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Record Research Funding is a Testament to Faculty Commitment

An Update from UF Vice President for Research David Norton on August 5, 2016

Record Research Funding is a Testament to Faculty Commitment

Earlier this week, we announced that UF faculty garnered a record $724 million in research awards in fiscal year 2015-16, which ended on June 30. As Vice President for Research, I see first-hand all of the work that goes into the development of grant proposals, so it is always rewarding to be able to share this kind of news with the campus community.

As impressive as the total awards amount is, it is the stories behind those awards that really illustrate the quality and breadth of the UF research enterprise.

About $450 million of the funding came from federal agencies, led by the National Institutes of Health with $178.6 million, a 17 percent increase over last year. U.S. Department of Agriculture funding was at $68 million; funding from the National Science Foundation was up nearly 35 percent to $63.3 million; and funding from the U.S. Department of Education more than doubled to $25.7 million.

The state of Florida provided another $50 million, up nearly 29 percent over 2015; and foundations and non-profits provided $110 million in support, a 21 percent increase. Industry, local governments and other sources funded the remaining $113 million.

It is this diversity in our research portfolio that has kept us on an upward trajectory for many years. In fact, research awards have increased 24 percent over the last decade in large part because our faculty continue to be very strategic at pursuing funding from the source that is the best fit for their science – government agency, industry or foundation.

And that funding touches every part of the university.

The College of Medicine in Gainesville and Jacksonville brought in $298 million; IFAS received $140 million; the College of Engineering was at $75 million; and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences received $40 million. The remaining colleges had a combined $171 million.

Notable grants from NIH include $4 million to the Institute on Aging to develop strategies to address low-grade chronic inflammation and movement disabilities in the elderly; $3.6 million to the Diabetes Institute to continue its research on type 1 diabetes; and nearly $3 million to the Center for Translational Research in Neurodegenerative Disease to establish an Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.

As Dr. David Guzick, UF’s senior vice president for health affairs, said: “Research grants from the NIH are among the most prestigious recognitions of excellence that biomedical scientists can receive. Competition for NIH grants is a demanding process in which the innovation and excellence of one’s research is assessed by scientific peers against a limited budget. The growing success by UF’s faculty in winning competitive research grants from the NIH is therefore a tremendous testimony to the esteem in which they are held by the scientific community.”

Major U.S. Department of Agriculture grants to IFAS included $4.4 million to develop turfgrass with improved drought resistance; $3.4 million to try to stem the impact of laurel wilt on avocados; and $3.4 million to combat a bacterial disease damaging tomatoes.

“A record year for research awards to IFAS is important in two ways. It means we can accelerate our search for solutions to the challenges faced by farmers, families and all Floridians,” said Jack Payne, senior vice president for agriculture and natural resources. “The awards also signal that the USDA and other funding agencies recognize the quality of our science and the impact our faculty make by improving people’s lives.”

Other federal awards included more than $8 million from the U.S. Department of Commerce Economic Development Administration for Phase II of the Florida Innovation Hub and $5 million from the Department of Education to expand the College of Education CEEDAR Center’s work with teachers and public school leaders who serve students with disabilities.

The 50,000-square-foot expansion of the Innovation Hub will provide much-needed space for technology startups near UF, said director Jane Muir.

“Several companies in the Florida Innovation Hub are projecting significant growth in the near future and will need expansion space that is not readily available in Gainesville,” Muir said. “In addition, Phase I is operating at capacity and needs additional space to accommodate demand.”

The largest non-governmental grant was $7.6 million from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, or PCORI, for the OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium to continue to expand a statewide network which links UF with other universities, health systems and patients around the state to address health challenges like concussion, hypertension and teen smoking.

Maddie’s Fund, a pet rescue foundation, awarded the College of Veterinary Medicine nearly $4.2 million to continue to grow the college’s shelter medicine program. The foundation has provided $11 million in support to UF’s program since it was founded in 2008.

Faculty willing to do the hard work of pursuing external grant funding are an important reason why UF is now a world-class research institution, ranked among the best public universities in the United States.

Citizens of Florida and beyond and our students here on campus all benefit from the research UF scientists and scholars conduct.

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