Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm delighted to have this opportunity to participate in these pre-budget consultations.
In a recent speech at Queen's University, the Minister of Finance pointed to post-secondary education as being “one of the cornerstones of our success as a nation” and noted that there are real pressures to do more.
The need cited by the minister for predictable, long-term funding for post-secondary education flows directly from the central role universities play in developing the human resources and producing the new knowledge that are essential to Canada's competitiveness. Public universities have an obligation to ensure that their programs of education and research do indeed serve the public good. It's in this context that I'd like to focus my remarks today on two particular points from the brief I prepared for the committee: first, the need for new approaches to the commercialization of research; and second, ways universities can assist in addressing another national priority—research and training in public health.
Turning first to the commercialization of research, it is, as you know, about developing discoveries into potential new products and then helping support the companies that will bring these new products to market. This is a labour- and resource-intensive process, requiring support from universities, government, and the private sector.
Indeed, increased public investment is essential to ensure the creation of new knowledge, which is the basis for innovation. I therefore join my university colleagues in urging that enhanced support of the federal funding councils and the CFI be a priority for the 2007 budget.
More is required for effective commercialization. Last month the Council of Canadian Academies reported that while Canada is strong in academic research, there's an ongoing concern that these strengths are not translating into innovations that succeed in the marketplace.
Based on experience in a number of jurisdictions in the U.S., I feel that if we are to effectively manage the transition from research and discovery to successful innovation and commercial development, a new paradigm will be required. New government funding mechanisms need to be developed to help create the university-industry partnerships that undergird successful commercialization. Universities, with their industry partners, need to be involved in all stages of the innovation cycle from the creation of new knowledge through to the development and refinement of new products and to the support of the companies that will bring these new products to market.
This process will require multi-sector support and multi-sector collaboration. We therefore recommend that the federal government's 2007 budget commit to fund new mechanisms and incentives for university-industry partnerships, designed to increase the rate of commercialization by shortening the innovation cycle and more rapidly deploying new technologies.
In addition to their direct impact on our nation's economic growth through enhanced commercialization, universities also play a significant role in addressing major societal issues, contributing not only to the prosperity of the nation, but also to the quality of life of all Canadians.
My second point relates to the role universities can play in addressing one such national issue, that of public health. According to the report of the National Advisory Committee on SARS and Public Health, Canada's public health human resources are deficient. The committee, like other bodies, recommended the development of a national public health strategy to address this issue.
Queen's recognizes the need to act as a strategic resource to government in the area of public health. Resources of both colleges and universities need to be enhanced to educate professionals in the front line of response to major public health issues, and also to support research that will allow us to address such critical public health issues as pandemics and bioterrorism.
Toward this end, Queen's has convened a number of sister institutions to recommend a national, academic, public health strategy to ensure that universities, in partnership with the Public Health Agency of Canada, are prepared to address the nation's public health research and educational needs. To support Canada's public health infrastructure, we therefore recommend that the federal government's 2007 budget commit to providing the resources necessary to develop and implement a national academic public health strategy to address the needs of the public health system of Canada.
Mr. Chairman, that concludes my remarks. Thank you for your attention. I welcome any questions you may have.