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I call the meeting to order.
This is meeting number 80 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Science and Research. Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the Standing Orders. We have members and witnesses appearing virtually today.
If you're on Zoom, you can choose the official language of your choice. Interpretation services are available for this meeting, so at the bottom of the screen just choose floor, English or French. If interpretation is lost, please let me know immediately and we'll suspend until interpretation services are available.
For members in person, it's a normal meeting. We ask you to address your remarks through me, and I'll recognize you by name. For those in the room, your microphone will be controlled, as normal, by the proceedings and verification officer.
Although this room is equipped with a powerful audio system, we also have to be very careful for the interpreters. We don't want our earphones near our microphones creating feedback. If feedback does occur, take your earphone out immediately. However, please, let's stay away from having feedback for the sake of those using headphones.
As a reminder, we should be speaking slowly and clearly for our interpreters. With regard to a speaking list, we'll do the best we can to maintain the order we've been given, whether you're here virtually or in person.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(i) and the motions adopted by the committee on Tuesday, January 30, and Thursday, February 15, the committee resumes its study of the distribution of federal government funding among Canada's post-secondary institutions
It's now my pleasure to welcome the witnesses.
From Thompson Rivers University, we have Dr. Shannon Wagner, vice-president of research. She is here in person. Online, from the University of Calgary, we have Dr. Ed McCauley, president and vice-chancellor, and from Western University, we have Dr. Penny Pexman, vice-president of research.
Each individual will have five minutes for opening remarks, and after that time, we'll go to questions.
We will start off with Dr. Wagner for five minutes.
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Weyt-kp xwexwéytep. Shannon Wagner
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Good morning. My name is Shannon Wagner, and I am the vice-president of research at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C.
Today, I am here proudly representing small and mid-sized universities that are pushing the boundaries of knowledge to address regional, provincial and national research questions and priorities. We are proud of our vibrant campus life and our commitment to open learning, with nearly 29,000 students.
We are very proud to be guests on the traditional territory of the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc for our first house in Kamloops and to T'exelc for our second house in Williams Lake, B.C. Our relationship with our host first nations guides us in our approach to all academic and research initiatives for our institution.
Our university, while deeply committed to teaching and learning, has carved a niche in research creation and dissemination. Now recognized among the top 50 research universities in Canada, TRU has shown notable growth and is second in our tier in research income. Our strategic research plan addresses key challenge areas that inform academic planning, which guides undergraduate, graduate and faculty education and research.
A flagship initiative at TRU is addressing the urgent need for research and education on wildfires. The establishment of the Institute for Wildfire Science, Adaptation and Resiliency, under the scientific leadership of world-renowned wildfire researcher Dr. Mike Flannigan, marked a significant step toward better understanding and managing the effects of wildfires. TRU and the Province of British Columbia have partnered in a first-of-its-kind initiative to create an ecosystem for wildfire studies, which includes a state-of-the-art building that will house all aspects of wildfires, from basic training through to advanced research, so that research-informed training is an expectation rather than a goal.
Equally important is our knowledge makers program, which empowers indigenous students to engage with and contribute to academic scholarship, offering them a platform to be heard and recognized on an international stage. Collaboration with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization showcased the power of indigenous knowledge in addressing global challenges like food security, further highlighting the impactful work done by our students and faculty.
These initiatives demonstrate the critical role small and mid-sized universities like TRU play in making a difference regionally, nationally and globally. The contribution of institutions like ours drives forward innovation, understanding and change. To support this ongoing and valuable work, beyond our endorsement of the ACCRU's recommendations, I propose several enhancements that would boost the contributions of small and mid-sized research institutions.
First, rethink funding models. Refocus the merit-based funding system to prioritize the quality and impact of research proposals by democratizing access to funding, while reducing emphasis on an applicant's previous research success. Perhaps this could also be accomplished by creating funding calls, beyond special calls for early career, targeted to those who have not been previously funded.
Second, level the research environment. Address disparities that give preference to applications from institutions where research infrastructure and ecosystems may be more plentiful, when those disparities do not present true barriers to successfully completing research.
Third, focus on regional needs. Regional needs and the unique strengths included in the relationships with community are not always the easiest factors to account for in existing funding calls. Valuing the unique strengths and relationships that researchers and institutions have with their communities will supercharge regional research ecosystems.
Fourth and finally, promote collaboration. Encourage and facilitate interinstitutional partnerships to tackle national and global challenges. Programs like the recent NSERC Lab2Market, which required interinstitutional partners for eligibility, are excellent models for how to bring together post-secondaries across Canada.
Thank you very much for the opportunity to present this morning. I look forward to your questions.
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Good morning from sunny Calgary and the traditional territory of the people of the Treaty 7 region.
We're home to one of Canada's research-intensive universities. Since 2011, the University of Calgary has been intentionally growing its research capacity by focusing on impactful solutions that are beneficial to Canadians. By 2021, we had become the youngest institution on Canada's top-five list of research universities, and we have one of the fastest rates of growth in research funding, which ranks among those of much larger, more established institutions. Our research community consistently demonstrates excellence and transdisciplinary collaboration, which are among the reasons our external research funding continues to grow.
For many years, the research performed at the University of Calgary and our sister institutions has made Canada more prosperous and healthier. We have done so in partnership with the federal government, which leverages further investment and helps us attract talent to solve some of Canada's pressing problems.
A good example is One Child Every Child, a Canada-first research excellence program. At $125 million, it's one of the largest federal research grants to a university in western Canada. We have leveraged this funding to attract other partners to build a $268-million research and innovation ecosystem with our community and industry that will dramatically improve health outcomes for children and youth across the country.
We are grateful for the support of the federal government, as it creates leveraging opportunities to accomplish important shared goals.
Other players also recognize the economic, social and health benefits of research. Last year, the University of Calgary had $545 million in externally sponsored research. More than one-third of that came from industry and non-profit organizations. There is broad relevance and broad benefit to the research we perform. It advances discovery. It generates economic activity. It creates jobs. It supports existing industries, and it helps create those of tomorrow.
Federal funding plays an essential role. It supports talent and the creation of new ideas for the benefit of society. However, funding levels are eroding. Since 2020, federal funding has fallen in real terms by 19%. At the same time, our competitors are increasing their funding. The stakes are global.
We need to increase research funding to attract and retain talent, create new ideas and grow enterprises. The top economies in the world are doing just that. We also need to maintain a merit-based allocation of that funding based on rigorous, independent review. Canada's current system is considered an international best practice. While it is true that U15 institutions like the University of Calgary do receive the largest amount of this funding, we also receive most of industry's funding—75%, to be exact. A strong innovation and start-up ecosystem has broad spillover benefits when university research is mobilized towards innovation.
At the University of Calgary, we have activated several commercialization pathways, including the Hunter hub for entrepreneurial thinking, mentoring programs for innovation training, a set of evergreening, philanthropically driven venture funds, and several sectoral innovation hubs. For the third consecutive year, the University of Calgary is the top start-up company creator among Canadian research institutions. Our ecosystem is working to mobilize research.
U15 institutions are the anchors of Canada's research ecosystem, but we are not silos. We routinely collaborate with other institutions. Just last week, the University of Calgary and University of Alberta partnered with the University of Lethbridge and Northwestern Polytechnic in Grande Prairie to expand rural medical training. We have many joint ventures with the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology, a polytechnic in Calgary, with Mount Royal University and with other post-secondary institutions across the country.
Increased federal funding will help to promote those collaborations by supporting scholars, and, through these partnerships and collaborations, it will help smaller institutions grow, just as the University of Calgary has grown. The merit- and excellence-based funding model is key to this success. It is a proven winner and is the envy of other countries.
The core problem with Canada's research funding model is not how the research funding is allocated, but that the funding is falling in actual terms and diminishing our capacity as a nation to conduct impactful research for the benefit of Canadians.
Thank you.
Hello, everyone. Thank you for inviting us to participate in today's discussion.
My name in Penny Pexman, and I am the vice-president of research at Western University. In my remarks today, I will share some insights into the exciting work led by Western researchers with federal grant funding and will echo calls for further investments to strengthen the talent pipeline and catalyze Canadian research and innovation.
At Western, we provide more than 40,000 students with an exemplary learning experience that engages and challenges them to meet ever higher standards in the classroom and beyond. This experience benefits tremendously from having opportunities to interact with other top minds and access unique and leading research facilities. It is one way we develop leaders, thinkers and entrepreneurs who are able to navigate the complexities of our world and solve some of its biggest challenges.
We are proud to be located in London, the geographic centre of southwestern Ontario. Our campus is enriched by students, trainees and faculty from across the region and by numerous local partnerships with hospitals, industry, not-for-profits, indigenous communities and other organizations.
As a member of the U15 group of Canada's leading research-intensive universities, Western plays a vital role in advancing knowledge, driving innovation and developing next-generation discoveries that improve local and global health, economies, culture and societies.
It was in London, for example, that Western professor Dr. Ivan Smith introduced cobalt radiation therapy at our affiliated hospitals, doubling the survival rate for early stage cervical cancer to 60% and benefiting tens of millions of cancer patients. It was also where Dr. Fred Possmayer discovered a method of extracting and purifying natural surfactant from a cow's lung to help premature babies breathe, saving millions of lives worldwide.
Western is also considered the birthplace of the modern practice of wind engineering. Built in the 1960s, the first-of-its-kind boundary layer wind tunnel laboratory has been used to test many of the world's most significant structures, including the CN Tower, the Confederation Bridge and, more recently, the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest structure.
Subsequent government investments have since allowed Western to establish an unparalleled cluster of unique wind research facilities and programs that today are helping develop building codes, supporting the construction industry, understanding our environment and keeping buildings and their occupants safe. It takes time and sustained investments to develop research strengths at this scale.
While excellence is rooted in our history, Western continues to pursue and lead partnerships aimed at advancing next-generation discoveries that improve global health, economies, culture and societies. For example, Western has recently launched a nuclear hub that leverages our expertise and infrastructure to strengthen partnerships with industry, hospitals, academia and indigenous partners. We will co-develop a pan-Canadian strategy that ensures the country remains a leader in nuclear research, innovation and training and continues to deliver real solutions that address decarbonization and advance life-saving medicine.
Many other research efforts include partnerships with small to medium-sized institutions across the country, including a partnership with Capilano and Thompson Rivers universities that provides better training to early childhood educators. Another, with Simon Fraser, Dalhousie and Memorial, is preparing primary care providers for future pandemics. Closer to home, we're working with Windsor on initiatives related to composite materials and technologies.
These are just a few examples. As we say at Western, impact takes many forms, from individual scholars creating and promoting knowledge to collaborative teams developing novel technologies and solutions to grand challenges, from researchers influencing policy to artists creating culture and bringing joy to our lives, and from efforts to understand the fundamental questions that drive curiosity to knowledge that supports the development of our business, legal, health and education systems.
This is why I would echo the U15's recommendations to maintain the principle of the independent expert review process for research grant applications based on the established excellence and rigour of the federal granting councils; to invest in the core funding budgets of the federal granting councils and CFI; to increase federal funding for graduate scholarships and doctoral and post-doctoral fellowships by 50% and double the number of awards; and to implement the governance advancements to the research support system proposed in the Bouchard report.
We encourage the federal government to make a major investment in the federal research ecosystem to support research at all Canadian institutions and ultimately benefit communities like ours in London and across Canada.
I'll direct my questions to Dr. McCauley.
The University of Calgary has become a top-five research-intensive university. Hearty congratulations. That is a higher rank than many larger central Canadian universities enjoy. The University of Calgary has done this even though it doesn't have the geographic proximity that some of these other institutions have to the central Canadian business cores or even access to the lobbying federal government folks involved in the research funding community.
I take from this that federal research funding is very important to the University of Calgary, but would you attribute part of your institution's success to your management of strategic objectives like a diversified portfolio of funding—that is, industrial funding, philanthropy and mixed land use—in order to leverage the impact of federal research funding?
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You are my former boss, so I still feel awkward cutting you off, but I have only six minutes. I'll try to behave.
Can I take a “yes” from that?
Dr. Edward McCauley: Yes.
Hon. Michelle Rempel Garner: Okay. That's excellent.
We're looking for recommendations. Would you recommend that the federal government encourage research institutions that apply for federal research funding to diversify their portfolios in a manner similar to you in order to leverage research funding and get outcomes such as skilled workers, intellectual property commercialization, etc.?
I want to welcome our witnesses to this very important study and give a personal shout-out to Western University in London.
I am very happy to have you join us to help us understand a bit more about research, especially with the lens of southwestern Ontario, Western being one of the U15 universities. There's also the collaboration you have within the region.
Welcome to the committee. I'll get right to it.
As I understand, funding is allocated to universities through a quota. Could you share with the committee a bit more about what the allocation is per university and how you understand it is decided? For example, is it by student population, amount of published research, etc., or is there any other factor you may consider to be a criterion that allows you to get that funding?
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I agree with Dr. Pexman.
Quotas are not the way to look at it. It's a merit-based program or a variety of different programs that individuals, collectives of individuals, collaboratives and partners can apply for. The key thing there is the piece on excellence, on merit-based approaches to evaluating those proposals, and having a clear set of guidelines on submission.
I've been very fortunate to live in different jurisdictions and have grants from different organizations around the world. The support staff at the tri-councils and CFI do an amazing job at ensuring there's no bias in those proposal evaluations. They're just incredible.
I would like to welcome the witnesses who have joined us today for this important study.
Ms. Wagner, from Thompson Rivers University, your colleague from the University of Calgary said earlier that the issue wasn't necessarily the distribution of funding, but rather underfunding. In our latest study, we learned that 79% of funding goes to Canada's 15 largest universities. I would like to hear your thoughts on this information.
As a representative of a university that isn't one of the 15 largest in Canada, do you think that equity and access to funding for small and medium‑sized universities constitute a real issue?
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That's an excellent question. It really goes back to my opening remarks.
There are opportunities for us to increase the system and create specific programs that might benefit smaller institutions where it is a little harder to break in. Smaller or mid-size institutions like ours are oftentimes looking at recruitment from, for example, mid-career researchers or individuals who are coming in from practice—individuals with long histories in health, for example, who become health researchers. They don't necessarily have significant funding successes from their previous experiences to build upon.
We're thinking about ways we can bring into the system researchers who are new to the system or who have not yet had an experience in the system. We don't want to make the assumption that just because you haven't had an opportunity to access the system, you don't have a great idea. We're trying to be creative about how to provide avenues for faculty researchers and great minds to enter the system in new ways that we haven't thought of before.
I'm also pleased to be here today. When my colleague, Mr. Cannings, asked for a replacement because he had other commitments, I gladly volunteered. I believe in the fundamental importance of research for the advancement of human knowledge, for economic development and for the opportunity to adopt public policies based on facts, science and research too. This also helps us with our work.
Ms. Wagner, I'll continue along the same lines as my Bloc Québécois colleague. You talked about equity in Canada's research ecosystem and about how our approach should focus on the democratization of access to funding. You spoke in particular about the possibility that a perhaps smaller institution, which has never done research in a given field or on a given topic, could also access research funding, even if it were for the first time.
It reminds me a bit of young people who want to enter the job market, but who need to already have experience, just when they're trying to enter the job market. Even without experience, they can be extremely competent and able to contribute to the company.
How should this approach work? Should funding be earmarked for these new initiatives, projects and fields of research? Should more general criteria be applied? You talked about approaching this issue creatively rather than systematically denying access to funding. I would like you to elaborate on that. How could this be done?
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That's an excellent question.
Lots of different opportunities could be put forward to start to address some of those pieces. Some of the ideas we've come up with to this point think about how the scoring system works within the tri-council. Is it most appropriate to put a lot of weight on, for example, previous funding success? There may be some situations when that is entirely appropriate. I'm not suggesting that's not the case.
We see opportunities for career researchers, for example, which get at exactly what you've referenced with a new employee trying to enter the workforce. You need experience to get experience. It equates to the same sort of approach.
Could we look at similar kinds of approaches for individuals who perhaps have great ideas and haven't yet been able to break into that system? Are there opportunities to create special calls or special opportunities that allow individuals who need experience to get experience and become a participant in the system?
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It's such an important topic right now federally and for the interior of B.C. in particular, which has experienced the absolutely devastating impacts of forest fires over the last couple of years. I'm really pleased to say that TRU has decided that wildfires are an absolute priority of our institution. We've partnered with the province. We're going to develop a training and education centre that will look at everything from basic training through undergraduate and graduate training to research in order to create an ecosystem of research-informed training.
As many of us know, with climate change, the adaptation training and response need to change, and we need research to do that. I think back to Dr. McCauley's comments at the beginning: Research drives society. We need research in order to really move forward on answering some of the pressing calls of our current situation.
We have definitely seen some influx of federal funds, particularly around Natural Resources Canada and the opportunities that exist through it. I think that's definitely a start.
There's a lot of work to do. I would expand it beyond wildfires to many other different types of climate disasters that we're experiencing as a country. It's a high-priority area, and it's definitely a source for investment at the federal level.
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At a smaller or mid-sized institution, we identify pillars of research priorities, similar to the larger institutions. As an institution, we will absolutely invest in those research areas. For us, it's certainly one of our research areas as well. Another one is indigenous health.
Was return on investment the other part of that question?
Mr. Gerald Soroka: Yes.
Dr. Shannon Wagner: When we think about making investments in research, we're often thinking about the capacity that's built, in particular, around tri-council funding.
One of the other members brought up, for example, the Canada research chair program. The opportunity of having a Canada research chair makes me think about Dr. Mike Flannigan and Dr. Jill Harvey, who are chairs at TRU. They help us build relationships with industry. They provide almost ambassadorships for the institution to create pathways to a return on investment for grant dollars. That's a really important piece of building research at a university.
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We have big ambitions at Western. I'm a relatively new VPR. I'm struck by the research strengths that already exist and the opportunities that exist to build on those through partnership, innovation and tech transfer.
One example of a priority is one that I mentioned in my comments, which was the nuclear hub. I like that example because it's built on discovery research in things like medical isotopes and nuclear energy, but it also involves key partnerships, both within the province and beyond, with different types of organizations. It capitalizes on a couple of federal programs that actually require matching contributions and leveraging.
One would be the NSERC alliance program. We have a number of successful NSERC alliance grants that have just come in through the nuclear hub for which there is an industry partner who wants to engage with one of our researchers. The federal funding requires a combination of federal and external funding, and those tend to build into bigger and bigger industry contracts.
The Mitacs program would be another example. There's a requirement that, in order for a student to engage with an industry partner, some money comes from Mitacs. There's also money from the industry partner. Those lead to fantastic job opportunities and larger-scale industry partnerships. We have a number of those examples right now in the nuclear hub.
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Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses for coming.
I heard something this morning that I really wasn't expecting to hear, but it really caught my attention.
Dr. Wagner, you talked about the institute for wildfire and about understanding and managing the effects of wildfires. I think that's so important. One of my children did graduate work on wildfires in Nova Scotia at Dalhousie University. When she started, she was told that no one else had done that before. This was a number of years ago.
To come back full circle, in two weeks' time, I'm putting on a session in my community. I come from Halifax West in Nova Scotia, all the way on the other coast, where we experienced terrible wildfires last year that have left hundreds of people devastated. Many homes were burned and many people were evacuated. A number of things happened, but luckily there were no fatalities.
I'm putting on an information session on emergency preparedness on April 25. Perhaps we should talk to you afterward to see what information we can get from you.
How do you collaborate or teach to solve problems? They're not just your provincial problems or those in your own territory or even Canada. They could be international issues. How do you collaborate? How can you get more researchers, get more funding and get more people knowledgeable so that you can garner much more funding? I'm happy to hear that you've received funding from Natural Resources Canada, but perhaps you can describe that process to us. What can we do as parliamentarians to aid you with that?
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I echo the devastation of the wildfires. As you know, a number of lives were lost last year as well in the firefighter ranks. We were working directly with the B.C. Wildfire Service at the time and felt very deeply the loss of their members. That happened last summer. It's become very much an emotional topic for us at our institution, so thank you for that.
As far as our development of the Institute for Wildfire Science, Adaptation and Resiliency goes, our scientific director is Dr. Mike Flannigan. He is globally known for his expertise in wildfire research, and he is incredibly well connected with other researchers provincially, nationally and globally. While having him and the other researchers do that work and connect with other researchers, our role is to provide the assistance and support to have the researchers do the fantastic work they do and to invite other institutions and other researchers to become part of the institute.
Another big piece for us is the creation of a wildfire training and education centre, which we think is a first in the ecosystem. We are not aware of any other systems where training, education, research and innovation are coming together under one roof to do these things collectively with all of the people engaged.
The idea of that is having research-informed training and education, building that research and then informing the things that are happening on the ground. We are not interested in doing that only regionally. We really would like to see both the institute and the centre become a provincial source and absolutely a national source.
We are actively seeking any kind of collaboration that anybody would like to have with us. We are trying our very best to work with other post-secondary institutions across our province and across our nation.
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With the limited time I have left, Dr. McCauley, I have a question for you.
The U15—your university and others—does tremendous work, and you talked a lot about team-building collaboration across industry but also with other universities.
I have a U15 member in my province, Dalhousie, and I know they collaborate with the other centres, but what else can you recommend to us in terms of how we as parliamentarians and a government can help you so that all sectors and universities, regardless of their size, work together better?
Ms. Pexman, you said earlier that the size of the organization shouldn't necessarily affect research funding. If I understand you correctly, we should be funding universities based on past innovations. Can you elaborate on this?
In my opinion, the purpose of research funding is to fund future research, not to reward discoveries. Yet this is the current model of the funding structure. In your opinion, is the current funding system appropriate and does it allow for innovation? Shouldn't there be improvements so that everyone, regardless of their location or university, can make major advances in scientific research?
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Welcome to our witnesses, who have just joined us.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(i) and the motions adopted by the committee on Tuesday, January 30, and Thursday, February 15, the committee resumes its study of the distribution of federal government funding among Canada's post-secondary institutions.
It's now my pleasure to welcome Dr. Marc Nantel from Niagara College, vice-president of research, innovation and strategic enterprises, who is here in person. We also have, from Aurora College via video, Pippa Seccombe-Hett, vice-president of research.
Ms. Seccombe-Hett, you can choose the language on the bottom of your screen. I see you nodding, so you're well aware of that.
You'll each have five minutes to start.
We'll start with Dr. Nantel from Niagara College.
I'd like to thank the committee for undertaking this study and for inviting me as a witness.
As said, my name is Marc Nantel and I'm the vice-president of research, innovation and strategic enterprises at Niagara College. I have experience in research at both the university and college levels. I have a Ph.D. in plasma physics, have done research in France and in the U.S. and was an adjunct professor of physics at the University of Toronto for 10 years. I've been at Niagara College since 2011, leading its research and innovation division.
You will no doubt hear much about university research and the distribution of funding between smaller and larger universities for this study. I'm here to discuss the place of colleges within that ecosystem. Interestingly, 11 colleges get more overall research funding than the university listed at number 50 on the Canadian university research list, so several colleges do more funded research than some universities.
College research is often about the application of knowledge to solve immediate problems. It's about the companies that approach us for help. It's about developing new products, processes and services with them. It's about giving college students a richer education.
At Niagara College, we've been doing applied research with industry for more than 25 years. We are currently number one on the top-50 research college list. We focus our applied research on sectors of importance to the Niagara region, such as advanced manufacturing, agriculture and the environment; food and beverages; and business and commercialization. Typically, we require that there be a one-to-one matching of government investment in a project so that the company has skin in the game and the desire to commercialize the result, which leads to faster economic development and job creation.
Here's only one example. I can give more during the question period.
Hamill Machine is a Niagara Falls small to medium-sized enterprise that used to cater to the automotive parts industry. Niagara College helped Hamill develop a completely new product line that automates the harvesting of microgreens, speeding it up by 50 times. Their three harvester machines for cutting, washing and drying are now sold domestically and internationally under a new spinoff company, Hamill Agricultural Processing Solutions, which has grown over the past five years from zero to 20 full-time employees. Last year, it did $3 million in sales and completed its first overseas installation in Abu Dhabi.
That's great, but Canadian colleges achieve outcomes like this for the country on less than a shoestring. I like to say that we do it on the plastic bit at the end of the shoestring. Right now, colleges receive only 2.9% of the federal funding for research.
Here's an example of how colleges lead and could do more with better funding.
Niagara College is the creator and leader of the Southern Ontario Network for Advanced Manufacturing Innovation, or SONAMI. You heard about it from Madam Johnston earlier. It brings together nine colleges and two universities. We like collaborating.
In its eight years of existence so far, SONAMI has undertaken more than 460 projects with 316 industry partners that commercialized 149 products. That's a 32% commercialization rate. It has created more than 280 jobs. Those are undercounts because of reporting. These projects were mostly funded through FedDev Ontario and also through NSERC.
This is an example of how colleges can lead strong networks that include universities, but currently, several federal funding programs supporting similar networks do not allow colleges as lead applicants. This needs to change, as do the measurements of success of such programs, which should reflect what colleges can bring to the table. If the evaluation criteria are about refereed papers instead of the number of jobs created, then college applications won't rank very well. That would be both disappointing and counterproductive if what you want is economic development through manufacturing transformation, transition to a greener economy, industry investment in technologies and increased productivity.
Here's another example of what colleges could do with more than 2.9% of the federal research funding. We don't keep the intellectual property generated through these collaborative projects generally. We give it to the industry partner. Companies come to us for solutions, but they don't always know what to do and how to get the best benefit for the IP. Colleges could help them understand what they have and help them commercialize it. Right now, though, colleges and their offices of research are underfunded and do not have the bandwidth or resources to take their industry partners on this complex journey.
In conclusion, I'm happy that colleges are included in this study. I hope that I have demonstrated the important role that they can play in Canada's research ecosystem, especially as it touches industry relevance, economic development and job creation. We can do so much more if we can be recognized as such and enabled to realize our full potential for Canada's economy of the future.
Thank you very much.
Thank you very much.
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Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the opportunity to speak with the committee today.
I would like to acknowledge that I am here speaking on behalf of the president of Aurora College, Dr. Glenda Vardy Dell. She was unable to make it today and asked me to speak on her behalf since we recognize that it is critical that the voices of smaller and remote post-secondary institutions participate in discussions surrounding the distribution of research funding.
I want to share some information about our college to provide context for our institution and our position with regard to the distribution of funds.
Aurora College is the public community college of the Northwest Territories. It has three main campuses—in Inuvik, Fort Smith and Yellowknife—with research staff located in each of these campuses. We operate the Western Arctic Research Centre in Inuvik, which is the logistics hub for research in Canada's western Arctic. It serves the college, the community and hundreds of external researchers every year from regional, national and international origins.
The north has always generated a tremendous amount of research interest. However, the science and research have historically been led by researchers located outside of the region. These researchers are located primarily in federal government departments and in universities across southern Canada. Increasingly, we have to note, we are seeing large international teams working in our area as well. All of this research has made a tremendous contribution to science. It is valuable nationally, regionally and internationally, but there has always been a gap between the big-picture science and regional research concerns and priorities.
When I first began working in the territories 25 years ago, we spent much time advocating for the priorities of northern jurisdictions and highlighting them to federal research funders to encourage work on these topics since the funds were inaccessible to residents in the territories. This prevented the region from maintaining research capacity in the north, conducting research on local priorities or directing the use of any research funds, which created a great sense of inequity.
Aurora College started conducting a small amount of research in 1995, when the college was created and merged with the Science Institute of the Northwest Territories in advance of the separation and creation of Nunavut. This positioned a small amount of capacity in Aurora College to focus on regional applied research programs, and that's since grown.
Aurora College became eligible to access tri-agency funding in 2014 and, over the last decade, has really started to grow and realize the aspirations of developing applied, community-partnered research. Over this decade, we have grown from 10 to 45 research staff and developed applied research programs with community partners, always partnering with and creating strong benefits for northern communities. It is also important to highlight that we have been able to anchor access to indirect cost funding for our regional indigenous governments and not-for-profit organizations in order to contribute to creating a regional applied research ecosystem.
Throughout this last decade, we have also increased our collaborative engagements with research from universities that have active northern research programs. Doing this has allowed us access to new funds, mentorships and partnerships, but it has also helped us understand how much more indirect cost funding is provided to universities through the research support fund.
Aurora College is currently in the process of transforming from a college to a polytechnic university. Part of this vision is really about building and expanding on this applied research focus. Getting access to national research funds has been a game-changer for us. It has positioned the college to be in a meaningful role for the region and opened avenues for funds, equipment and expertise to focus on and partner with northern and community organizations to address local challenges. The NSERC college and community innovation program has been critical to our growth and success in developing research programs that bring impact and benefit to the communities we serve.
Given our position and our recent experiences with national research funding, we would like to highlight and recommend continued and increased funding in the college and community innovation program. This anchors the applied, community-partnered research where we have demonstrated success and impact and are positioned to grow.
We would also highlight access to research support funds to help offset indirect costs. Providing colleges and institutes with equal access to these would create significant capacity in our institutions to meet the evolving research requirements of data security, research data management, etc.—the many changing requirements.
We also suggest potentially targeting funds that build bridges between universities and colleges to increase the impact of research and knowledge at the community level.
Of course, being northerners, we want to highlight that there is a northern supplement for university programs that is not available for the northern colleges or polytechnics. This creates an additional barrier for our ability to conduct research.
I would like to close by reiterating the importance of national research funding for supporting applied northern research within colleges. It's critical that opportunities remain for remote, northern and indigenous people to access national research funds and participate in the applied northern research ecosystem.
I'd like to say thank you for allowing me to speak with you today. I welcome all questions to help provide the small institution perspective in support of the work of this committee.
:
Thank you so much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to both of the witnesses today.
I was glad to hear you refer to SONAMI. Conestoga College is just a block away from my constituency office, so I'm very familiar with it. I grew up in Niagara, so I'm very familiar with Niagara. I know all the things you do. I've been to the culinary school and seen the grapes, and you have all the various kinds of liquor covered, just so everyone knows. It's a great place.
I'm also very aware of the research you've done with manufacturing. I was the chair of the manufacturing innovation network, and I'm quite aware of all the excellent collaborative, applied research that goes on with manufacturers.
Just to clarify, the purpose of this study is not to redistribute the current funding and take away from one group of post-secondaries to apply to another. In your opinion, do you think it would be better to create specific programs to support college-level research or adapt the existing fund programs, and if so, how could the existing programs be improved or adapted?
:
I think it depends on the outcomes you want at the end. If the outcome you want is for Canada to generate new knowledge and keep us at the top of the pointy bit of science, then definitely universities are where you go. I sometimes say that colleges will not discover the Higgs boson or detect gravitational waves. That's been done already, although I may have to change my analogies. If what you want is economic development, jobs and small companies getting bigger in regions, then this is a type of impact we can have.
From the point of view of whether it is better to have college programs or have college and universities applying for the same programs, I think you should evaluate if a proposal is good based on the outcomes you want out of the research. If what you want is something that universities are excellent at bringing, then I think it's a university program. If it's something that colleges are excellent at bringing, then make it a college program.
There could be some that have both that apply, but then at that point, the evaluation criteria and the outcomes you want and expect should be adapted such that colleges won't be evaluated on the number of papers they write in nature or science, because this is not what we do. This is not our output. Our outputs are prototypes. They are new products that get commercialized so that our companies do better.
:
Absolutely. Thank you. The shortness of the statement made me choose what I meant to discuss, but I'm glad you asked it as a question.
Students are in every project we do. We're a college. We're there to educate students and prepare them for the life of success that they hope to have. Every project we do has students.
In some cases, it's done in their classroom as part of a capstone project, and they get a grade for it. For some projects, we hire the students, and it's their part-time job or their co-op term to work full-time on projects during that period. They work very closely with industry partners. They are part of the meetings with them and part of the designing of the solution. They learn a whole bunch of essential skills, like dealing with adults, keeping time, managing, understanding budgets and understanding what outcomes are and why they have to keep to those outcomes. They learn how to present and how to write in a way that is business-related and not so much school-related.
The students who work with us on projects learn a whole lot on the innovation side, as well as on the essential-skills side. I'd like to think they are readier to hit the job market once they graduate and are more innovative employees who can help companies innovate from the inside.
At Niagara College, we typically see between 1,500 and 2,000 students do applied research through our innovation centres and our capstone projects. We're a 12,000-student college, so a good proportion of our students participate. Many more could if we could undertake more projects, obviously.
:
Thank you for the question.
One of the things that would help us would be to have access to more programs that would allow us to lead major networks or large projects. In particular, there's a big project on agricultural innovations that's funded, I believe, by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council or the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. When this project was launched a few years ago, only universities could register as principal applicants. Colleges could join in, but only as little brothers, if you will.
We created and lead, in an exemplary way, I think, the SONAMI network, which is the Southern Ontario Network for Advanced Manufacturing Innovation. This network has grown from 3 to 11 members and has succeeded in creating many jobs and commercialized projects.
So the colleges are able to eat at the big boys' table, but, the issue is, when people evaluate the kind of projects the colleges are normally involved in or want to do, they have to see what spin-offs we can bring about. These are not of the same type as those generated by universities. So funding programs have to be tailored to what colleges can do and what the government wants to achieve. That's one way we can grow.
The other way was mentioned by my colleague from Aurora College. Right now, we're not really well supported for the other activities that are connected to the projects we do, like data management, security or diversity and inclusion. We want to do all that, and we're doing it in a hurry on the corner of our desk, but the universities have a program that automatically subsidizes them to do that kind of thing. So we need to support project research, but we also need to support the stewardship of those research projects so that they're done right.
:
Thank you for the question.
Sometimes, I am amused to think that universities have been around for a thousand years and colleges have only been around for 50 years, or so, in their present roles. College research has existed for only a few decades, from 20 to 50 years depending on the college. Quebec, with its CEGEPs and Centres collégiaux de transfert de technologie, is a little ahead of the rest of Canada. However, college research is a fairly recent phenomenon, which has not yet penetrated the general consciousness of the population and the people who make decisions.
I think there's a way to show the good things about college research a little more convincingly. It's good to have all kinds of places to do research, such as national labs, universities, colleges and industry. However, we should first determine the results we want to achieve, and then determine the optimal distribution of grants based on the desired results.
I think colleges could produce more, because they have more capacity, but they are limited by their financial resources. Colleges are there primarily to teach. Research is something they do for society. On the other hand, research is woven into the very definition of universities, and for them, research is a recognized function. Colleges could do a lot, but they need a little more help.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I thank the witnesses for their presence, as well as for their invitation. I may go for a visit if I have the time, because I'm interested.
Ms. Seccombe‑Hett, Aurora College's mandate is quite interesting, since it includes improving the quality of life of the people of the Northwest Territories by using science and technology, but also indigenous knowledge. This mandate therefore includes socio-economic objectives for the people of your region.
What research projects are currently under way as part of this mandate to improve the quality of life for the people of the Northwest Territories?
:
Thank you for the question. It comes under our mission.
I can give you some research examples. One is a partnership we hold with our territorial government and regional partners monitoring permafrost along the Inuvik Tuktoyaktuk Highway. We are really spending a lot of time investigating that, looking at slope stability, road stability and snow loads. In order to maintain that infrastructure, how do we best maintain the road? We have a college-university regional partnership conducting that work.
Another example is using UAVs to monitor slope stability above cultural sites that are important to indigenous communities in the region. Another example is using Lidars to measure wind speeds, and to look at putting alternative energy or wind energy systems in remote systems to diminish our carbon footprint.
Those are some examples of some of the research programs we're actively engaged in. Other ones are looking at contaminants in water around mines, looking at whether the water sources around some of our communities are safe and looking at the legacy impacts of mining, like arsenic from mining. Those are some examples of the work we're doing, if that's helpful.
:
Thank you. It's interesting to hear about these historical inequities.
Mr. Nantel, I won't forget you: I'll address you in the next round.
Ms. Seccombe‑Hett, the government of the Northwest Territories has set five key priorities for research: cultural preservation, environmental science, health and wellness, natural resource management and community sustainability.
What do you think the federal government's role is in achieving these five goals when it comes to research funding? Is it well done, effective and adequately funded, or would you say the opposite?
:
Yes, 95% of Canada's population is within 50 kilometres of a college, as is 86% of the indigenous population. So we're everywhere. Plus, the fact that we work mostly with local companies helps us improve local economic conditions.
As I mentioned in my opening remarks, Niagara College focuses on industry sectors that are important to its region, such as manufacturing, food, beverages, environment and horticulture, among others. Every college in Canada tends to do this.
You have to know that applied research with local businesses or non-profits is a contact sport, as they say. You really have to be ready. People have to come and try the new product we've designed with them, whether it's a new recipe or a new drink. They have to come and test the prototype we've just made for them. Often, when they adopt the technology, we'll help them install it in their factory. So proximity is very useful.
We get more convincing and effective results when we can keep a role in the company's future. Generally speaking, when we hand over the intellectual property of a product to a company, they want to know whether they should protect it, or how to market the product. We can help companies to do this, since we're usually quite close to them geographically, and thus guide them further in their economic development. Proximity changes everything.
Of course, companies across Canada can benefit from grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, but the more local FedDev Ontario grants, for example, target a certain region of Ontario. Generally, that's closer.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I find it a bit ironic that my Conservative colleagues are concerned about the price of food in northern communities, given that it was they, when they formed the government, who eliminated the program that subsidized the transportation of food in these communities, even though it's transportation that represents the bulk of the cost of food there.
Mr. Nantel, in your presentation, you talked about improving equity in access to federal research funding. What exactly do you mean by this notion?
:
Thank you very much for the question.
Sometimes, a program is designed to get university results and target universities, which is fine. At some point, however, someone points out that colleges were forgotten. So we add “and colleges” to the instructions, but it doesn't work. In fact, if the results and the kind of interventions desired are university interventions, no college is going to receive a grant, because the way assessors evaluate applications will favour universities.
Therefore, when you design programs and want colleges to be part of them, you need to look at the contribution colleges can make and adapt the evaluation criteria and desired outcomes accordingly.
:
Thank you to the clerk for including colleges among our witnesses here this morning. It's tremendous to hear about the work going on at Aurora and the real challenges they face with keeping research alive not only in the institution but also outside of the institution, which they're working on.
Mr. Nantel, you were talking about working with industry. I graduated from Red River College Polytechnic in mechanical engineering technology. My co-op job back in 1979 had to do with a local blinds manufacturer. I used that co-op experience over my 30 years of experience in the field. I kept using that experience over and over. Thank you for the partnerships you have with our local businesses.
Thank you both, Dr. Nantel and Pippa Seccombe-Hett, for being with us this morning and giving us your insights on colleges and post-secondary institution research funding. I had to cut you off a couple of times, but if there's any further information, please feel welcome to send it to the clerk.
To members of the committee, I have a heads-up. The indigenous knowledge study is going through translation right now. We should see version 1 of the report in early May, so we can take a look at it.
Thank you to the analysts for all of your hard work on that report. I'm looking forward to reading it. Those testimonies were incredible.
Let's get on with our day.
Is there a motion for adjournment? I see nods around the room.
(Motion agreed to)
The Chair: Thank you.