1 / 7

Campus Core Research Facilities at UCSF

Campus Core Research Facilities at UCSF. Keith Yamamoto yamamoto@medsch.ucsf.edu CTSI TTR Leadership Retreat November 6, 2007. Ad hoc core research facilities. Provide advanced instrumentation and/or research services needed by a cluster of investigators. The current situation:

teo
Download Presentation

Campus Core Research Facilities at UCSF

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Campus Core Research Facilities at UCSF • KeithYamamoto • yamamoto@medsch.ucsf.edu • CTSI TTR Leadership Retreat • November 6, 2007

  2. Ad hoc core research facilities Provide advanced instrumentation and/or research services needed by a cluster of investigators • The current situation: • Cores have been developed ad hoc by departments, ORUs, programs, clusters of investigators to address specific needs • Lack of central information produces overlapping services and competition, insufficient user base, differential access and recharges, poor administrative practices • Cores lack resources to update instruments, or for staff to develop new technological capabilities • Lack of central coordination compromises quality and needs assessments, decision-making to expand or downsize

  3. Campus Core Research Facilities (CCRFs) Provide instrumentation and services needed by broad segment of research community; accessible by all • Necessities for success: • Coordinated oversight and decision-making for designating and evaluating CCRFs, strategic planning, prioritization • Sound business practices that ensure economic success and responsible delivery of services • Policies and resources for continuous acquisition of state of the art equipment • Stable academic appointments for CCRF Directors that lead in creating new instrumentation and/or capabilities, and in user education

  4. Proof of Principle: UCSF Genomics CCRF • Consolidated administration, services across facilities at PH, MB, MtZ, Gladstone • Eliminated service, equipment and personnel redundancies, releasing space and $490k to establish new service capabilities • Brought together campus experts in genomic technologies, enhancing service and education • Coordinated financial management; expanded authority for rate adjustments that better reflect actual use • Mechanism to coordinate needs assessments and assure broad campus constituency

  5. Proposed CCRF management and support structure • Executive Director: oversees business and operations administration, coordinates acquisition of resources • Steering Committee: works with Executive Director to oversee planning, prioritization, evaluation • Centralized, web-based business managementsystem for oversight of operations, tracking of services, recharge collection • Costs of services to be covered by rechargeincome within three years of CCRF establishment • Institutional support: to seed equipment acquisition and updating, support professional staff development of technical advances, educate users

  6. Proposed CCRF scientific planning and oversight • CCRF Steering Committee: • – CCRF Executive Director • – EVD or Vice/Assoc Deans for Research (or designees) • – Directors of CCRFs (or designees) • – faculty representatives • – appointed by and reports to Vice Chancellor for Research • CCRF Steering Committee responsibilities: • – evaluation of existing CCRFs • – establishment or termination of CCRFs • – allocation of supplementary funds • – strategic planning

  7. Current Activities to Anticipate and Facilitate CCRFs • Relevant campus-level activities • CCRF proposal to Executive Budget Committee 2006, 2007 • UCSF Strategic Plan: top priority to CCRFs • Search underway for Vice Chancellor for Research • Core Facilities Working Group (CFWG) • Ad hoc, from SOM, CTSI, TTR, CC, DC, CVRI, QB3, Gladstone • Governing Principles: • – coordinate only core functions with campus-wide scope and access • – individual core technologies divided amongst existing entities • – entities function autonomously, interact through CFWG • – CFWG facilitates inter-core communication, coordination, services • – CFWG communicates its activities to EVC, will work with VCR • Defining individual cores and core-specific planning groups • Defining scope and mechanisms of coordination functions • – vetting proposals for new/modified cores? • – centralized recharge?

More Related