UCI gets FDA approval
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
After working together for nine years, UC Irvine and the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration cemented their relationship on Wednesday with
a formal pact.
A friendly footing and the FDA’s high-tech facility, which opened
in June, will allow the two to work together on research and training
and to share resources. Officials with the university and the
government agency said they are thrilled with the partnership.
“We’re really excited to have the facility -- and more important,
the people, as immediate neighbors of the campus,” said William
Parker, UC Irvine’s vice-chancellor for research.
A memorandum of understanding that spelled out the partnership was
signed by both organizations Wednesday and tours of the FDA lab and
office facility were given.
“This is not the last step but just the next step in what we have
to do,” said Alonza Cruse, director of the FDA’s Los Angeles
district. The FDA and UC Irvine have been collaborating since 1995,
when the government agency created a new Irvine office as part of a
reorganization of its offices. In 1996, their partnership produced
EPINET, a fax broadcast system to alert public health officials about
dangers such as lead in candy wrappers and mercury in face cream.
They have co-sponsored five conferences.
The two are now working together to bring lab techniques for food
sampling into the field so scientists can identify contaminated food
more quickly.
Having a formal partnership creates a bridge between the two
agencies, and that will help UC Irvine as a research university, said
Jonathon Ericson, chairman of UC Irvine’s school of environmental
health, science and policy.
“The FDA is 95% scientists,” he said. “There are very few agencies
that have that many scientists under one roof.”
Those scientists can share their expertise with UC Irvine
students, potentially teaching courses for the school, he said.
To date, the FDA has hired 14 former UC Irvine students and
offered several student internships each year.
The FDA building’s concrete walls and high ceilings enclose labs
that screen food for pesticides and pathogens and test drugs to check
for counterfeits.
“This is a first-class facility,” Parker said. “We need to attract
quality scientists to Orange County, and this is going to help.”
Collaborations could include using the university’s graduate
school of management to help streamline FDA operations and using
computer science to create a database for assessment of food and drug
risks.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.