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Updated: Monday, 18 Jun 2012, 3:06 PM EDT
Published : Monday, 18 Jun 2012, 3:05 PM EDT
COLLEGE STATION, Texas (KXAN) - John Sharp, chancellor of The Texas A&M University System, on Monday announced that the A&M System has been awarded a contract to develop one of three U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Innovation in Advanced Development and Manufacturing.
The public-private partnership will create jobs and is meant to enhance the nation's biosecurity preparedness. The contract, with a duration of up to 25 years, builds upon investments by the A&M System and the state of Texas in growing new jobs in the burgeoning biopharmaceuticals industry.
The $285.6 million contract includes an initial investment of $176.6 million from the U.S. government, with the remainder cost-shared by commercial and academic proposal partners.
“We have long served our nation and risen to defend our country against national security threats,” said Sharp. “Our selection for this center reflects that tradition and means we are enhancing the nation’s ability to counter biological and pandemic threats, both known and unknown, with vaccines manufactured here in the United States. We would like to thank President Obama and his administration; we are honored to be selected and to have the Texas A&M System’s unique capabilities leveraged to meet critical 21st-century challenges.”
The center's tasks will include approaches to:
The need for this advanced public health and biosecurity capability was identified following a comprehensive review of federal public health emergency medical countermeasures called for by President Barack Obama in his 2010 State of the Union address. The Department of Health and Human Services issued a request for proposals on March 30, 2011, and the contract was awarded following a year-long competitive nationwide process.
“The Center for Innovation will enhance the nation’s emergency preparedness by providing surge capacity for vaccines and medical countermeasures to chemical and biological events,” said Vice Chancellor for Strategic Initiatives Brett P. Giroir, M.D., and the principal investigator for the center. “We also will leverage these unique capabilities to create a broad positive impact on global health and advancing applied academic research.”
Sharp said this award is a result of a decade of visionary leadership by Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Governor David Dewhurst and Speaker of the House Joe Straus, backed by the Texas A&M System Board of Regents and faculty and researchers throughout the A&M System to position Texas and the A&M System as leaders in biotechnology and biopharmaceuticals.
“It begins with Gov. Perry and his vision to establish Texas as the ‘third coast’ of the biopharmaceuticals industry,” said Sharp. “Over the past decade the State of Texas has methodically cultivated and grown the biopharma and technology industries in Texas, and the fruits of those labors are being born today. Texas would not have been competitive for a national center if not for investments by the Emerging Technology Fund, the Texas Enterprise Fund and other related programs such as the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas.”
Texas A&M System proposal team included:
• Beck (Dallas, Texas)
• Blinn College (Brenham and Bryan, Texas)
• Caliber Biotherapeutics, LLC (Bryan/College Station, Texas)
• deltaDOT Ltd. (London, United Kingdom)
• Ferguson Pape Baldwin Architects (San Diego, Calif.)
• GlaxoSmithKline Vaccines (Rixensart, Belgium)
• Kalon Biotherapeutics (College Station, Texas)
• Lonza Houston, Inc. (Houston)
• Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental Research Institute (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
• Mary Crowley Research Center (Dallas and Bryan, Texas)
• NDA Partners (San Luis Obispo, Calif.)
• Noesys Data (College Station, Texas)
• PPD, Inc. (Wilmington, N.C.)
• Sabin Vaccine Institute and Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development and National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine (Houston)
• Sartorius (Goettingen, Germany)
• Texas A&M Health Science Center (Bryan, Texas)
• Texas A&M Institute for Preclinical Studies (College Station, Texas)
• Texas A&M University (College Station, Texas)
• Texas Biomedical Research Institute (San Antonio)
• Texas Engineering Experiment Station (College Station, Texas)
• Texas Engineering Extension Service (College Station, Texas)
• Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory (College Station, Texas)
• University of Florida (Gainesville, Fla.)
• University of Texas Medical Branch
at Galveston – Galveston National Laboratory (Galveston, Texas)
• Vaughn Construction, Inc. (Houston)
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