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https://www.ucsf.edu/news/2010/02/3201/speaker-pelosi-hears-economic-stimulus-success-stories-ucsf

 

Kwok Lab- Neil Risch- Nancy Pelosi

 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, UCSF Chancellor Sue Desmond-Hellmann and UCSF scientist Neil Risch met to discuss how the federal economic stimulus package has infused much-need resources to UCSF, small businesses and the City of San Francisco.

 

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi heard firsthand this week how the federal economic stimulus package, known as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), is creating jobs, spurring scientific research, improving public safety and transportation and supporting small businesses in San Francisco.

 

Pelosi hosted a roundtable discussion and news conference on Wednesday at UCSF to celebrate and communicate the success of the $787 billion stimulus program, one year after President Barack Obama signed the bill into law on Feb. 17, 2009.

 

“This is a very special day for us because we worked very hard to put together this recovery package,” Pelosi said. “Our country was on the brink of falling into a deeper national recession.”

 

Since the stimulus bill was passed, the number of jobs lost in the US has decreased significantly—from 741,000 jobs lost last year to 21,000 jobs lost during the same month, Pelosi said. Asked about California’s high 12.6 percent unemployment rate, Pelosi noted that the state has its own significant budget challenges, but is getting relief from the recovery act totaling nearly $90 billion that has either been distributed or allocated.

 

UCSF Recovery Act Facts

 

Number of grants:

256 as of Feb. 16. 2010

Total funds awarded:

$117.8 million as of Feb. 16. 2010

Amount received:

$5.756 million as of Dec. 31, 2009

Number of jobs created/saved:

568.75 in research and other areas

 

Website

During a roundtable panel discussion, which was moderated by UCSF Chancellor Sue-Desmond-Hellmann, MD, MPH, and included Mayor Gavin Newsom, as well as others from San Francisco’s private and public sector, Pelosi asked for specific examples of how the stimulus funding is being used in San Francisco.

 

Desmond-Hellmann said the stimulus funds will help University scientists conduct “biomedical research that literally will change the world.”

 

“The funds have enabled the University to retain scientists, enhance its research infrastructure, train the next generation of scientists, conduct leading-edge research, and uncover new knowledge to improve human health,” she said.

 

UCSF has been awarded 256 grants totaling $117.8 million as of Feb. 16, making the campus one of the top institutional recipients of this stimulus-based scientific funding. As of year-end, UCSF has received $5.756 million of those funds, enabling UCSF to retain or create 568 jobs in research or associated areas.

 

The infusion of resources comes at a critical time for UCSF, which is one of 10 campuses of the University of California and the only campus dedicated solely to graduate and professional education in the health sciences. With shrinking state funds, UCSF has increasingly relied upon extremely competitive NIH funding to drive its research, which consistently ranks among the top in the nation in caliber across research areas.

 

Investing in the Future

 

Neil Risch, PhD, director of the UCSF Institute for Human Genetics, shared a $25 million grant with Kaiser Permanente to fund the research and creation of the largest genetic health care database ever undertaken. The project will enable scientists to conduct a genome-wide analysis of DNA samples from 100,000 Kaiser member volunteers and connecting that genomic information with actual health outcomes over the past 20 to 40 years, with the goal of ultimately improving upon personalized health care.

 

“This is an unprecedented opportunity for a large number of scientists around the world to better understand age-related diseases and it’s an investment for the future,” Risch said.

 

He noted that the stimulus funding, plus a $9 million donation from Kaiser, will finance the construction of a data center that otherwise would not have been possible and will create additional jobs.

 

University leaders from across the US and UC system are praising the $10.4 billion provided by the recovery act to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to help pay for scientific research and development, the purchase of new equipment and science-related construction projects.