2006 - 2007 Request for Proposals
If you have any questions, contact:
Roseann Thompson, Project Manager
(575) 646-7854
rethomps@nmsu.edu
Due Dates
Letter of Intent and Abstract: December 7, 2005
Proposal: February 1, 2006
Introduction
Since the creation of WERC in 1990, one of the prime
objectives of the program has been to solve environmental
problems. This is accomplished by combining research and
education in a way that benefits the student, the researcher and
ultimately, the nation.
The technology development projects are intended to provide
financial support for students and faculty, laboratory
resources, supplies, materials, technical focus and other
elements needed to educate the students and assist the faculty
in exploring new and innovative techniques that address
environmental and health related issues. WERC consortium member
institutions are invited to submit a proposal for funding
consideration.
History/Background
The creation of WERC: A Consortium for Environmental
Education and Technology Development was announced on July 26,
1989. The consortium is composed of New Mexico State University
(NMSU), University of New Mexico (UNM), New Mexico Institute of
Mining and Technology (NMIMT), Diné College, Los Alamos National
Laboratory (LANL), and Sandia National Laboratories (SNL). The
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) executed a contract with the
consortium in February 1990.
WERC Mission: The mission of the WERC program is to develop
human resources and technology that assist various levels of
government and private-sector companies in addressing
environmental issues, as well as:
· To
provide a national resource of education and technology
development programs.
· To
develop and deploy new environmental management
technologies that provide for training of students and
long-term visibility for WERC's programs.
· To
increase expertise and sensitivity to environmental
management issues.
An important consideration for the WERC program is the
education of students and professionals with advanced degrees.
The technology development projects are intended to provide
financial support for students and faculty, laboratory
resources, supplies, materials, and other elements needed to
educate the students and assist the faculty in exploring new and
innovative techniques that address environmental and health
related issues.
Research Objectives
Renewal of ongoing research as well as new proposals will be
considered for funding in 2006-2007. Renewal proposals for
ongoing research projects must demonstrate progress in
accordance with the timeline and stated goals that were
previously submitted for the project. All proposals must
consider research and development that will:
· Develop
cooperative proposals with other entities, and projects
to ensure WERC’s future self-sustenance.
· Provide
hands-on, laboratory and field-based educational
opportunities for students and faculty.
· Advance
the present state of knowledge resulting in immediate
transfer of leading-edge technologies.
· Advance
the knowledge of processes, policies, economics, and
social concerns which affect environmental education,
environmental restoration, pollution prevention, energy,
water, human health, food safety, and waste management
and disposal as well as stakeholder communications, risk
assessment, and decision analysis.
· Provide
solutions for problems associated with the DOE, and
other federal, state, and industrial environmental
situations (oil and gas, chemical/petrochemical, power,
etc.).
· Stress
collaboration among the Consortium universities and
national laboratories, private industry, and government
agencies.
· Provide a
30 percent documented cost share of both direct costs
and indirect costs from a collaborative partner such as
private industry, state agency or private foundation.
A ll proposals
should provide a concise explanation of the ways the project
will promote strong graduate, undergraduate or technical
education/training in the above listed areas. Documentation
should clearly indicate the number of students, fields of
specialization, and degrees or certificates expected to result
from participation in the project.
Proposals are solicited from researchers at the consortium
member universities. The proposals should address how research
will be accomplished with an interdisciplinary effort focused on
areas highlighted above. In addition to the focus areas listed
above, priority will be given to proposals that:
· Focus on
issues specific to arid and semiarid environments.
· Present a
plan for field demonstration of technology.
· Include
an education enhancement focus; present an opportunity
for WERC to participate in commercialization of project
results.
· Are self
sustaining beyond 2007.
Research proposals must clearly identify a problem and the
nature of the solution. WERC will consider proposals from any
academic discipline which can aid in developing a solution for
significant environmental and health related issues. The
research may be applied, addressing relatively immediate and
practical solutions, or basic, addressing issues that will
provide fundamental knowledge that may become useful.
Projects for routine monitoring are not eligible. Proposals
should generally be responsive to one of the categories listed
below.
·
Demonstration/Deployment: including mitigation,
remediation, extraction of raw materials, use of raw
materials, pollution prevention, generation, treatment,
storage, transportation and disposal.
· Broad
Issues: including risk, decision analysis, pollution
prevention, cost, policy and stakeholder outreach.
· Waste
Sources: including hazardous, toxic, nuclear, oil,
chemical, petrochemical and gas.
· Medias
of Contamination: including soil, ground water,
surface water and air.
· New
Initiatives: focusing on border issues, energy,
pollution prevention, food contamination prevention and
potable water.
Eligibility
Individuals eligible to participate as principal
investigators include faculty and staff from the four
consortium members (NM Tech, NMSU, UNM and Diné College).
Specific academic disciplines eligible for participation
include, but are not limited to: engineering, natural science,
biological science, math, social science, economics, pharmacy,
law and medicine. In cooperation with university faculty
members, employees of other organizations may participate but
may not act as the principal investigator. Examples of other
organizations which may qualify include: LANL, SNL, and other
national laboratories; private firms; other universities; and
non-DOE organizations. Non-consortium participating
organization and their employee(s) in general are not eligible
for financial support from the consortium. Subcontracts are not
encouraged and will be reviewed very carefully.
Researchers who have not submitted their final reports from
previous technology development awards will not be
considered for the current round of funding. Timeliness of
researcher performance on past WERC projects will be a factor in
proposal selection. Researchers who are late in any ongoing
sponsored studies without an approved no-cost extension are not
eligible to be named a participant in any proposal for the
2006-2007 funding cycle.
Projects that have received two previous years of funding
from WERC are not eligible as renewal grants. Renewal proposals
must clearly and specifically identify progress made during
previous WERC awards.
If you have any questions about your eligibility for this
RFP, please contact Rose Thompson.
For more information, contact:
Roseann Thompson, Program Manager
(505) 646-7854
Proposal Considerations
A. Funding
An average award of $60,000 per project is anticipated. This
amounts excludes the 30 percent cost-share by an industrial,
state, or foundation collaborator. Equipment should come from
other funding sources. Equipment requests should not appear on
the budget. Equipment funding for the Technology Development
program within WERC is extremely limited and must be requested
separately.
Based on proposal merits and significance to the critical
technology areas, WERC may fund up to two proposals at a rate
over the anticipated average award. WERC strongly suggests
applying for the average award. For those wishing to apply for
the larger award, the proposal must include a section entitled
"potential additional work" and include a draft budget within
this section. This section is limited to two pages beyond the 20
page proposal limit.
Cost-share is required of all WERC proposals and is defined
as 30 percent of the total project cost - 70% of the project can
be WERC/DOE funded, 30% must come from other non-federal
sources. Cost share must be clearly documented with
letters of support for any and all outside sources. The
cost share must meet the institutional definition of cost share
and therefore it can not come from a federal source. Any support
from federal sources will be considered as in-kind support
beyond the required 30 percent cost share. Proposals that do not
show the required 30 percent cost share will be returned without
review.
Formula: Total Budget Request divided by 70 percent equals
the total dollars on which to base cost sharing dollars.
The cost-share must be provided by a collaborative partner that
may include, but is not limited to, private industry, state
agency, or private foundation. The funds may not be
federal funds. The budget must clearly delineate in a
separate column(s) the source(s) and amount of cost-share being
provided. In addition, the proposal must include a letter(s)
from the collaborative partners(s) describing the willingness to
cost-share project expenses stating the amount and period over
which the funds are available. Proposals submitted without the
above cost share information will not be considered for funding.
Specific restrictions related to the cost-share (intellectual
property rights, proprietary requirements, etc.) must also be
addressed in the letter. The letter must also clearly state
whether funding for technology development described in the
proposal to WERC is presently in progress or is contingent upon
an award from WERC.
Availability of funds for this program is contingent upon
final approval of the WERC budget by DOE.
B. Submission Dates
1. Letter of Intent and Project Abstract: A letter of intent
to submit a full length proposal and project abstract must be
submitted to the WERC administrative office postmarked by
December 7, 2005. The letter must include a two page
executive summary (see Executive Summary Description below)
which includes project title, key words, identification of
renewal or new grant, duration, estimated funds to be requested,
cost-share and sources of cost-share, names and affiliations of
PI and Co-PIs, statement of the problem, and statement of the
results, benefits and/or information expected.
The purpose of the letter of intent is to form the review
panel. All investigators that submit a letter of intent by the
due date are eligible to submit a full proposal. WERC does not
reject any proposals at the letter or intent stage.
A letter of intent and abstract must be submitted in order to
qualify for consideration of the full proposal. Proposals which
do not have a letter of intent and
abstract on file at the WERC administrative office will be
returned to the principal investigator without review.
It is preferred that letters of intent and abstracts be
emailed as a .pdf file to
rethomps@nmsu.edu
.
Or sent to the following address:
Roseann Thompson, Project Manager
WERC/NMSU
Box 30001, MSC WERC
Las Cruces, NM 88003-8001
Proposal Submission Date: Final complete proposals (including
cost share commitment letters) must be received by 5 p.m. on
February 1, 2006. Proposals should be emailed to
rethomps@nmsu.edu.
The anticipated start date for a new or a renewal projects is
August 1, 2006 with a period of performance of August 1, 2006 –
July 31, 2007. Extensions of time will not be allowed.
D. Instructions for Preparation of the Proposal Document
Proposals for both new projects and continued funding of
current projects should be prepared in accordance with the
guidelines presented herein. All proposals, both new and
continuations, will be peer reviewed and evaluated by external
reviewers with experience in the area of the proposed research.
Renewal request proposals should be indicated in the project
title. These proposals will be evaluated and ranked along with
the new proposals with no priority guaranteed. Renewal proposals
should clearly document results obtained during previous funding
periods as well as application of these results to developing
solutions to current problems. Renewal proposals should also
clearly document collaboration and identify future cost share.
Proposal renewal will be highly influenced by the success
demonstrated on the application of results and other support.
The following specific steps must be undertaken for
successful proposal submission:
1. Number
of Copies: E-mail the proposal to
rethomps@nmsu.edu
in a single PDF file. The PDF file must contain the
support letter(s). Faxed proposals will not be
considered. However, a fax of the signed support letter
will be allowed. Please email
rethomps@nmsu.edu
prior to faxing the support letter.
2. Proposal
Length: The proposal (main body, excluding the title
page and the two-page executive summary) must not exceed
10 single-sided pages on 8 1/2 x 11 inch paper and no
smaller than 10 point font is acceptable. Proposals and
appended materials must not exceed a maximum of 20
single-sided pages. Any proposals exceeding the 20-page
limit will be considered non-responsive, returned to the
PI, and removed from the competition.
3. Proposal Content: Each proposal shall consist of a
project information page, executive summary, the main
body, and the proposal budget sheet(s). The executive
summary shall not exceed two single spaced pages. Begin
a new page with the main body of the proposal. For those
wishing to apply for the larger award, please include a
section entitled "potential additional work" and include
a draft budget within this section. This section is
limited to 2 pages.
E. Proposal Review
Proposals meeting the 20 page limit, deadlines and letter of
intent requirements will be evaluated by an external panel of
reviewers in accordance with criteria listed below. Panel
members (approximately 12-15 members), will be invited to
participate in the evaluation based on their technical
expertise, professional credentials, and professional
affiliation (such as academia industry, government agency, or
national laboratory). The external evaluations and rankings will
be further reviewed by an internal committee and recommendations
will be made to the WERC Executive Director and the WERC
Executive Board.
Upon completion of the review process, WERC will not consider
re-evaluation requests of your proposal. As in the past, WERC
will not consider an appeal process.
Reviewing comments are confidential and a summary of the
review panel's comments will be provided.
Review Criteria
a.
Technical merit, sound approach, and the potential to
advance the state-of-the-knowledge. Adequate review of
the state of the current technology.
b. Meeting
the research framework and objectives. Plan for field
deployment in 2007.
c. 30
percent cost-share of both direct and indirect costs.
d. Adequate
support for training of undergraduate and graduate
students.
e. Investigators' qualifications and past
accomplishments, consortium member collaboration,
industrial participation and other external
collaboration.
f. Adequacy of facilities, budget and equipment.
g. Overall rating of the proposal.
h. contribution to the self-sustenance.
i.
Potential for deployment.
j.
Conformance with the overall mission and strategic
long-range plan.
k. Graduate
and undergraduate student support.
l. Use of
existing consortium research facilities and equipment.
m.
Sufficient planning for technology deployment and
commercialization.
Executive Summary
Information provided in the executive summary (two page
maximum) should address all aspects of the evaluation criteria
listed in Research Objectives.
a. Project
Title: Use a concise, descriptive title that clearly
reflects a specific relationship to an environmental
issue. Such titles should include "keywords" suitable
for indexing and retrieval purposes. The project title
should not exceed 100 characters including spaces. If
the project qualifies as a renewal grant, the word
RENEWAL should be placed after the project title.
b.
Keywords: Identify three to five keywords which best
describe the project.
c.
Duration: Indicate the total duration in months and the
proposed starting and ending dates. The total project
period requiring WERC funding can not extend beyond 12
months (However the project should show how the project
will lead to a site demonstration and self sustenance
beyond 2007). WERC is expected to award funding to
projects for a 12 month period beginning on August 1,
2006.
d. Funds
Requested: 2006-2007__________
e. Cost
Share Funds: 2006-2007__________
f. Source
of Cost Share Funds: List the name of the collaborative
partner such as private industry, or private foundation.
g. Name and
Affiliation of Principal and Co-Investigator(s) and
Collaborator(s): List all investigators and
collaborators who will actively participate in the
research project.
Principal Investigator
Title, Department, Consortium University, Address
Collaborator Discipline of Expertise, Affiliation, Phone
Number, E-mail
Co-Investigator
Title, Department, Consortium University, Address,
Collaborator Discipline of Expertise, Affiliation, Phone
Number, E-mail
h.
Statement of the Problem(s): Indicate the local, state,
regional, or national issue(s) to be addressed by the
project, including an explanation of the need for
research. This section should not exceed two paragraphs.
i.
Statement of the Results, Benefits, and/or Information
Expected: Indicate the results, benefits or information
expected to be gained from the project and how they will
be used. Describe in detail any long-term, large-scale
plans that might be explored as a result of this
project, include possible external funding sources. This
section should not exceed two paragraphs.
Main Body of Proposal
a.
Nature, Scope, and Objectives of the Research:
First, include a detailed statement describing the
specific problem(s) to which the proposed research is
addressed. It should describe, in non-technical terms,
the relevance of the proposed research to the problem(s)
and the relevance of the sponsored research to existing
or foreseeable local, state, regional, or national
problems. The proposal must also address the importance
and value to WERC. The second statement should describe
the specific project objectives clearly setting forth
the purpose(s) of the investigation.
b.
Methods, Procedures and Facilities:
Provide sufficient information to permit technical
evaluation, as well as the approach to meet the research
objectives.
c.
Related Research and Environmental/health issue:
Show by literature and communication citations the
similarities and dissimilarities of this project to
completed or ongoing research on the same topic.
d. Other
Research Support:
Include a brief summary of involvement by the
investigator(s) in other current research support,
pending proposals to other funding agencies, and recent
past research support. Information to be supplied should
include title of project, funding agency, amount of
grant or proposal and status.
e. Cost
Sharing:
All proposals must clearly document a 30 percent
cost-share for both direct and indirect costs. If the
request is for $60,000, the cost share would be $25,715,
making a total of $85,715. Formula: Total Budget Request
divided by 70 percent equals the total dollars on which
to base cost sharing dollars. Additional letters of
commitment, supporting data, and specific evidence
documenting cost share information should be placed in
the appendix. Approval to include cost-share in the
proposed project must be indicated on the research
budget page by signature of the home unit's director of
research and fiscal officer.
Priority will be given to projects with significant
external cost-share funding. Examples of cost-sharing
include: direct support of faculty and student time,
supplies, equipment, indirect costs, materials furnished
by other organizations, equipment furnished by other
organizations, and other external unrestricted funds
awarded to the Consortium institution which can be used
to enhance the research. Federal funding, including pass
through to industry, is not allowed to be shown as cost
share. All cost sharing and equipment purchasing must be
performed during the funding phase. All cost entities
must be able to furnish documentation.
f.
Collaboration:
Inter-university, national laboratory, and/or industrial
collaboration must be described in sufficient detail to
identify the role of each organization and investigator.
This section should clearly identify strengths,
complimentary nature, and expected contribution from
each organization and investigator/collaborator. If
resources outside the consortium members are a part of
the proposal and require funding, clear justification
for not using consortium collaboration is required.
Subcontracts will be closely scrutinized and are not
generally encouraged.
g.
Student Support:
Provide a detailed explanation of the ways this project
will seek to promote strong graduate and/or
undergraduate training in the areas discussed
previously. In addition, indicate the number of
students, fields of specialization, and degrees expected
to result from participation in the project.
h. Past
Performance:
Accomplishments of the investigators over the past five
years resulting from funds obtained through WERC or
other external funding sources will be considered.
Clearly document in a short narrative with reference to
the results such as but not limited to peer reviewed
publications, patents, awards, etc. This section should
not exceed one-third of a page in length.
i.
Expenditures:
Use your university's accepted budget form to estimate
all expenditure categories. For renewal projects,
include the final previous budget and a summary of
expenditures through the date of submission of the new
proposal.
1. Project Staff: costs of personnel assigned to the
research project. Only consortium university personnel
are allowed.
2. Fringe Benefits: charged at the usual and
customary rate of the member institution. Tuition and
student fees are not allowed.
3. Laboratory Services: Charges for laboratory
services are permitted if the same or similar services
cannot be performed at a consortium facility.
4. Other Services: Other services include
communications, printing and reproduction, and
computing. Charges for computing services (if needed)
are allowable expenses. All computing charges must be
thoroughly documented and justified in the proposal and
indicated clearly on a separate line of the budget
sheet.
5. Travel: Research related travel should be
incorporated in the project budget. Research related
travel includes travel required to perform the research.
As examples, travel to survey field sites, obtain
samples, or review documents otherwise not available,
will be considered to be research related travel. Travel
should be divided into in-state and out-of-state
categories and should include the location, frequency,
duration and number of people traveling. Travel is
limited to the continental U.S. travel. Travel to
conferences in not allowed under this RFP. All travel
must conform to appropriate federal circulars and
university policy.
6. Supplies: Expendable supplies should be listed by
category. The two major categories are office and
laboratory supplies. Each individual expendable item
should not exceed $250. Office supplies will require
justification as to the specific benefit to the
research. Computer software considered to be generic
will also require specific justification. If specialized
computer software is required for the consortium
project, it should also be listed and identified in a
separate category.
7. Cost Share: The budget must indicate cost sharing
on each item (i.e. personnel, equipment, etc.). The
amount of the cost share must be shown in the budget
sheet and clearly described on a separate, attached
sheet. The description should include how the cost share
is provided and how it will be documented. Each
consortium university is responsible for documenting and
submitting cost share information.
NOTES: Due to varying indirect cost rates, each
participating consortium university should submit
separate budget sheets. All budgets originating at the
NMSU Engineering Department must be approved and signed
by Linda Schauer at the Engineering Research Center;
budgets originating from other NMSU Departments must be
approved and signed by the department’s contract person;
and budgets originating from UNM, NM Tech and Diné
College must be approved and signed by the appropriate
contract person. Proposals that have not been approved
will be excluded from evaluation.
j.
Investigator(s) Qualifications:
Include a resume of the principal investigator,
co-investigators, and collaborators. Resumes should not
exceed two pages and list less than ten pertinent
publications. The principal investigator is the primary
individual who is responsible and accountable for the
conduct of the research. If project funding is awarded,
the principal investigator will be expected to agree
with and abide by terms and conditions designed to
assure adequate project oversight and efficient
communication with WERC and the principal investigator's
host institution.
k.
Potential Additional Work (optional section):
For those wishing to apply for the larger award,
identify the work that will be done and include a draft
budget within this section. Should you apply for this
you may use an additional two pages to address the work.
The two pages should be removable from the main
proposal, i.e. start this section on a new page.
If you have any questions, contact:
Roseann Thompson, Project
Manager (575) 646-7854
rethomps@nmsu.edu
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