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Mark Elliott
@melliott_water
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Professor, Env Engineering, Univ of Alabama, https://t.co/Xph84WiF66
Joined December 2016
@ban_epp_gofroc @R_H_Ebright I hope that’s the case, but this and the USAID action are destructive and ill-conceived. They seem to be based on emotional responses to the worst abuses in the system, rather than the thoughtful approaches to reigning in administrative bloat and corruption that we need.
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This is basically my take on the NIH IDC cut. 15% is not enough (at least for wet lab-based research). But the logical first step in controlling IDC rates would be to make all Federal grant proposal max funding levels based on total costs, not direct costs.
The indiscriminate and ill-conceived slashing of indirects by the @NIH yesterday must be amended if want to restore America’s leadership role biomedical research. 15% simply isn’t enough for institutions to provide the basic infrastructure needed to run a successful lab. I say this as someone who has been and remains deeply critical of the NIH, its funding system and of the ways universities are structured and spend money. We would all benefit from a genuine reexamination of how and to what @NIH funds are allocated, and I remain optimistic that once the dust settles and new NIH leadership is in place that this is what will happen and this hack job by people who don’t understand or care about research will be forgotten. And I’m sorry but I can’t help but laugh at the people who are demanding a full-throated defense of the current indirect levels. Nearly every PI I’ve known for my entire career has complained about excessive indirect rates. This is mostly because, despite their importance, even most PIs haven’t bothered to actually understand them, and because they don’t FEEL that universities are actually spending the money to support their research. Whether they are or not nobody really knows because in the typically Byzantine maze of university budgets it’s often very hard to figure out. There are also lots of actual shenanigans that go on especially at places with the highest indirect rates to use funds to build out the institution and increase its power rather than to directly support funded research projects. And anyone who says administrative bloat at universities isn’t real and partially fueled by indirects is either blind or part of the bloat. So let’s get organized to have an actual constructive response to this firebomb. Scientists need to advocate for what is best for research - and we have to do it ourselves because the institutions that claim to represent us - universities and scientific societies in particular - have their own goals that often do not align with ours. We also have to remember that grants are not an entitlement. We are not owed anything. If we want to continue benefiting from the public support we have always enjoyed, we have to show the public and their representatives - even ones we might not always agree with - that we’re spending their money wisely.
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@aaron_renn Overall, I have long believed that negotiated Federal indirect costs rates were being abused (eg, to fund administrative bloat). But this bull in a china shop approach is likely to adversely affect a US research enterprise that has massive direct benefits &positive externalities
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RT @jk_rowling: This 'why do you care about a tiny fraction of the population?' line is, and always was, utterly ridiculous. Gender ideol…
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RT @jk_rowling: This astounding paper reminds me of Hannah Arendt's The Banality of Evil: 'The net effect of this language system was not t…
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RT @CD57227: Just a normal day in science: Do you want to be named as author of your paper – or would you like to appear as having had not…
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RT @wesyang: The transgender issue is so difficult for liberals because it is one where any conservative by virtue of their default hostili…
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RT @DrTimothyKelly: Key insight about censorship: Once you create tools to suppress 'dangerous' ideas, bad ideas will evolve to hijack thos…
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RT @wesyang: The world is cleanly divisive between those who will believe the easily disprovable propagandistic falsehoods that Oliver is b…
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RT @praxiscircle: A timely reminder from Contributor @McCormickProf: in the wake of an emotional #election, we must remember that the Chris…
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RT @tracewoodgrains: It may be too early for an election retrospective. It's still election night, and technically things haven't been call…
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RT @ass_deans: It is hard to be an associate dean for as long as I have. Most associate deans move up to become a dean or go back to their…
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RT @AmericaWeek: 𝕄𝕒𝕥𝕥 𝕋𝕒𝕚𝕓𝕓𝕚 - 𝔽𝕦𝕝𝕝 ‘ℝ𝕖𝕤𝕔𝕦𝕖 𝕥𝕙𝕖 ℝ𝕖𝕡𝕦𝕓𝕝𝕚𝕔’ 𝕤𝕡𝕖𝕖𝕔𝕙 🎤 “Mother Fuc*er I’m an American” WATCH : @mtaibbi speech from the @Resc…
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