Politics

Losing ground in the research race

A survey of our assets and their funding shows that we do not have a clear strategy and some key programs are being defunded. Here's a wake-up call about this most critical sector of our modern global economy.

Losing ground in the research race
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by

Ashli Blow

A survey of our assets and their funding shows that we do not have a clear strategy and some key programs are being defunded. Here's a wake-up call about this most critical sector of our modern global economy.

Hiding  in our region’s labs behind racks of test tubes, electron microscopes,  and spectrometers are researchers, lab technicians, computer  programmers, and the other highly talented people who comprise our  research community. We talk about the need to be innovative to compete  in a changing global economy. Our scientists and researchers and their  support staff are at the heart of the innovation process. Their test tubes are the hope for reviving our economy.

We enjoy a wide range of research in our region. This  research is an entire "industry cluster" and a major employer in our region.  Research should not be treated as an addendum to other clusters but as a  separate industry. Once you look at it as an industry, you examine how  to make it stronger. I asked our staff at the Trade Alliance, working  with the Technology Alliance, to create a brochure like those we had  previously developed on IT, biotech, and aerospace. Then end product was  called “Greater Seattle and Washington State: A Center of World Class  Research.” It became one of our bestselling brochures.

Recently  I went on the Global Health Tour of the region, organized by the Prosperity  Partnership and the Global Health Alliance. Global Health is but one  part of our research community. Traveling through the South Lake Union  neighborhood, we visited PATH, Seattle Biomedical, and the Institute for  Systems Biology and heard from researchers at the Hutchinson Center, UW,  and others. They presented the products, services, and contributions to  world health that came out of these organizations.

The primary components of funding for this sector are at the federal,  state, and private levels. The federal government provides funding  through agencies such as NIH,  USAID, NSF, and DOD among others. There is a threat to  federal research both from the deficit reduction efforts and  the  anti-science philosophy of certain members of Congress. The state government does a little,  although some of this has also been cut. Charitable entities such as the  Gates Foundation play a significant role. Business gives money both  in the corporate interest and through community giving and employee  associations. Individuals give to such institutions as the Hutch.

To make a competitive country, one needs selective infrastructure, education, and research.  To cut those building blocks is counterproductive to  creating a successful economy and creating employment opportunities.  If our country had a competitive strategy and made an aggressive effort  to increase trade and lower the deficit, research would be at the top  of the agenda.

Using funds from the tobacco settlement, Washington state supports growth in our biotech industry.  It developed a successful research program with  the Life Science Discovery Fund (LSDF). The metrics on the LSDF grants  were excellent, but very few in  Olympia wanted to hear the numbers when they were scrambling to preserve  basic services. The budget for the LSDF was cut from over $30 million to $4 million. The two research universities were also cut. The  legislature is not thinking strategically, but rather getting through  the next revenue forecast and hoping for a recovery.

However, in the last session, the legislature established a small new program, the Global Health Technologies Competitiveness Fund, whose first grants have been awarded. Another  positive step was the creation of Innovate Washington, a  technology-based economic development agency formed from the merger of  Washington Technology Center and SIRTI (formerly the Spokane  Intercollegiate Research and Technology Institute). The merger creates a  single organization that assists innovative companies statewide with  their technology-commercialization needs.

According  to a recent Innovate Washington announcement, this organization  combines the nationally recognized business-assistance programs of WTC  and SIRTI and adds a new industry-cluster-based strategy, with an  initial focus on coordinating Washington’s clean energy initiatives. The  role of the agency is to facilitate research supportive of state  industries and provide mechanisms for collaboration between  technology-based industries and universities. It helps  businesses secure research funds, develops and integrates technology  into new products, and offers technology transfer and commercialization-training opportunities. It aims to serve as the lead entity for  coordinating clean energy initiatives and to administer technology and  innovation grants and loan programs.

As  participants in a recent Trade Alliance and Seattle Chamber Study  Mission learned, Scotland provides a good model of this systematic approach to commercializing  research. A research council awards grants. For example, if the  University of Edinburgh sees commercial possibilities in some research,  Enterprise Scotland is notified. A case worker is assigned to assist the  process with various interventions until either a product is developed  or the attempt is dropped. Another part of Enterprise Scotland assists  with the marketing of the product throughout the world.

The private sector  is also a major contributor to our research expertise. Microsoft  operates a research center, said to be the largest of its kind in the  world, with a budget of over $1 billion. Children’s Hospital,  Swedish Hospital, Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason Hospital, Boeing — all  these have significant research arms. Our advantage is that we have  many different disciplines located in a small region and people can  easily meet. The Institute of Systems Biology brings this cross-disciplinary approach into  one organization.

One way to increase the effectiveness of these investments in research would be to do an economic impact assessment of all our research assets. How  many and what kind of research jobs are there? How can we enhance this  economic sector? How can our universities and community colleges prepare  the researchers and lab technicians of the future?  How do we enhance this state and the Puget Sound region as one of the world’s great centers of science and research?

Public leadership and the general public are beginning to understand  what our business leaders know, that new circumstances and a new reality require a new  strategy and approach.  The global competitiveness league  is reaching parity, and we can no longer coast with our old game  plan. We need to capitalize better on our key assets, the research universities. The researchers must better understand that  they need to assist in this effort, lest there be a further  erosion of their funding. Finally, we need to strengthen what little we do to promote  the business of the future, particularly by restoring the Life Science  Discovery Fund.

"Research  centers and institutions are indisputably the most important factors in  incubating high-tech industries,” asserts the Milken Institute in a  study of American’s high tech economy.  A UW publication notes that universities are the engine of the knowledge-based economy.  “The last half of the 20th century has witnessed the most explosive growth in scientific discovery  in all human history. From the proverbial astronomy to zoology, each  day brings a new report of expanded frontiers.  Although  not all these discoveries can be translated directly or immediately into  products that we will purchase at our local shopping mall, many of them  will directly affect our lives sooner than we realize.”

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal