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Mr. Charles F. Monahan Jr.

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    biz.yahoo.com/bw/080109/20080109005940.html?.v=1 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/10/2008    Last Visited: 1/10/2008  

    On January 7, 2008, MCPHS President Charles F. Monahan, Jr. and KSU Rector Abdullah A. Al-Othman signed the agreement at a ceremony on the University's sprawling campus in Riyadh.
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    President Monahan and KSU Rector Abdullah A. Al-Othman (center) exchange gifts after a signing ceremony in Riyadh. (Photo Courtesy: MCPHS).
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    "We are very impressed with the quality of pharmacy education and practice at King Saud University and its clinical sties," said President Monahan, who was accompanied by Dr. George Humphrey, Vice President for College Relations, and Dr. Caroline Zeind, Chair and Professor of Pharmacy Practice at MCPHS-Boston.

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    www.telegram.com/article/20080618/NEWS/806180563/1101 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/18/2008    Last Visited: 6/19/2008  

    Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences is seeing record enrollments and needs to expand its downtown Worcester campus, said Charles F. Monahan, president and a lifelong city resident.

    Last month, the college graduated 180 students; next year 200 are expected to graduate.Applications are up 10 percent and the same is expected next year, he said.It currently offers programs in pharmacy, physician assistant and nursing, and hopes to add a dental hygiene bachelor's program.

    Right now the school has room in its two buildings to accommodate the fourth program, but it has a master plan for the whole city block it owns and wants to build its own parking garage.

    While Mr. Monahan said he sees big potential in Worcester for adding other health science programs, such as MRI - radiological sciences, "We act very prudently.

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    www.dismashouse.org/colleenaward.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/13/2007    Last Visited: 5/13/2007  

    In 2000, with the future of Worcester's downtown looking bleak, Charles F. Monahan Jr., president of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, established a satellite campus on Norwich Street - giving a new lease on life to several buildings in the heart of the city.

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    www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=106745&d=14& - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/14/2008    Last Visited: 2/14/2008  

    Dr. Yousif A. Asiri, the dean of the KSU's College of Pharmacy, said MCPHS President Charles F. Monahan, Jr. and KSU Rector Dr. Abdullah A. Al-Othman signed a Memorandum of Understanding at a ceremony held on the university campus last month.

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    www.telegram.com/article/20080812/NEWS/808120326/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/12/2008    Last Visited: 8/13/2008  

    > "The college has invested more than $50 million in the downtown area, and I believe a rich mix of health care facilities and biotech companies help give Worcester a very bright future," said college President Charles F. Monahan Jr.
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    Mr. Monahan said the largest classroom is currently 160 seats.The new space, which will take about a year to renovate, will have a classroom of 200 seats, and another with 225 seats, he said.

    "We bought other buildings for further expansion and found we need large classrooms, and they weren't adequate for that," he said.
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    Once brought into use as part of the school, the college will not pay city taxes on the property, Mr. Monahan said.He pointed out that some of the college's properties on Norwich Street have commercial tenants, and are on the tax rolls, and that the Honey Farms convenience store in one of its buildings on Commercial Street pays taxes to the city.

    The 400 additional students that will eventually be added will be responsible for millions of dollars in tuition, retail, housing and other spending while they are enrolled, he said.

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    www.telegram.com/article/20081116/COLUMN22/811160353/10 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/16/2008    Last Visited: 11/16/2008  

    Under the tireless leadership of President Charles F. Monahan, a Worcester resident, the rapidly expanding institution has brought life to a once dormant area.

    Assumption College hosts W.I.S.E., a popular education program for seniors, and the school's Reach Out Center coordinates student assistance of numerous community service programs.

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    www.colleges-fenway.org/newsletter/COFNewsletterWinter2 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2009    Last Visited: 5/24/2009  

    "During this process, the Mission Hill community taught us some very important lessons - that Boston is a city of neighborhoods, places where people live and raise their families, and that institutions must develop projects that respect the scale and character of the surrounding community," said MCPHS President Charles F. Monahan Jr. at the facility August 2007 ground breaking.

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    www.worcesterchamber.com/?s=WORCESTERCHAMBER&p=board1 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/26/2008    Last Visited: 5/26/2008  

    Charles F. Monahan President Mass College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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    biz.yahoo.com/bw/070501/20070501006442.html?.v=1 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/5/2001    Last Visited: 5/1/2007  

    "It gives me great pleasure to congratulate the School of Nursing on this important recognition," said MCPHS President Charles F. Monahan Jr. "Our superb faculty, state-of-the-art facilities and innovative programs are preparing the health care leaders of tomorrow across New England."

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    www.telegram.com/article/20081130/COLUMN27/811300373/10 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/30/2008    Last Visited: 11/30/2008  

    College President Charles F. Monahan Jr. has signed an unprecedented 25-year agreement with the city to have his 600-student school make annual voluntary payments that will go directly to support the operations of the Worcester Public Library.
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    "I'm thrilled that Charlie Monahan has established a leadership position on this important issue. He has always been a good friend to this city.

    "To take the responsibility that his school has goes well beyond their economic responsibility to the city of Worcester," he added.
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    "We recognize that Worcester is facing financial challenges, like most other cities and towns," Mr. Monahan said. "This is our way of giving something back to the city. Our annual gift in support of the Worcester Public Library, which is utilized by many of our students, is one way we can help the city. We want to continue the positive momentum that has been generated and help the city get through these tough times."

    Mr. Monahan is no stranger to PILOT programs and the role they play in communities. In Boston, where MCPHS has its much larger flagship campus, the college makes payments in lieu of taxes of about $150,000 annually, he said.

    In his ever-modest manner, Mr. Monahan downplays talk of being a trailblazer when it comes to Worcester's PILOT program. He said he just feels it is the right thing to do for his school, and he emphasized that it should not diminish the many outstanding things other colleges do in Worcester.

    He said one reason why PILOT has taken so long to get off the ground in Worcester is because its advocates continually tried to bully the colleges into making payments to the city. But, he added, there are many other ways the colleges can and are helping the city.

    "Everyone was getting their backs up over this," Mr. Monahan said.
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    Mr. Monahan cautioned folks at City Hall against using the agreement his college has struck with the city as a way to pressure other colleges to follow suit or set high expectations for similar agreements.

    He pointed out that in Boston, which is often held up as an example of a successful PILOT program, six colleges do not make any PILOT payments at all, and most of the money that city receives from PILOT comes from just two schools: Boston University, $4 million; and Harvard University, about $2 million.

    Mr. Monahan said colleges have also not been immune from the downturn in the economy. He said their endowments have taken a major hit in the wake of the stock market dive, forcing many schools to make unprecedented program and personnel cuts.

    As a result, he said, not every school may be in a position today to make payments in lieu of property taxes.

    There are signs, however, that other PILOT agreements may be in the offing in the not too distant future.

    In the Telegram & Gazette's reader comments section that accompanied Thursday's story on the MCPHS agreement, WPI President Dennis Berkey praised Mr. Monahan and Mr. O'Brien for "achieving a win/win agreement reflecting the strong mutual support between the MCP and the City."

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