The results of the September 2006 CIHR grants competition are now available. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) is the main funding body for biological research in Canada. The funding crisis will have a devastating effect on the careers of many of my colleagues.
A total of 310 grant renewals were submitted and 91 were funded. This represents a renewal rate of 29%. Keep in mind that most of these applications were submitted by well-established scientists with a long history of funding and publications. At this rate of renewal, 71% of functioning labs might have to shut down unless they're successful in the next competition.
When your grant is not renewed, you revert to the "new" category of applications. In the latest competition, 240 "new" applications were funded out of 1707 submissions. This is a 14% success rate. Remember, most of these "new" applications are from scientists who are in the prime of their career but who failed in their renewal last year.
Of those grants that were funded, 26.1% of the funding awarded by the peer review committees was clawed back in order to spread the money a bit further. What this means is that some of the "renewals" were funded at lower levels than the current grants. Post-docs and research assistants will be let go even when a grant is renewed.
The average grant was $109,000 and no equipment was funded. This is not enough money to run an effective biochemistry lab.
Pierre Chartrand is the Vice President, Research Portfolio, at CIHR. He posted a wimpy message on the CIHR website [A Word on the September 2006 Operating Grants Competition]. Here's part of what he had to say.
Competition for available funding has grown increasingly intense. This trend is unlikely to change as Canada continues to expand its infrastructure for health research. For this reason, within the Research Portfolio of CIHR, we cannot afford to be consumed by disappointment. Canada owes its reputation for research excellence to an open, accountable and very rigorous peer review system for funding applications. We must re-double our efforts to ensure that the peer review processes used to guide CIHR's funding decisions are the very best that they can be. In light of the recent competition results, we have heard from a small number of active peer reviewers and others who are frustrated to the point of no longer wishing to participate in the peer review process. Such frustration, no matter how limited, leaves me gravely concerned because CIHR is at a point in time where the participation of the absolute best in its peer review processes is critical.Let me tell you, Pierre, you damn well better be "gravely concerned." Some of my friends are sick and tired of sitting on committees where they have to reject excellent grants from their colleagues knowing that this will be a knockout blow to their future careers as scientists. Is it any wonder that they don't want to act as executioners?
Now you tell us that things aren't likely to change but you still expect Canadian scientists to volunteer to do the dirty work. Not gonna happen. About 70% of those volunteers whose grants were up for renewal have just stopped being "peers." Don't expect them to be happy. As for the rest, I urge them to boycott the process until there's a change in the CIHR leadership that got us into this mess.
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