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UNH
named top tier Sea Grant College
UNH is one of only nine universities
in the nation to hold top tier status as a land, space and sea grant
institution
By Kathleen
Schmidt, NH Sea Grant
Affirming its commitment to serving the needs of its state citizens,
UNH officially became a full land, space and sea grant institution
at an Aug. 20, ceremony in Dimond Library. During the event, NOAA
Administrator and Undersecretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere
Vice Admiral Conrad Lautenbacher Jr. presented UNH President Ann
Weaver Hart with a plaque commemorating the university’s new
status as a top tier Sea
Grant College.
“The University of New Hampshire is an extremely impressive
organization,” said Lautenbacher after spending the morning
touring campus and learning more about UNH-NOAA partnerships such
as Northeast Consortium, the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping
(CCOM)/Joint Hydrographic Center (JHC), the Cooperative Institute
for Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Technology (CICEET), and
the Atmospheric Investigation, Regional Modeling, and Prediction
(AIRMAP) Cooperative Institute.
“This university has been a leader in partnerships,”
he said.
As one of only nine universities in the nation to hold top tier
status as a land, space and sea grant institution, UNH receives
federal funding for research, education and outreach through three
national programs established by Congress: the Cooperative State
Research, Education, and Extension Service (funded by USDA), the
National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program (funded by NASA),
and the National Sea Grant College Program (funded by NOAA).
“These three programs are all unique in that Congress created
them to bridge the gap between researchers and stakeholders by formally
incorporating education and outreach into each program’s mission,”
said UNH Vice President for Research and Public Service Donald Sundberg
during the ceremony.
Also speaking were National Sea Grant Review Panel Chair Peter Bell,
Seacoast Science Center President Wendy Lull, and National Sea Grant
Director Ronald Baird. Nancy Ragland Perkins, legislative assistant
for Oceans and Environment for U.S. Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), read
a letter from the senator.
“Sen. Gregg has been a very strong supporter of the National
Sea Grant College Program,” said NH Sea Grant Director Ann
Bucklin. “He is certainly a legislative leader in marine resource
issues, and NH Sea Grant is very grateful for the Senator’s
continuing support.”
The National Sea Grant College Program is a federal-university partnership
whose mission, as mandated by Congress, is to foster the sustainable
development of the nation’s coastal resources. Operating through
a university-based network, Sea Grant supports research, education
and outreach to address a broad range of issues including aquaculture,
marine biotechnology, seafood processing, the development of marine
products, fisheries recruitment and conservation, estuarine processes
and marine policy.
Although UNH has received Sea Grant funding for 35 years, for most
of that period it was part of a joint program with Maine. Due to
growth in marine research at both universities, Maine/NH Sea Grant
separated in 2000, creating two fully distinct programs. The newly
independent NH Sea Grant has been able to focus its efforts on the
needs of the Granite State. However, separation also required UNH
to reapply for top tier status as a Sea Grant College.
Sea Grant College status is the top level of programs within the
National Sea Grant College Program. The designation is based on
a demonstrated record of superior performance in marine and coastal
resource programs and signifies that the Sea Grant program is addressing
the needs of its state. In March, a panel of marine experts visited
UNH to review its application and gave it a “glowing recommendation”
that it should become a Sea Grant College, according to Peter Bell,
who assembled the panel.
The top tier status recognizes UNH’s dedication to maintaining
a high quality and balanced program of marine research, education
and outreach, and NH Sea Grant’s role in working with UNH’s
marine community, marine researchers at other New Hampshire colleges
and universities, and the state’s marine stakeholders to address
current and future resource issues. This recognition puts UNH on
the same level with other top tier Sea Grant programs, making it
more competitive in seeking additional NOAA funding.
“Sea Grant lies at the interface of this continuum from research
to the user, allowing the benefits of technology to be translated
into usefulness in the community, and to connect those users’
requirements to those in research and education,” Lautenbacher
said. “It is a marvelous vehicle for doing so, and it has
been honed to a fine art here in New Hampshire.”
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