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Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack Announces $176 Million
in Recovery Act Funding to Improve Research Capacity at Laboratories in 29
States
By Kim Kaplan
June 19, 2009 WASHINGTON, June 19, 2009 -
Agriculture Secretary
Tom
Vilsack announced today that the USDA is
distributing $176 million in Recovery Act funding to upgrade laboratory
buildings and support facilities at research locations across the country. Not
only will these projects further important research being conducted at USDA
laboratories in 29 states, these funds will help revitalize local economies by
creating jobs and supporting local businesses that supply needed construction
products and services.
"President Obama is committed to ensuring that USDA stays on the
cutting edge of research in food safety, nutrition, producing food and
preserving the quality of our soil and water," Vilsack said. "This
funding will ensure that our labs can carry out the critical research that
enables the U.S. to have the safest, least expensive food supply in the
world."
The Recovery Act funds will improve the safety and health aspects of the
laboratories, enhance the energy efficiency, and reduce the cost of operation
and maintenance. These benefits will improve the working environment, resulting
in improved productivity, and generate maintenance savings that will be
captured and returned to directly support the research program. All of the
projects selected are at locations conducting research of the highest priority.
The Western
Regional Research Center (WRRC) in Albany, Calif., which is receiving $28.4
million, focuses on creating crop plants, food products, and food processing
methods that are healthier and safer for consumers and the environment. For
example, WRRC scientists discovered that microbes thought to live only in
animals can also exist on plants such as lettuce and spinach, and the
researchers are now working on ways to prevent produce contamination. WRRC will
use the Recovery Act funds to make electrical and plumbing systems repairs,
fire detection and suppression system renovations, roofing systems replacement,
and other repairs that will keep the lab's research moving forward.
The
National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research (NCAUR) in Peoria, Ill., which
is receiving $40.1 million, focuses on inventing new uses for agricultural
crops and developing new technology to improve environmental quality and food
safety. For example, NCAUR has developed a series of new food products that
expanded markets for U.S. cereal crops. One of them, Calorie-Trim, is an
all-natural, fat replacer. Derived from whole oats and barley, C-Trim contains
20 to 50 percent beta-glucan, a soluble fiber that helps the body regulate
blood sugar and lower bad cholesterol, diminishing the risk of heart disease.
NCAUR also developed a vegetable oil-based elevator hydraulic fluid for
elevators that is now being used in the Statue of Liberty. This new biobased
hydraulic fluid has high fire resistance and could replace the conventional
mineral oil-based product, which has major flammability, is environmental
toxic, and has disposal problems. NCAUR will use the funding announced today to
address critical deferred maintenance of mechanical, electrical, and plumbing
systems to enable the lab to continue to develop new products.
Projects Receiving Funding:
- Aberdeen, Idaho, Small Grains and Potato
Germplasm Research Unit: $40,000
- Akron, Colo., Central
Great Plains Research Station: $550,000
- Albany, Calif., Western Regional Research
Center: $28.4 million
- Ames, Iowa, National
Animal Disease Center: $10.5 million
- Athens, Ga., Southeast Poultry Research
Laboratory: $2.3 million
- Beltsville, Md., Beltsville Agricultural
Research Center: $10 million
- Beltsville, Md., National Agricultural
Library: $7.4 million
- Boston, Massachusetts, USDA
Jean Mayer Human
Nutrition Research Center on Aging: $3 million
- Clay Center, Neb.,
Roman L. Hruska U.S.
Meat Animal Research Center: $1.3 million
- College Station, Texas,
Southern Plains
Agricultural Research Center: $1.3 million
- Corvallis, Ore., Horticultural Crops
Research Unit, Forage Seed and Cereal Research Unit,
- National Clonal Germplasm Repository Unit: $355,000
- East Lansing, Mich., ARS
Avian Disease and
Oncology Laboratory: $430,000
- El Reno, Okla., Grazinglands Research
Laboratory: $130,000
- Fargo, N.D., Red River
Valley Agricultural Research Center: $1.17 million
- Florence, S.C., Coastal Plains Soil,
Water, and Plant Research Center: $230,000
- Fort Lauderdale, Fla., ARS
Invasive Plant
Research Laboratory: $475,000
- Ft. Collins, Colo., National Center for Genetic
Resources Preservation: $290,000
- Geneva, N.Y., Plant
Genetic Resources Unit and Grape Genetics Research Unit: $650,000
- Ithaca, N.Y., Robert
W. Holley Center for Agriculture and Health: $275,000
- Kearneysville, W.Va.,
Appalachian Fruit
Research Station: $650,000
- Kimberly, Idaho, Northwest Irrigation and
Soils Research Laboratory: $50,000
- Logan, Utah, USDA-ARS
Forage & Range Research Laboratory: $55,000
- Madison, Wis., U.S.
Dairy Forage Research Center and Cereal Crops Laboratory: $650,000
- Manhattan, Kan., Grain Marketing and
Production Research Center: $440,000
- Miles City, Mont., Fort Keogh Livestock and
Range Research Laboratory: $4 million
- Miss State, Miss., Poultry Research Unit
& Crop Science Research Laboratory: $1.8 million
- Newark, Del., Beneficial Insects Research
Laboratory: $470,000
- Pendleton, Ore., Columbia Plateau
Conservation Research Center: $150,000
- Peoria, Ill., National Center for
Agricultural Utilization Research: $40.1 million
- Riverside, Calif., United States Salinity
Laboratory, National Clonal Germplasm Repository for Citrus & Dates:
$625,000
- St. Paul, Minn., Cereal Disease
Laboratory: $1.88 million
- Stoneville, Miss.,
Jamie Whitten Delta
States Research Center: $26 million
- Tucson, Ariz., Carl
Hayden Bee Research Center: $455,000
- Washington, D.C., U. S. National
Arboretum: $9 million
- West Lafayette, Ind.,
National Soil Erosion
Research Laboratory: $775,000
- Wyndmoor, Pa., Eastern Regional Research
Center: $20.1 million
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