UNE community members take freezing 'plunge' to celebrate Giving Day success

Members of the UNE community line up on Freddy Beach to jump into the Saco River
UNE community members line up before taking the polar plunge at Freddy Beach.

On a blustery day in late March, with the wind chill hovering around just 21 degrees, a group of students, faculty and professional staff from the University of New England braved the cold waters of the Saco River to celebrate a successful 2024 Giving Day., which raised over $180,000 to support students and research at Maine’s largest private university.

Held on Friday, March 22, this was the fourth Polar Plunge to honor the University’s Giving Day donors. Flanked by fishing boats with gulls soaring overhead, over a dozen members of the UNE community set off for the frigid waters, led by Jonathan Millen, Ph.D., dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.

Funds raised during Giving Day will also support UNE’s Doing Our Part fundraising campaign, which aims to empower students to make change in their world through advances in health care education, promotion of groundbreaking scientific research, the creation of new academic programs, and access to a life-changing education supported by a well-rounded student experience.

The campaign represents a profoundly transformational moment for UNE, in which strategic, student-centric investments in programs and infrastructure will enable the University to provide an unmatched educational experience.

Such investments include the new Harold and Bibby Alfond Center for Health Sciences, which will house the University’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, Maine’s only medical school; the establishment of new, high-demand undergraduate and graduate programs and majors; expanded scientific research capacity; and increased scholarships and financial aid for students.

These investments will allow UNE graduates to embark on valuable careers and lives that make the world a better place — graduates like Sophia Tearman (Marine Sciences, ’24), who is studying the viability of growing protein-rich sea lettuce in Maine waters for the first time. 

“Aquaculture is important because we’re running out of land space to farm. We need to turn toward the ocean if we want to be able to sustainably keep growing enough food to feed our growing population,” she said, adding that campaign funding will allow her to create a more sustainable food source.

The campaign will also allow for the creation of New England’s first interprofessional health care education hub at UNE’s newly renamed Portland Campus for the Health Sciences, clearing the way for an enhanced number of health care professionals to care for the state’s changing populations. 

The relocation of its medical school from Biddeford will allow the University to graduate 35 more doctors each year and will bring together nearly all of the University’s health professions programs onto a single campus, meaning students in the state’s only medical schooldental school, and physician assistant program will collaborate directly with their peers studying nursing, social work, pharmacy, physical and occupational therapy, nurse anesthesia, and psychiatric nursing, among others.

That means students like Olivia McPherson (M.S.P.A., ’26) will be able to work as physician assistants in underserved communities across Maine, just like the one where she grew up.

“I think being able to train in Maine to take care of people from Maine sets me up for what I want to do in my career,” she said.

Learn more about UNE’s Doing Our Part fundraising campaign.