| New center to harness homeland security
expertise by Daniel
J. Fitzgibbons, Chronicle staff
ith the federal government poised to spend billions
on homeland security, campus officials are laying the groundwork
for a planned Center for Emergency Preparedness devoted to protection,
detection and response programs for a range of disaster scenarios
on the state, regional and national levels.
The interdisciplinary
center, which will be formally announced April 30, will provide
an umbrella organization for faculty from various schools and colleges
to collaborate on projects capable of attracting federal support,
according to interim Vice Chancellor for Research Fred Byron.
Planning for the center
began last fall, he said, after the Bush administration detailed
plans to pump billions into training and research programs through
the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Byron said the emerging
importance of homeland security as a national priority mirrors the
focus brought to research by the space program in the 1960s.
"I think people
who get in quickly and establish contacts with DHS will not be sorry,"
he said. "We're trying to respond to new trends in the federal
government's research spending. We're following the money."
That's the message
Chancellor John V. Lombardi brought to a meeting of about 50 interested
faculty on April 4. "There's a lot of money out there for this
game, but the people with the money don't know what to do with it,"
he said. "We're here to tell them how to do it."
According to Byron,
initial meetings last fall with deans and faculty showed a high
degree of interest in developing the proposed center.
On the advice of College
of Engineering dean Joseph I. Gold-stein, Peter Hilton was hired
as a consultant to help shepherd the initiative. Hilton, who serves
on the Dean's Advisory Council in Engineering, is the managing partner
of Technology Strategies Group.
Working with staff
from the Office of Industrial Liaison and Economic Development,
Hilton identified and met with about 50 faculty whose research could
have homeland security applications.
The faculty comes from
Engineering, Nursing, Public Health and Health Sciences, Journalism,
Food Science, Computer Science, Biochemistry, Polymer Science,
Chemistry and Microbiology, among others.
Many of those faculty
attended a colloquium on Emergency Preparedness and Effective Response
held earlier this month.
During the three-hour
session, faculty panels discussed ways their research could be integrated
into the development of research, technology and training to protect,
detect and respond to a range of disasters.
The panels discussed
a number of topics, including areas of vulnerability, including
safeguards for food, water, air and soil, while other faculty shared
thoughts on using advanced technology to coordinate disaster responses
and ensure safe evacuation of urban areas and buildings.
Other panels discussed
the potential for using current research on detection of severe
weather, trace chemicals or biological agents for homeland security.
"We want to bring
these teams together to develop three or four white papers that
we can shop around in Washington," Byron said this week.
Byron said campus staff
will be coordinating their efforts with the offices of Congressman
John Olver and Richard Neal and Senator Edward Kennedy.
Byron is hopeful that
the campus's approach, which emphasizes the human element as well
as technology in its problem-solving, will win federal support.
DHS is emphasizing
far-reaching, systematic research efforts, he said.
On April 29-30, said
Byron, the campus will showcase some of its research to corporate
representatives and state officials who could be key allies in developing
homeland security proposals.
"We want to introduce
the center to them and give them a rough idea of what we have in
mind," Byron said.
Using The Environmental
Institute as a model, Byron said CEP could emerge as an invaluable
resource for the state and industry alike.
"We want them
to come to us," Byron said, referring to state public safety
agencies. In turn, federal agencies are likely to favor efforts
that have state backing.
"This is really
a key area where a land grant university can serve the state and
the nation," said Byron. |