1 / 12

Federal Research Environment for the Department of Defense A Presentation to UC Riverside

Federal Research Environment for the Department of Defense A Presentation to UC Riverside. Michael Ledford, Kaitlin Chell, and Karen Mowrer Lewis-Burke Associates, LLC January 2014. Lewis-Burke Associates, LLC.

vashon
Download Presentation

Federal Research Environment for the Department of Defense A Presentation to UC Riverside

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. Federal Research Environment for the Department of DefenseA Presentation to UC Riverside Michael Ledford, Kaitlin Chell, and Karen Mowrer Lewis-Burke Associates, LLC January 2014

  2. Lewis-Burke Associates, LLC Lewis-Burke Associates, LLC is a leading full-service government relations firm specializing in advocating for the public policy interests of institutions of higher education and other research and education organizations • Began working with UC Riverside in November 2012 • 23 professional staff members • 26 clients, all nonprofits involved in research and/or education • 15 universities • 3 contractors running national research facilities • 8 associations 2

  3. Select Services • Advanced intel on new programs and emerging agency themes. • Strategic university-wide agenda development. • Enhancing resources for researchers. • Information on new funding initiatives and prominent solicitations. • Support for post-docs and graduate students. • Thematic deep dives on federal funding. • Support for early career faculty. • Coalition building. • Program and project support at both political and policy levels. • Positioning and profile enhancement. 3

  4. Department of Defense • DOD basic and applied research priorities in FY 14 despite overall RDTE cuts • However, DOD officials indicate investment accounts will be cut in FY 2015 budget request • Success rates lower, fewer extensions, some select areas cut by as much as 20-30% • Air Force and Navy positioned to do better than Army • Ongoing debate about feasibility of Strategic Guidance if sequester not reversed (long-term) • Service branch research offices implementing cuts differently • Cognitive sciences, synthetic biology, advanced materials, and quantum information sciences key foci; maintaining technological workforce also a major concern (particularly cyber) • Shift to Asia is still an undercurrent 4

  5. Service Branch Research Offices • Army Research Office • Continues strong focus around broad basic research topics including physics, materials, computing, engineering, life sciences, and environmental sciences • Emphasis remains around broad scientific areas, but ARO is aligned with crosscutting DOD priorities like big data, manufacturing, and materials • Office of Naval Research • Leading funder of basic research across service branches • Priorities include sensors/communications, energy, and portable weapons • Air Force Office of Scientific Research • Recent realignment under five new thrust areas reflects increasing interdisciplinary approach to funding research • Priorities include cyber/information science, materials, alternative energy, and communications 5

  6. Signature DOD Funding Mechanisms • Standard grants and contracts – • Broad Agency Announcements • Special program announcements (e.g. Minerva, Multi-disciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI), Young Investigator Programs) • Cooperative Research Agreement (CRA) • Cooperative Technology Agreement (CTA) • Center of Excellence (COE) • Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contracts 6

  7. Other DOD Research Entities • DARPA • Focused on game-changing R&D around threats of the future; program managers enjoy broad autonomy in funding projects • SEED awards also possible for ideas with promise but more demonstration necessary • Cyber/cloud computing, big data, and health/biological research top priorities under new Director Prabhakar • DTRA • Basic and applied research on bio/chemical/nuclear/information sciences geared towards countering weapons of mass destruction • Small, but underutilized research opportunity for universities (~$50 m in basic research) • Chemical-Biological Research (~$60 million) • Targeted BAAs released throughout the year • Non-medical: nano, cognition, information science, bioscience • Medical Biological Defense Transformational Medical Technologies Initiative: diagnostic technologies, vaccine, therapeutic – viral, toxin, bacterial • Medical Chemical Defense – Smallest Area: respiratory, cutaneous and ocular, neurological, toxicology 7

  8. SERDP/ESTCP • Workshops – identify key priorities (e.g. groundwater contamination, sustainable water usage, climate change, energy and water, materials research for stealth warfare technology, etc.) • SERDP-reducing energy and water consumption; invests in both basic and applied • ESTCP-technology demonstration and validation program • SERDP Core Solicitation – Pre-proposals due Jan 9, SEED Solicitation – Proposals due Mar 14. • ESTCP likely early 2014 release • New leadership (Acting: Anne Andrews) at SERDP/ESTCP presents opportunities for changes; ARPA-E Workshop good opportunity 8

  9. Intelligence Community: Opportunities for Engagement • NSA (National Security Agency) • Centers of Excellence for Information Assurance – Academic and Research • New emphasis on “cyberdefense” • e.g., Key research topics – Mobility, Software assurance, Virtualization, • DIA/ODNI (Defense Intelligence Agency) • Centers for Academic Excellence (Jan 2014) • Postdoc Research Fellowships (Nov 2013) • NGA (National Geospatial Intelligence Agency) • NARP - Academic Research Program (BAA –Winter 2014) • University research initiatives – basic research • Research Collaboration Grants - GEOINT • New Scientific and Technical Innovative Research grants (early career) • IARPA (Intel Community – DARPA) • Select Programs – Abstracts and Proposers’ Day conference CRITICAL • Active BAAs (Office of Incisive Analysis, Office of Safe & Secure Operations, Office of Smart Collection) • New: bio-intelligence chip (i.e. exposure to chem-bio agents). 9

  10. Other Key Defense Health Engagement Areas • Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program (CDMRP) • Broad umbrella with active solicitations throughout the year (typically 1/year for each sub-program – e.g. Breast Cancer Research, TBI, etc.) • Combat Casualty Care • Device, mobile, on site interventions, traumatic brain injury • Telemedicine and Advanced Robotics (TATRC) • Medical devices, trauma, neuroscience, biomaterials • Social and Behavioral Research: • Cross DOD - Human Social Cultural Behavioral Modeling (~$20 million) • Minerva Program (basic research) • U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences • ARO - Cultural and Behavioral, Institutional and Organizational Science 10

  11. Looking Ahead • Must lead with DOD mission to be responsive to sponsor needs • R&D and basic research still a TOP priority on both sides of the aisle in Congress, but there is competition for limited dollars as more institutions turn toward DOD • Public-private partnerships will remain the favored mechanism for very large-scale efforts • Proposers Days, RFIs, and meetings with program managers still key to determining and influencing agency policy and research directions • Shared milestones and progress reports part of the culture 11

  12. Contact Kaitlin Chell Lewis-Burke Associates LLC 1341 G Street, NW Eighth Floor Washington, D.C.  20005 e: kaitlin@lewis-burke.com p: 202.289.7475 f: 202.289.7454 www.lewis-burke.com 12

More Related