semester classes in the morning in its fourth-floor space at that facility.
- In January 2004, Cooley
plans to open the first portions of its own facility at 38 Oakes, in
the block north of the Graduate Center, and will admit afternoon and
weekend students.
Full renovation of the five-story,
80,000-square-foot Oakes building will be completed when Cooley secures
permission from the American Bar Association to operate the new facility
as a full branch campus. Cooley already has filed an application with
the ABA for permission to offer the first two years of its standard curriculum
as a satellite operation in Grand Rapids. That approval is expected to
take place in 2003. At that point, Cooley will apply for approval of the
campus as a branch of the law school that will offer a complete degree
program.
The Cooley branch campus will include the completely renovated Oakes building,
the nearby Durfee building, a two-story parking structure and a skywalk
connecting the Cooley and WMU buildings. Construction plans call for development
of the Cooley space at WMU and renovation of the Oakes building by Rockford
Development Co., Rockford Construction Co. and Design Plus, the same three
groups responsible for development of the WMU Graduate Center-Downtown.
That center opened in fall 2001.
Please contact Stephanie Gregg, Cooley Law School's assistant dean of
admissions, regarding admission for downtown Grand Rapids classes at greggs@cooley.edu
or 517-371-5140 ext. 2250, or Matt Kurz, WMU's associate vice president
for university relations, at kurz@wmich.edu
or 269-387-8401.
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