Turnover at Romanian Funding Agency

The National Research Council of Romania is looking to replace the 19 members that resigned last week in protest of retroactive budget cuts to existing grants.

Written byJef Akst
| 1 min read

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Romania special money made to celebrate the 1999 eclipse WIKIMEDIA, MARINA TThe Romanian government recently told grantees of the National Research Council (CNCS), Romania’s primary funding agency for federal research, that it would be slashing the budgets of some multi-year research grants awarded in 2011. In response, 19 members of the Council members resigned last week (April 12)—the retroactive cuts were apparently “the final straw in already strained relations between the government and the council,” ScienceInsider reported.

When the cuts were announced, 568 Romanian researchers signed a protest letter to the Romanian government. Though the government promised to make up the difference in 2014, the letter points out that similar cuts in 2010, which came with similar promises, were never made good.

Another issue that led to the CNCS members’ resignation was a new requirement that grant applications are reviewed by international panels and that papers resulting from CNCS-funded research be published in internationally ranked peer-reviewed journals.

Now, the Romanian Ministry of Education, Research, Youth and Sport is asking universities for nominations for new Council members. But Romanian paleoclimatologist Bogdan Onac of the University of South Florida in Tampa, who had 45 percent of his 2013 CNCS grant money swiped, worries that ...

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  • Jef (an unusual nickname for Jennifer) got her master’s degree from Indiana University in April 2009 studying the mating behavior of seahorses. After four years of diving off the Gulf Coast of Tampa and performing behavioral experiments at the Tennessee Aquarium in Chattanooga, she left research to pursue a career in science writing. As The Scientist's managing editor, Jef edited features and oversaw the production of the TS Digest and quarterly print magazine. In 2022, her feature on uterus transplantation earned first place in the trade category of the Awards for Excellence in Health Care Journalism. She is a member of the National Association of Science Writers.

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