All posts by Aaron Jaco

Register today for the Grand Blue Mile and Drake Road Races

Drake students, faculty, and staff can use the discount code FSS5DGB to save $5 toward registration in the 5k, half marathon, or Bulldog Double.

Be the first to register for the brand new Bulldog Double. Finish in both the Grand Blue Mile on Tuesday, April 25, and either the half marathon or 5K of the Drake Road Races on Saturday, April 29, and receive your own 2017 Bulldog Double finisher medal to show off your Relays Week accomplishment.

All Drake Road Races participants receive a long-sleeve T-shirt and finisher medal, while the Grand Blue Mile participants receive a short sleeve T-shirt.

For the first time ever, as part of the Bulldog Double all finishers of the Grand Blue Mile and either of the Drake Road Races Half Marathon or 5K will receive TWO FINISHER MEDALS!

Your paid registration for the Drake Road Races also includes one paid admission to the Distance Carnival, the Thursday evening session of the Drake Relays presented by Hy-Vee, and a discount ticket rate of $17 to the Friday night session. A ticket voucher will be presented at packet pick-up for redemption at the Drake Athletics Ticket Office.

Early bird registration pricing is available until March 6. Don’t delay, register now for the best savings!

Grand Blue Mile | Tuesday, April 25 | 6 p.m. | Register Now | More Info

Drake Road Races | Saturday, April 29 | Half Marathon or 5K | Register Now

Bulldog Double | Griff – GBM and Half Marathon | Spike – GBM and 5K
—Ellen Lowe, Recreational Services

Campus parking

As we prepare for several changes in our campus in the year ahead, including the opening of two new STEM@DRAKE buildings, we are also carefully evaluating the effect these and other changes will have on parking. For example, various faculty, staff, and students provided input into the development of the 27th Street promenade and parking lot that is part of the STEM@DRAKE project, noting the importance of adding a parking lot adjacent to the new buildings.

Likewise, the University Parking Committee is addressing a variety of topics including changes to the parking rate structure and how to better handle visitor parking—particularly as it relates to the impact on permit holders. While proposals for parking rate increases are never popular, periodic reviews of rates and usage are necessary to ensure we keep pace with the cost of providing parking. Since the parking rates were last changed at Drake—in 2009—we have seen a steady increase in maintenance and repair costs as well as parking rates at other institutions like ours (the annual rate at Creighton University, a Midwestern peer, is $341 for students and $375 for employees).

With input from the Parking Committee, Director of Public Safety & Operational Services Scott Law will be meeting with various representative bodies on campus to discuss possible parking rate options. Based on feedback from those meetings, further refinements and changes to parking rates and regulations will be finalized so that changes can be communicated before the end of the semester.

Watch for additional communication from Scott Law in OnCampus regarding this topic.

—Venessa Macro, Chief Administration Officer

New campus addresses

Last summer Drake purchased 27th Street and Carpenter Avenue stretches between 25th and 27th streets. Because of this purchase, the City of Des Moines requires address changes to the buildings located on Carpenter Avenue and 27th Street. The address changes will be effective on June 15, 2017.

New addresses:

  • Harmon Fine Arts Center: 1310 25th St.
  • Opperman Law Library: 2604 Forest Ave.
  • Cartwright Law School: 2608 Forest Ave.
  • The Point: 2612 Forest Ave.
  • Jewett Resident Hall: 2700 Forest Ave.

Other recent address changes (already in effect):

  • Olin Hall: 2708 Forest Ave.
  • Collier-Scripps Hall: 2702 Forest Ave.
  • Science Connector Building: 2714 Forest Ave.

—Jolene Schmidt, Director, Operations and Support Services

Drake tree project 2017

The Facilities Planning and Management (FPM) team is continuing the tree work plan to remove and prune trees. The majority of the tree pruning work has been completed including in the areas from Jewett to University Avenue and 25th Street to 28th Street. On Monday, March 13, FPM will remove the Sycamore west of Old Main. The west entrance will be temporarily blocked off to allow the removal process to take place. FPM hopes the tree removal will be completed within a two-day window.

The following buildings will also be affected by tree removal work the week of March 13: Cole Hall, Carnegie, Cowles, and Aliber.

To see a full schedule of the tree work, please visit our web site www.drake.edu/facility/

If you have any questions or concerns about the work being completed or concerns related to noise, please contact Aaron Edwards, building and grounds manager, at 515-271-2959 or FPM at 515-271-3955.

—Kevin Moran, Executive Director Facilities Planning and Management

Spring Break facilities projects

Facilities Planning and Management manages multiple projects of all shapes and sizes. All projects aim to implement as many sustainable practices as possible and to improve the quality of the campus.

Current projects are featured below for Spring Break, March 13-17.

  • Weitz Construction will be connecting the STEM building to Fitch Hall.
  • Weitz will be connecting the fire sprinkler system, which will require that the fire alarm system be shut down in Olin March 13, 8–10 a.m..
  • Cleaning Opperman corridor wall panel
  • Addressing carpet, upholstery, and hard wood areas of buildings throughout campus
  • Completing a steam line repair outside of Olmsted
  • Planned power outage of the Fine Arts Center Tuesday, March 14, for an 8–10 hour period to install a new breaker for the chiller project
  • Heat shutdown in Harvey-Ingham for insulation of new heating pump and piping
  • Medbury second floor corridor ceiling and lighting replacement
  • Prep and paint Studio Arts, Room 120
  • Removal of sick or dead trees around Old Main, Cole Hall, Carnegie, Cowles, and Aliber.

If you have any questions or concerns about the work being completed or concerns related to noise, please contact Facilities Planning and Management at 515-271-3955.

—Kevin Moran, Executive Director Facilities Planning and Management

University Communications adopts new model to focus on key audiences and digital

A restructuring of University Communications began last week. This reorganization is based on input from President’s Council, Deans Council, and other key partners across campus. These changes are necessary in order for University Communications to move forward in an audience-centered, data-driven, and digital-first way. Ultimately, the University needs greater emphasis on digital/mobile communications, as well as student recruitment, campus communications, alumni and donor communications, and public relations.  

Moving forward, University Communications will build strategic plans and make data-driven decisions that focus squarely on the needs of the University’s most important audiences. This new model introduces market research, brand strategy, and strategic planning, while infusing project management and accountability across the department. All the while, the team will be able to better collaborate on storytelling for key audiences and across multiple media, particularly digital and social media.

The five focus areas for University Communications are:

  • Campus relations encompasses student recruitment communications and campus communications. Alyssa Young will serve as director, and she will lead a cross-functional team that includes Jill Brimeyer, Libby Burns, and Tim Schmitt. There is one open position that will be posted soon; that role will focus on the campus communications aspect.
  • Alumni and donor communications will have greater attention now in terms of research, strategy, and planning. Beth Wilson will serve as director, and she will lead a cross-functional team that includes Emma Daily and Meredith Ponder.
  • Public relations, as before, will encompass news media, social media, and related efforts. Jarad Bernstein will continue as the director of this team, which includes Aaron Jaco and Niki Smith.
  • Digital communications will include for the first time a team to provide front-end design, content management, and content creation/coordination for both the University website and intranet. Jeremy Sievers will continue as director, and his cross-functional team will include Tim Schmitt (dotted line to Alyssa Young), Meredith Ponder (dotted line to Beth Wilson), and Justice Simpson. There will be two open positions posted soon; one role will focus on front-end design, and the other role will focus on content management.
  • Brand strategy and implementation will involve a blend of in-house talent and outsourced expertise in market research and brand management that currently being sourced via a competitive RFP process led by Dave Remund, executive director.

Additionally, Sara Sommerlot-McWeeny continues as office manager for University Communications, along with budget management responsibility for all of University Advancement (dotted line to John Smith).

Work will continue, but please allow 90 days for University Communications to get its bearings. Change can’t happen overnight; the team needs time to modify practices and processes, initiate long-overdue market research, and build strategic plans. No doubt you may have questions; your feedback is welcome anytime.

—Dave Remund, University Communications

Preview J-Term 2018!

The J-Term Fair is on Monday, March 6, 4:30–6:15 p.m. in Parents Hall, Olmsted Center. You will find information about J-Term 2018 classes—both travel seminars and on-campus classes—as well as information about J-Term housing, finances and registration.

—Art Sanders, Associate Provost

Japanese Language Club conversation hours

Students, have you considered learning a few words and phrases in Japanese? Are you planning one day to apply for a Fulbright or the Japanese Exchange and Teaching (JET) program? Do you want or need to keep up your foreign language fluency? Drake’s Department of World Languages and Cultures wants to help.

The Japanese Language Club meets every Friday, 3–5p.m. in Room TM-133, located in the lower level of Olmsted. All students are welcome to join in for conversations directed by a native speaker.

For further information, contact Associate Professor Chinatsu Bachmann at chinatsu.sazawa@drake.edu.

—Dorothy Pisarski, Drake International communications liaison

2017 Pappajohn Student Entrepreneurial Venture Competition

The 2017 Pappajohn Student Entrepreneurial Venture Competition is now open! This competition for Iowa college and university students who have an interest in starting their own venture. Three regional winners will receive $500 and go on to the state competition with a chance to win $5,000. In 2016, the Drake team for Kelsi Ziemann Artistry won a top prize—you could be next! For more information, visit the Entrepreneurship Centers in Aliber Hall, Room 302, or online at tinyurl.com/drakepappajohn2017.

—Stephanie Cardwell, Entrepreneurship Centers