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Governor celebrates signing of bill at UHV

Texas Gov. Rick Perry holds  10-month-old Alison McDaniel as her mother, Elizabeth, looks on. Perry  signed a  law allowing underclassmen to be admitted to UHV.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry holds 10-month-old Alison McDaniel as her mother, Elizabeth, looks on. Perry signed a law allowing underclassmen to be admitted to UHV.

By APRILL BRANDON
Originally published August 6, 2009 at 7:12 p.m., updated August 11, 2009 at 8:45 a.m.

It took a lot of people to turn the dream of making the University of Houston-Victoria into a four-year university into a reality. On Thursday, all those people, from the students who campaigned to the Texas governor who signed it into law, gathered at the university to celebrate a year of hard work.

"This is a milestone for this university system," Gov. Rick Perry said at the event, which had a standing-room-only crowd. "UHV never did buy into that old adage of starting at the bottom and working your way up. You all started this darn near the top and said 'OK, let's go from here.' That's the attitude you had and it's a great attitude to have. The wheels are now turning."

Perry was at the university for the ceremonial signing of House Bill 1056, which allows the university to admit freshmen and sophomores. The legislation was formally signed by the governor on June 19.

"This is a glorious day, not just for the University of Houston-Victoria, but for the University of Houston system, the city of Victoria and the state of Texas," Chancellor of University of Houston System Renu Khator, said. "We have to be thankful for our leadership in Austin. And, of course, for the one person who had the last word and with one stoke on June 19 made a dream into a reality."

Also on hand at the event were Rep. Geanie Morrison, the author of the bill, Sen. Glenn Hegar and UHV president Tim Hudson, who all spoke, as well as many other university and community leaders.

"This expansion couldn't have come at a better time or a better place," Perry added. "It's clear the folks in Victoria understand the strong impact education has on the economy, the impact it has on the community, the impact it has on the lives of these young men and women who have chosen to come here and the way they will impact the future of this state."

Even though the governor slipped up once during his speech, referring to the school as the "University of Texas in Victoria," receiving much light-hearted heckling from the crowd in return, the atmosphere was joyous inside the Multi-Purpose Room in the University Center, especially for the students in attendance.

"A lot of work went into this, but it feels like a lot of work has finally paid off," Kristen Lindley, the first student regent from Victoria for the University of Houston System Board of Regents, said. "Many students got involved and we asked students several times to come and speak to the board of regents. I think this has made the students feel like they have power over things that happen within the system. It was really neat to see that if you want to make something happen, you can."