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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The National Science Foundation has
awarded the Alabama Experimental
Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, headquartered at
The University of Alabama, a grant to coordinate development of
a Hurricane Katrina recovery plan for educational research initiatives
damaged within Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.
Alabama EPSCoR is forming a multi-institution assessment team
to evaluate and prioritize needs and devise a recovery plan, said
Dr. Keith McDowell, executive director of the program and vice
president for research at The University of Alabama.
The $200,000 grant will enable EPSCoR to develop plans which address
both short-term needs, such as additional clean-up of damaged research
facilities, granting displaced faculty and students access to undamaged
laboratories, and assistance with lost or damaged research data,
as well as long-term needs, such as reconstruction of laboratories
and other research infrastructure.
“The significance of an articulated Katrina research recovery
plan for Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana cannot be overstated,” said
McDowell. “These states are at the heart of a growing high
technology economy in the Southeast and provide not only important
new research capacity and innovations, but a science, technology,
engineering and mathematics workforce.”
One of the hardest hit research facilities in the state is the
Dauphin Island Sea Lab and its research stations along the Gulf.
Twenty-one of the state’s universities and four-year colleges
are member institutions of the lab, which is the state’s
marine education and research center. Located on the eastern tip
of a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico, the Sea Lab is the home
site of the Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium, and schools
across the state have researchers working in this part of the Gulf.
The Alabama Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research,
known as EPSCoR, is a family of competitive, merit-based programs
sponsored in Alabama by the state and by the National Science Foundation,
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Department
of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department
of Agriculture.
These programs are a federal-state-industrial partnership formed
to enhance the science and engineering research, education and
technology capabilities of Alabama.
Cooperating partners in Alabama EPSCoR include 27 Alabama colleges
and universities, and 175 industrial, federal laboratory, and governmental
partners including the Alabama Department of Economic and Community
Affairs, the Economic Development Partnership of Alabama, the Alabama
Development Office and the Alabama Commission on Higher Education.
The state’s research institutions that participate in EPSCoR
include The University of Alabama, Alabama A&M University,
Auburn University, UAB, the University of Alabama in Huntsville,
the University of South Alabama and Tuskegee University.
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