UW-Platteville vows to work with local officials on a plan for Richland campus
KIMBERLY WETHAL
Updated
Izeah Currier, freshman college ambassador from Blue River, walks through campus at UW-Platteville Richland. University and campus officials are mulling how to best use the campus in the wake of an announcement that in-person classes for degrees will no longer be held there, starting July 1.
UW-Platteville administrators are pledging to work with University of Wisconsin System administration and Richland County officials to find a use for the Richland Center campus, which is set to end in-person instruction July 1.
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In the weeks before I joined the Wisconsin State Journal in September, I was told this: Remember that a higher education institution is like their own city. It has its own character and struggles, defined by the students who learn there and the faculty who teach them.
I have seen this over and over again, and it was particularly clear when I visited UW-Platteville at Richland a week after the University of Wisconsin System ordered degree-fulfilling classes to cease because of low enrollment. During my visit, I found many of the devastated students to be emotionally invested in their campus community — and committed to saving it.
Izeah Currier, freshman college ambassador from Blue River, walks through campus at UW-Platteville Richland. University and campus officials are mulling how to best use the campus in the wake of an announcement that in-person classes for degrees will no longer be held there, starting July 1.