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May Khanna
@may_khanna
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@UF Faculty & Asst Dean of Innovation & Entrepreneur @AcadofInventors. CSO Regenerix CEO Eternum. Opinions are my own. Spreading Kindness, Peace and Innovation.
Gainesville, FL
Joined June 2012
RT @UWMadison: In response to the federal directive issued on Feb. 7, 2025 to change the Facilities and Administration rate for all existinā¦
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RT @JamesSurowiecki: NIH is legally prohibited by the Further Continuing Appropriations Act of 2024 from changing indirect-cost rates acrosā¦
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RT @UTDPainLab: At every university where I have worked, indirect costs have played a huge role in building vital research infrastructure tā¦
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RT @RonDePinho: If we want to thoughtfully reduce NIH indirect costs, we need to reduce the federal regulatory burden that causes universitā¦
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@JohnStreicher1 @DrPhiltill Thank you for clarifying. Still not set by the universities as has been implied by most.
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Morgan. As a representative of the one of the greatest country in the world (the US, in case there is confusion) that you find yourself retweeting this despicable gift is truly mind boggling. That you felt comfortable retweeting this while simultaneously going to Lebanon to speak to their government about what they should be doing is even more incredible. Despite the fact that I always advocate for peace, I truly believe that when the US has gone into wars, they fought with integrity and honor. This gift is disgusting and dishonorable. Represent our country with love and kindness.
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RT @NutritionNerd: [Disclaimer: I donāt know that the below is accurate, so someone that has this information, please share] š§µ With all oā¦
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This is really interesting. Iāve always thought the universities set the indirect rates. But excellent points made here about the alternatives and how this should be approached if the rate cuts remain in place.
It seems few people know what an āindirect costā is or why it has to be 40-60%. The reason the government forced universities to raise their indirect costs up to (typically) 40-60% was to force a huge amount of regulations on the universities while also minimizing the bookkeeping to comply with those regulations. This includes the work by contract managers, compliance lawyers, accountants, safety management, etc., who are required by the government per the terms of the contract. If universities had to allocate all those categories of labor to each contract hour-by-hour it would require too much bookkeeping, which would waste money. (Iām setting aside for now the question of whether or how much the regulations are wasting money and only discussing how you bookkeep the effort to comply with the regulations.) So to save money, while also requiring universities to do these types of work, the government requires universities to roll those categories of labor into ācost poolsā that must be allocated as a percent of the technical work in each of the contracts. While the actual āoverheadā might be only 15%, these pooled labor charges that are required by the government are typically much more. Second, the government doesnāt allow the universities to figure out their own indirect rates. These rates are determined by the federal government through audits every couple of years. The government then sends a document telling the university what rate to use for its cost pools. For example, the University of Colorado was told by the DHHS to use 54% ( and U. Nebraska was told by DHHS to use 55.5% (. 40-60% is not only reasonable to fulfill the terms of the contract, it is the rate that the government tells the university it can charge for all the work the government requires the university to do. So if the government wants to reduce the indirect rate to 15%, then it needs to do one of these two things: Either (A) eliminate all the federal regulations that force the universities to do those categories of work (compliance, accounting, management, safety management, tracking harmful chemicals, etc.) Or, (B) stop requiring universities to pool those real costs into the āindirect costā category and allow universities to include them in the ādirect costsā of the contract. If the government chooses (A), then the safety rails have been entirely removed. (Even if the government lowers the regulations without entirely eliminating them, the costs they impose will still be real costs that probably come out to more than 15%.) Or, if it chooses (B), then the direct costs will go way up and research will actually be less efficient because all the bookkeeping, not more efficient. But if the government caps the indirect rate at 15% without doing either (A) or (B), then it will be impossible to do research for the federal government without going bankrupt. Thatās the worst possible choice. It will kill research in the US. Is that what we want? I can explain it for you but I canāt understand it for you. Itās up to the reader not to be ignorant.
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@JohnStreicher1 @DrPhiltill This is why this post is interesting. I think itās been implied by everyone against indirects that it was the universities setting that. I didnāt realize NIH sets that rate.
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RT @DrPhiltill: It seems few people know what an āindirect costā is or why it has to be 40-60%. The reason the government forced universiā¦
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RT @PracheeAC: If there ever was a time to get creative about investing in science outside of government (especially the kind of science noā¦
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RT @JasonSynaptic: Getting a lot of this. Individuals demanding that their tax $$ should benefit them. Letās see how higher education doesā¦
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RT @patrickshafto: Super excited: my new @darpa program on AI for pure mathematics! Exponentiating Mathematics (expMath) aims to acceleratā¦
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RT @LabWaggoner: Microglial reprogramming enhances antitumor immunity and immunotherapy response in melanoma brain metastases @Cancer_Cellā¦
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