UB, CUBRC Partners
in New Homeland
Security Center
BUFFALO,
N.Y. -- The University at Buffalo and CUBRC will serve as major collaborating
partners in a new $15 million Homeland Security Center of Excellence to be
established at The Johns Hopkins University (JHU), Secretary of Homeland
Security Michael Chertoff announced this week at JHU in
Baltimore.
The Center
for the Study of High Consequence Event Preparedness and Response -- the fifth
Homeland Security Center of Excellence established since 9/11 -- will study how
the nation can best prepare for, and respond to, potential large-scale incidents
and disasters.
Led by
JHU, the UB/CUBRC team will be among a consortium of seven major partners
contributing to the center's research. The Department of Homeland Security
anticipates providing JHU and its partners with a total of $15 million over the
next three years. The UB/CUBRC team anticipates receiving approximately $1.5
million.
Research
areas to be addressed by the center will include deterrence, prevention,
preparedness and response to catastrophic events, including issues such as risk
assessment, decision-making, infrastructure integrity, surge capacity and sensor
networks.
CUBRC's
research contribution, working primarily with the New York State Center of
Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences and the UB School of Engineering
and Applied Sciences, will focus on disaster management for biological and
chemical events, as well as the development of information fusion-based systems
for disaster mitigation and response, according to Michael D. Moskal, principal
engineer at CUBRC, who will serve as lead investigator for the UB/CUBRC team and
also will serve as a member of the center's management
board.
"Our
collaboration with Center for the Study of High Consequence Event Preparedness
and Response puts UB and CUBRC at the forefront of research addressing the major
problems that are facing our country and positions our team to become one of the
preeminent research organizations in the country focusing on preparedness and
response to catastrophic events," said Moskal, who was in Baltimore to
participate in the announcement at JHU. "Using our country's experience in
responding to Hurricane Katrina as an example, we will be conducting research to
help make sure that U.S. preparedness and response to events of this magnitude
can be as effective and rapid as possible.
"CUBRC is
thrilled to be partnered with UB as part of this new center," Moskal added, "and
we look forward to many more collaborations of this type that utilize the
combined strength of the unique resources we have right here in Western New York
to address major challenges facing our country."
Several
other UB researchers also will contribute to the center's research and will lead
research in several specialty areas. Ann Bisantz, associate professor of
industrial engineering, is principal investigator for human factors research.
Michel Bruneau, director of the Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research
at UB, is principal investigator for critical infrastructure-related issues.
Moises Sudit, managing director of the Center for Multisource Information
Fusion, is principal investigator for information fusion research.
Bruce
Holm, UB vice provost and executive director of the New York State Center of
Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences, said UB's participation in the
center at JHU complements UB 2020, UB's strategic planning process. UB 2020 has
identified "Extreme Events: Mitigation and Response" as one of UB's 10 strategic
strengths, representing areas across the disciplines where UB has the best
opportunities to build academic excellence and achieve significant academic
prominence and recognition.
"UB's
participation in the Center for the Study of High Consequence Event Preparedness
and Response, as well its own ongoing research in extreme events, positions the
university to become a national leader in disaster response and mitigation
within the next five years," Holm said.
UB
researchers from the Department of Geology, Department of Microbiology and
Immunology, Department of Civil and Structural Engineering and Department of
Computer Science and Engineering also will contribute to the new center, Holm
noted.
Secretary
Chertoff, in a statement released by JHU, said "Johns Hopkins University has assembled and will lead a
talented and deeply experienced team of professionals from institutions across
the country.
"Together
they will help DHS strengthen the nation's ability to prevent and, where
necessary, effectively manage high-consequence disasters or terrorist
attacks."
In
addition to UB, the other major collaborators in the Center for the Study of
High Consequence Event Preparedness and Response include the Florida State
Universities Consortium on Homeland Security, University of Alabama, Morgan State
University, the American
Red Cross, the Brookings Institute and the Chemical, Biological, and
Radiological Technology Alliance (CBRTA). Eleven additional affiliated
participants also will contribute to the center's
efforts.
The
Centers of Excellence, overseen by the Office of University Programs within the
Homeland Security Science & Technology directorate, establish a network of
university-based centers that conduct multi-disciplinary research and develop
innovative educational programs. Through this initiative, the Department of
Homeland Security and partner universities focus the nation's most talented
researchers on homeland security issues.
CUBRC
(formally known as Calspan-UB
Research Center) is a not-for-profit company headquartered in
Buffalo whose
mission is to bring together scientists and engineers from its own staff,
academia and industry that form multi-disciplinary teams to accomplish project
research and development objectives.
The
University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public
university, the largest and most comprehensive campus in the State University of
New York.