University Of Illinois Trustees Approve New Medical School

URBANA, Ill. (AP) -- University of Illinois trustees have approved a plan to open a new public-private medical school at the Urbana-Champaign campus.

The unanimous vote on Thursday means the university and Urbana-based Carle Foundation hospital will negotiate the details of the hospital's pledge to provide $100 million to the project over 10 years.

The school's startup costs are estimated at $100 million. It would open in 2017.

The plan was recommended by university President Robert Easter. He said the new school would help university research and teaching while providing a potential model for public-private funding as government support of higher education dwindles.

Gov. Bruce Rauner has proposed a state budget that sharply cuts funding for public universities.

The school would be independent of the existing College of Medicine in Chicago.

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