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The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Can USDA's NIFA be ag's NIH?
Posted by Bob Grant [Entry posted at 27th October 2009 03:13 PM GMT]
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Thanks for the personal comment by Rafaela Canete-Soler [Comment posted 2009-10-27 16:34:24] Thanks anonymous for your well thought and wise advice. I will try to always remember it. Please, let me add something to it and feel free to counterbalance it. I think that is also important to bring into discussion strong opinions, concerns with an appearance of having an agenda and so on and so forth. Because the chances are that things and ideas can be clarified and we can move on feeling that everybody had an opportunity to express his/her own views. I only hope that Dr Beachy did not take it personally. Thanks again. Rafaela personal comment to Rafaela Canete-Soler by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-10-27 16:03:46] Dear Rafaela: I am the "anonymous poster" who posted both the history of the competitive research program at USDA and also the response to Mr. Hanson's comment regarding Dr. Beachy. I did not see your post prior to writing my post regarding Dr. Beachy's qualifications. However, your post certainly brought home to me how incredibly easily people who lack specific knowledge or information can be swayed by the strongly expressed opinions of others. I want to urge you to never, ever take for granted anything that others say or write. There is always the possibility that someone may put forward statements or propaganda in support of a specific agenda which may not be in accordance with your own agenda or beliefs. Please, I beg you, always take the "scientific" approach of getting reliable facts for yourself before accepting anyone else's opinions (including mine). The world would be a far better place if everyone were a bit more skeptical of others' opinions and were more inclined to verify what others tell them. Personal Attack on Roger Beachy Inappropriate in this Forum by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-10-27 15:48:21] I was rather surprised to see the comment from Jaydee Hanson in which he indicated that he felt that Dr. Beachy was not the best choice for the position.
My surprise was based on two things: 1, the tone of the article, which seemed -- how shall I put it without using the same tone myself -- strong? ; and 2, the reason provided by Hanson, which suggests to me that Mr. Hanson knows very little about the basic plant research community and even less about Dr. Beachy. I want to make it perfectly clear that I do not know Mr. Hanson, either personally or professionally, and I had never heard of him prior to reading his comment on this forum. I do not know, and certainly do not understand, the true basis for his comments or opinion. Furthermore, although I had, for more than two decades prior to my recent retirement, substantial professional awareness of Dr. Beachy , I do not know him personally, and my professional contacts with Dr. Beachy were extremely limited; in fact, I would not be surprised if Dr. Beachy would not even recognize my name. However, I can state that, in my pre-retirement professional capacity, I knew of Dr. Beachy as one of many basic research scientists of significant standing in his community. I am not biased either ?for? or ?against? Dr. Beachy?s appointment to his new position at the NIFA. Nonetheless, I consider Mr. Hanson?s comments not only inappropriate but in fact baseless. In support of my contention, I offer the following facts which I have taken from Wikipedia (warts and all ? e.g., ?CPM?R? which is a typo on Wikipedia) (although most of these facts were well known to me previously): 1. Dr. Beachy's academic career: "After completing his PhD, he became a member of the Biology Department at Washington University in St. Louis from 1978 to 1991, where he was Professor and Director of the Center for Plant Science and Biotechnology. From 1991 to 1998, he headed the Division of Plant Biology at The Scripps Research Institute, a leading biomedical research center in La Jolla, California. Since January 1999, he is the president of the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis, Missouri." 2. Dr. Beachy?s biotechnological and basic research credentials: ?Roger N. Beachy is an expert in plant virology and biotechnology of plants. He established principles for the genetic engineering of plants, that make them resistant to viral diseases. His research at Washington University in St. Louis, in collaboration with Monsanto Company, led to the development of the world?s first genetically modified food crop, a variety of tomato that was modified for resistance to virus disease. He demonstrated pathogen-derived resistance in plants and produce the first disease-resistant transgenic plant. He also showed that by transferring and expressing the coat protein gene of a virus in plants (coat protein-mediated resistance - CPM?R), these transgenic plants become resistant to viral infection. His discovery of the CPMR led to the development of virus-resistant varieties of potato, tomato, pepper, cucumber, squash, sugar beets, papaya and plum.? 3. Dr. Beachy?s awards and honors: ?Roger N. Beachy has received several awards and honors in his life. In 2001, he was awarded the Wolf Prize in Agriculture along with James E. Womack of Texas A&M University "for the use of recombinant DNA technology, to revolutionize plant and animal sciences, paving the way for applications to neighboring fields" ... He is also a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.? I must add that immediately prior to posting this comment, I ?Googled? Mr. Hanson. What I learned about him in that way has left me even more perplexed about his motivation for posting his comment. Thanks for the information by Rafaela Canete-Soler [Comment posted 2009-10-27 15:33:58] Thank you anonymous for the in formation on the NRI. I was just writing a note to The Scientist asking for recent history of launching NIFA. There appears to be, however, some legitimate concerns on appropriate leadership for such an instrumental initiative. I wonder if this is a definitive appointment or there is still a possibility for providing names of additional candidates that the Obama?s administration could take into account. Just a thought because many of us don?t know enough. I agree with the comments that the mission is very important and very much needed. Food and Agriculture but not Environment and Enviornmental Health? by Thomas Moritz [Comment posted 2009-10-27 15:16:46] The need for an NIH-style "national Institute" to focus on the environment and environmental health has been clear to many of us for many years -- aside from the obvious economic motives -- and the perception that "food" per se is our problem -- I wonder... How amazing that food is accepted as a problem that merits this attention but air and water not? HIGHLY MISLEADING & INACCURATE ARTICLE by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-10-27 14:54:28] This is a HIGHLY MISLEADING article. The clear implication in this article is that NIFA is conceptually brand-new, and that previously there was no competitive research grants program for academic agricultural research. THIS IS NOT TRUE!!!!! There were competitive grants programs at USDA since at least the early 1980's (if not earlier) -- although they did undergo name changes. Since at least 1991, it was called the National Research Initiative (NRI), and it was run out of the USDA's Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service. This highly-respected competitive research grants program at the USDA supported important academic research in basic agricultural science (including plant research, farm animal research, soil and rhizosphere research, etc.). Some of its permanent program officers were drawn from other Federal agencies such as the National Science Foundation, and some of them subsequently moved to other Federal agencies such as NSF and NIH (in fact, Dr. Sally Rocky, who is currently NIH's Acting Deputy Director for Extramural Research, was for many years a program officer at the NRI at USDA). For most of its existence, and certainly for its last two decades, the dollar amounts of funds available for academic agricultural-related research was a pittance (especially compared to NIH). In 2007, the last year for which NRI operated (it was not reauthorized in the 2008 USDA legislation), it was only able to spend about $164 million, which was enough to make relatively small awards to 451 proposals. However, that $164M was better than -- and more than -- nothing. I certainly hope that the new administrative unit will provide funding at levels that are substantially greater than what USDA has provided previously for competitive basic academic research. For more details about the NRI (only going back to 1991, when the competitive grants program was renamed NRI), please go to the following URL: LINK NIFA will be no Ag NIH if Beachy is its head by Jaydee Hanson [Comment posted 2009-10-27 14:33:03] This is an important mission, but Roger Beachy is the wrong person for the job. I hope that the Obama Administration will reconsider its support of Roger Beachy as head of the new National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). Until last month, Beachy was the head of Monsanto?s de facto nonprofit research arm. In his capacity as head of NIFA, Roger Beachy will be in charge of the nation?s agricultural research agenda and purse strings for the next six years. Given Beachy?s previous career running the Danforth Plant Science Center, a nonprofit closely linked to and funded by Monsanto, I fear that billions more in government funding will be funneled into agricultural biotechnology and chemical pesticide research while the real solutions to our growing agricultural problems, provided by sustainable and organic agriculture research, will suffer from a lack of federal funding and attention. NIFA itself will suffer if the sustainable agriculture community starts out suspicious of its work because of this ill chosen appointee. The idea is good but by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-10-27 14:20:32] Where are they going to get the brains from? We must... by ROBERT KILLOREN [Comment posted 2009-10-27 13:15:50] Food security, sustainability, and distribution are essential to the welfare of everyone on this planet. A strong economy, health care, national security are impossible if there isn't enough food and water and a healthy environment. For too long agriculture has been treated as a second-class science. The once great land grant system of research and extension that was the envy of the world has been weakened by shrinking federal support and the winds of political expediency. Our nation and our world need a renewed and reinvigorated program of R&D in the agricultural sciences and NIFA could be the start of that effort. A stronger better funded competitive grant program presents no threat to land grant institutions - but rather a new opportunity to lead the way. Nat'l Ag Inst. -- maybe, but---- by R. H. Richardson [Comment posted 2009-10-27 12:29:03] Ag and Medicine are "cash cows" for industries. There is a role, but it's easily seduced into nonpublic benefits for corporate welfare and higher public expenses. For health care, it drugs and patents. For ag it's patents and unsustainable methods with a high cost to producers.
Alternatives exist, but less well known. They don't make the "news" and aren't advertised since the best choices are supporting "health" in less expensive ways than typical medicine, and "sustainability" in agriculture without patents. Comment on this blog |