| Research dollars hit record high
By Sarah R. Buchholz,
Chronicle staff
ith dollars from the state harder to come by
these days, interim Vice Chancellor for Research Fred Byron offered
the Faculty Senate some good news May 22 when he reported that research
funding is up nearly 11 percent over last year. Byron also announced
that income from intellectual property is on the rise.
Last year at this time,
the campus had garnered just over $77.8 million in grants and contracts.
"We are now 10
months through the year, and our total [of research grants and contracts]
is just slightly in excess of $86 million, which is far in excess
of what we've ever had at this time [of year] before," Byron
said.
"The faculty success
rate at the agencies and also the foundations is really remarkable
at the present time," he said. "It's being as successful
as I can ever remember in bringing in external support, which speaks
very well for the caliber of our people because although there are
increases in the funding agencies, the number of people looking
for those increases is very large. It's a very, very competitive
environment, and we're doing extraordinarily well, right now."
Biology professor Willy
Bemis said he finds the success rate particularly remarkable in
light of the size of the faculty.
"The faculty is
smaller than last year because of the retirements, and yet the grant
money is increasing," said Bemis, who is a member of the senate's
Research Council.
Byron said that another
figure on the rise for the campus is income from intellectual property.
"For the first
time this year we've passed the annual level of $1 million,"
he said, "so that is another area where the campus is doing
very well.
"Some of our best
properties, in fact, will probably not come to market for a few
years, but when they do, I think that that level of income to the
campus will grow very substantially at that time." |