January 10, 2005

Proposition 71 Has Created a Monster

AP reports that first amendment groups are furious over tight secrecy concerning how $3 billion in tax dollars will be spent. ContraCostaTimes reports on "growing" complaints that the stem cell legislation offers too many opportunities to use stem cell money in California to make institutions rich. And it is certainly true that the stakeholders are running the show: "Many of the 29 board members, appointed by the governor and other elected officials to run the agency, represent research universities and the biotech industry, both of which are expected to win millions of dollars worth of grants."

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December 14, 2004

Real Estate Investor to Run California Stem Cell Program

Just out from the official Governor's Office press release:
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger today announced his selections for leadership of the Independent Citizens Oversight Committee (ICOC) which oversees the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine created by the passage of Proposition 71. The proposition, supported by the Governor, was approved by voters in November and will fund stem cell research that may offer cures for ailments ranging from Alzheimer’s disease to diabetes and cancer. The Governor announced his nomination of Robert Klein for chairman and Edward Penhoet for vice chairman of the ICOC.

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December 11, 2004

WANTED: Czar for California Stem Cell Research Agency ... Must Be Rested & Ready to Be Most Powerful Person in Biotech

LA Times reports:
With less than a week before the debut of California's new $3 billion stem cell institute, intense behind-the-scenes debate is growing over who should head the agency and whether a Friday deadline for filling the post will allow the best candidates to be considered. The debate is expected to crest Monday when Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and three other state elected officials must, under the tight deadlines set by the state's embryonic stem cell initiative, put forward their nominee to chair the new agency.

The chairperson will immediately become among the most influential officials in the field of biological research, running much of the day-to-day operations of an institute that will dole out some $300 million a year in grants, more than 10 times what the federal government now spends yearly in the stem cell field.

Bernard Lo is quoted.

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November 27, 2004

Why No Bioethics on the California Proposition 71 Governing Council?

Why doesn't California put a bioethicist on its Proposition 71 governing board dealing with the $3 billion to be allocated for stem cell research? University Chancellors and Presidents are being nominated up and down as schools' and institutes' top guns clamor to be public intellectuals on this big-ticket funding item, no doubt in part to ensure that their shop gets some of the money. The proposition guarantees seats on the board to some institutions (including the 5 UCal schools), but why in the world can't there be some slots dedicated to bioethics?

No matter what your position on stem cell research, there simply must be a dedicated stem cell ethics expert among the governors. If it weren't so serious a matter, one would have to laugh at the idea that these University and institute administrators are properly trained to think about how and whether to dispense the money and for which studies. It is a question several are beginning to ask anew, echoing concerns from those who opposed Prop 71 but themselves supported hES research. Bioethics in California has always been a developing phenomenon, although the Stanford center is arguably among the top programs in the nation. Hopefully at least some of the ballast for deliberations about which programs should be funded will be provided by people in stem cell bioethics in California. But that is a very, very short list of people.

Even more important, California should finally begin to build up some bioethics programs, particularly in the universities that plan to do significant new stem cell research. If the past is any predictor, that will not be easily accomplished in California, where bioethics has just never really taken a foothold in terms of university budgets and powerhouse faculties. There are plenty of good people in bioethics in California, but it is difficult to identify a group of major research centers in bioethics in the state, despite its preeminent place in biotechnology research. Proposition 71 should be the full employment act for California bioethics, to borrow Art Caplan's description of the role ethics money in the Human Genome Project had on bioethics in the 1990s. But if it is business as usual in the most populous state in the nation, bioethics may become an unfunded sport for university CEOs. That would not only hurt bioethics, it would hurt the people of California, who are clearly hoping for a careful, smart use of the $3 billion windfall for stem cells. For them, ethics has to stay in the mix in a serious way.

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November 12, 2004

What Happens When Your State Allocates $3 Billion for Stem Cell Research

Answer? Everyone wants to do stem cell research. Berkeley, though, is at a disadvantage, and it is interesting to watch as they deliberate about how to make up for the lack of a medical school.

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November 08, 2004

Wired News: Clone Ban Unlikely to Pass Senate

The change in administration makes stem cell proponents very nervous. Will a more republican Senate mean that the therapeutic cloning ban will finally pass, effectvely killing any chance for a stem cell biotech industry i nthe United States? Not according to Wired magazine, who report that, even with the change in administraion, a cloning ban is unlikely to pass even our new, more republican Senate. If Wired is right, the hopes for stem cell research in the US remain alive, and have been given a big boost by the passing of the $3 billion California stem cell initiative.

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November 02, 2004

SF Chronicle: Proposition 71 Passes

11:32PM - San Francisco Chronicle is projecting a clear win for Proposition 71, which allots $3 billion for stem cell research including ESR. My debating partner Mel Gibson is apoplectic and all over California TV complaining. The Proposition 71 story is beginning to filter out nationwide but it seems to be the dominant web story in California, from among some 13 propositions on the ballot there.

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November 01, 2004

Wisconsin is Petrified of Stem Cell Migration UPDATED

Wisconsin Business reports that California's Prop 71 will create a "giant sucking sound" as big stem cell labs and important scientists are vacuumed up by California. The article asks how much will it take to lure James Thomson? Interesting question...several weeks ago we blogged Alta Charo's comments regarding the threat of Bush policies to Wisconsin. One could be cynical about that threat, given that Wisconsin holds so much intellectual property in stem cell research that Wisconsin profits no matter who is doing the work. But Alta is clearly right that Wisconsin could lose its key figures in stem cell research to Prop 71 and to California.

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October 24, 2004

Monitor on Stem Cells

Somebody at the Christian Science Monitor has decided that it is bioethics week. This stem cell piece does a great job of establishing the real effect that $6 billion in Prop 71 money for stem cell research in California would have on the rest of the nation and on the stem cell debate. Great quotes from Annas, Caplan and Kahn.

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October 07, 2004

Update: Salk & Stem Cells

We previously noted the Salk hES ethics symposium. They've put up video, including "teachable" talks from Wolpe and Zoloth; those are available here.

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