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Contact: Carl
Nathe

(click photo to enlarge)
UK
President Lee T. Todd Jr., Scott
Smith, dean of the UK College of Agriculture,
and Kentucky
Senator Mitch McConnell
 “These
are substantial programs that are having direct,
measurable impacts on families and communities
throughout the Commonwealth and we’re extremely
pleased that Senator McConnell has enabled us to
strengthen our efforts in these areas."
--
Scott Smith,
dean,
UK College of Agriculture

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LEXINGTON,
Ky. (Feb. 16, 2004) -- Recently
announced federal funding for University of Kentucky
research and outreach includes significant support
for new crop opportunities, forage and livestock
systems, health education, plant and animal genetics,
and an important partnership with the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Agriculture Research Service.
Kentucky
Senator Mitch McConnell put these funds for UK
into the Omnibus Appropriations Conference Report,
which passed the U.S. Senate and now goes to President
Bush for his signature. Without Senator McConnell's
efforts, these funds would not have come to UK.
“The
senator’s tremendous support is vital to
helping the University of Kentucky move forward
with our research endeavors,” said UK President
Lee T. Todd Jr. “The real payoff will be
the improvement in the lives of Kentuckians.”
“President
Todd has done a masterful job of pursuing initiatives
that strengthen UK’s areas of excellence,
and I am pleased to support his vision by delivering
these funds,” McConnell said.
A
total of $11.36 million will support a variety
of projects involving several colleges at UK, but
the largest portion – $5.86 million – will
go to programs administered by the UK College of
Agriculture.
“These
are substantial programs that are having direct,
measurable impacts on families and communities
throughout the Commonwealth and we’re extremely
pleased that Senator McConnell has enabled us to
strengthen our efforts in these areas,” said
Scott Smith, dean of the UK College of Agriculture.
The
funding includes $2.74 million to continue the
development of a new research laboratory in cooperation
with the USDA’s Agriculture Research Service
(ARS). The new lab is being formed to improve the
productivity, profitability, competitiveness and
sustainability of forage-based enterprises. These
programs include research to improve forage and livestock
production in the state, as well as investigations
of ways to improve animal health and prevent major
diseases such as Mare Reproductive Loss Syndrome.
Other
funded programs include $805,000 for the statewide
Health Education through Extension Leadership (HEEL)
program; $388,000 to examine health and productivity
of grazing livestock; $663,000 to study new crop
opportunities; $663,000 for precision agriculture
and resource management research; $604,000 for
plant gene sequencing and innovative products research
conducted at the College of Agriculture’s
Advanced Genetic Technologies Center.
“Research
conducted through the ARS unit and the Advanced
Genetic Technologies Center is harnessing the power
of new applications of science to improve our state’s
grasslands and grazing animals, which can have
a significant positive impact on our economy,” said
Nancy Cox, associate dean for research in the College
of Agriculture.
Through
the HEEL program, a collaborative effort involving
the UK College of Medicine and its School of Public
Health, the College of Agriculture, and Cooperative
Extension Service, county Extension agents are
working with local communities to deliver research-based
information and programs designed to reduce disease
and generally improve health. The latest example
of HEEL’s statewide contribution is the recently
announced “Get Moving Kentucky!” initiative
to increase Kentuckians’ physical activity.
In
addition to the $5.86 million going to agriculture
programs, other UK funding comprising the $11.36
million includes $1 million for biomedical imaging
equipment; $1 million for the Center of Instructional
Technology and Learning; $1 million for improving
medication-related outcomes; $1 million for the
College of Law’s electronic access project;
and $1.5 million for transportation research.
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