Research Support Fund: Accountability and Public Acknowledgement 2020 - 2021
Definition
While individual research awards can be used to cover the direct costs of research, such as certain salaries, equipment, and supplies connected with a project, research institutions must bear the increasingly high costs of supporting their overall research activity with appropriate facilities, academic research resources, researcher salaries, management and administrative personnel, oversight of regulatory compliance and accreditation, and intellectual property management.
The Research Support Fund grant is critical to the success of the University’s research undertakings. In the past year, the grant money was used in several areas that supported the ongoing research work at our facilities. Some examples include:
Maintaining and Enhancing Qualtrics Software Institutional License: Qualtrics is web-based, research survey software that offers many advanced, but user-friendly, features. Qualtrics enables users to do surveys, get feedback, and conduct polls using a variety of distribution means. Qualtrics is cloud-based software and has proven to be a versatile resource for our researchers. Of particular significance has been the need for remote survey tools and other online meeting platform licenses to replace in-person interaction as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Qaltrics servers are available to University of Winnipeg researchers on Canadian sites to enhance data security.
Vivarium: The University of Winnipeg Vivarium occupies a 7500 square foot space for keeping and raising traditional model organisms (e.g., rodents, fish) and wildlife (e.g., bats) for research. The complex houses an Aquatic skid, six fish housing systems, including three drop-in chiller units for cooling fish housing systems, 2 freshwater housing units for Xenopus/fish, and one living stream. Rodent equipment includes a Cage Washer with access to a clean and dirty side, ventilated lab bench, change station, rodent isolator, rodent anesthesia and ventilated surgical table in the operating room, and both mouse and rat housing systems. The vivarium includes housing for rabbits and a wildlife facility designed to house bats with two large flight rooms and procedure space with biosafety cabinet for studies of behaviour, physiology and infectious disease. While housed in the Vivarium the animals are monitored every day by the technicians (weekends and holidays as well). The research ranges from nutritional studies to aquatic ecology and physiology, evolutionary biology and endangered species conservation.
Library: The Library has focused on sustaining resources responsibly through assessment and increased dialogue with faculty about their needs in the short and long term. The Library is increasingly looking to sustain access to resources through supporting Open Access practices and investing in Open Access infrastructure, including Erudit/ Coalition Publi.ca and Scoap3. These investments benefit the UW community by promoting trustworthy and respected open access resources to our faculty and students, and supporting the infrastructure that sustains them.
We continue to make platform improvements to our Institutional Repository, WinnSpace, including adding the ability to include DOIs to increase discoverability of resources, and added over 150 Open Access items, many in order to fulfill grant requirements.
The Library has become the point place for RDM on campus, coordinating an asset mapping exercise with the Research Office and TSC, and developing a detailed website for UWinnipeg researchers to guide them through the DMP process. Addition, hands-on DMP help has been provided through the Library in the past year, leading to highly successful grants and industry partnerships. The Library provides in-kind support for research grants: systematic reviews, RDM support, Open Access advising.
Looking ahead to 2020-21 the above initiatives will continue to be strengthened. The Library will also continue working more closely with the Research Office and Technology Solutions Centre to build capacity for the storage, management, archiving and dissemination of research data in keeping with evolving Tri-Council guidelines. We will continue assessing our subscription resource needs, and look for new investments in sustainable research infrastructure, both at the University of Winnipeg and nationally.
Financial Services Upgrades: The University continues to offer on-line and personal training for users of the recently installed financial system, Microsoft Dynamics NAV and new reporting software, Prophix. Award functionality includes multi-year reporting with enhanced non-financial information attached. Through Webclient, researchers have instant access to their award balances and reporting tools designed to improve analytical abilities. Continual upgrades are resulting in faster, more accurate, and more efficient services for researchers and research administration staff. Research accounting personnel are thus able to handle the increasing volume of research grants awarded with enhanced ability for financial analysis and reporting. Recently the Research Accounting office created a research accounting website with links to resources such as Webclient training videos, research related forms and policies, etc.
Research Support: The Research Office aims to add additional human resources to increase the University’s capacity to fulfill its 5-year Integrated Academic & Research Plan (IARP), which was developed in consultation with members of the University community. As the University’s research funding in the past decade has nearly tripled, the University of Winnipeg’s goal is to strengthen our capacity to provide relevant research support to faculty members. The Research Office continually seeks ways in which it can better support researchers while maintaining its capacity to develop and administer increasing numbers of successful grant and ethics applications.
About the Research Support Fund Program (RSF)
In 2003 the Federal Government introduced the Indirect Costs of Research Program (ICP) to provide grants to Canadian universities and colleges to offset the financial challenges of administering Tri-Agency funded research. The Research Support Fund replaced the Indirect Costs Program as of May 25, 2015. The program is part of the federal government’s ongoing strategy to make Canada one of the world’s top countries in research and development. The program currently has a budget of nearly $400 million and serves more than 150 postsecondary institutions across the country. In April 2019 the Federal Government announced a Budget 2018 boost of $231 million over the next five years and nearly $59 million per year ongoing for projects at research-intensive institutions. This Budget 2018 funding is in addition to the $369 million already invested every year through the RSF.
The Research Support Fund assists Canadian postsecondary institutions and their affiliated research hospitals and institutes with the expenses associated with managing the research funded by the three federal research granting agencies:
- the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR);
- the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC); and
- the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
Every year, the federal government invests in research excellence in the areas of health sciences, engineering, natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities through its three granting agencies. The Research Support Fund reinforces this research investment by helping institutions ensure that their federally funded research projects are conducted in world-class facilities with the best equipment and administrative support available.
Eligible institutions receive an annual grant through the fund to help pay for a portion of the central and departmental administrative costs related to federally funded research.
What costs does the program support?
Examples of costs supported by the program are:
- salaries for staff or students who provide administrative support for researchers and their projects;
- training costs for workplace health and safety;
- costs related to the maintenance of libraries and laboratories; and
- Administrative costs associated with getting a patent for an invention.
RSF Grants at the University of Winnipeg
RSF grants are allocated annually, based on a rolling average of the Tri-Agency funding awarded to the institution over the previous three years. In 2019-20 The University of Winnipeg incurred eligible costs of approximately $3,237,949 in support of Tri-Agency funded research activities. The total RSF grant awarded for that year was $1,202,568, off-setting approximately 37% of these eligible costs. For 2020-21, the University of Winnipeg RSF grant will be $1,369,003, an increase of approximately 14% over the previous fiscal year.
2020-2021 ALLOCATION OF RSF GRANT
The program allows institutions flexibility to allocate their annual RSF grant, at their discretion, to offset eligible costs incurred under five categories:
- Research facilities: renovation & maintenance of research facilities, upgrades and maintenance of research equipment and other devices, operating costs, and technical support for labs, offices and other facilities. ($377,000)
- Research resources: acquisition of library holdings, improved information resources, library operating costs and administration, and insurance on research equipment and vehicles. ($377,000)
- Management and administration of the research enterprise: support for the completion of grant applications/research proposals, acquisition, maintenance and/or upgrade of information systems to track grant applications, certificates and awards, training of faculty and research personnel, human resources and payroll, financial and audit costs, research planning and promotion, and public relations. ($375,000)
- Regulatory requirements and accreditations: creation and support of regulatory bodies, relevant training of faculty and other research personnel, international accreditation costs, upgrades and maintenance of research facilities to meet regulatory requirements, technical support for animal care and handling of hazardous substances, and the purchase of animals exclusively for training purposes (not research). ($180,000)
- Intellectual property: creation, expansion or sustenance of a technology transfer office or similar function, administration of invention patent applications, support for technology licensing, administration of agreements and partnerships with industry, development of incubators, support for the creation of spin-off companies, certain public outreach activities, and marketing of teaching materials, scientific photo libraries, data sets, and other tools for knowledge transfer. ($60,003)
UNIVERSITY OF WINNIPEG 2020 -2021 ALLOCATION OF RSF FUNDS
Expenditure Categories |
Dollar Amount |
---|---|
2020-21 Investment |
$1,369,003.00 |
Facilities 28% |
$377,000 |
Resources 28% |
$377,000 |
Management & Administration 27% |
$375,000 |
Regulatory Requirements & Accreditation 13% |
$180,000 |
Intellectual Property 4% |
$60,003 |
TOTAL: |
$1,369,003.00 |
Outcomes Reports:
2015-2016 [PDF]
2014-2015 [PDF]
2013-2014 [PDF]
Accountability and Public Acknowledgement:
For more information about the program please visit the Research Support Fund’s website: