HHS/NIH
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- This topic has 22 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 3 years, 4 months ago by MikeinMN.
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at 7:50 pm #305Eva Garland ConsultingKeymasterat 11:22 pm #644huawang0Participantat 5:48 pm #645Lu@EGCModerator::
To answer your questions:
1. For NIH Phase I and Phase II SBIR projects, the contact PI/PD needs to spend at least 50% of the time in the small business at the time of award and during the conduct of the proposed project. Deviations from this requirement are rare and must be approved in writing by the grants management officer after consultation with the NIH SBIR/STTR Program Coordinator.
For Phase I and Phase II STTR projects, the PD/PI is not required to be employed by the small business. However, the Contact PD/PI, the first PD/PI listed, must have a formal appointment with, or commitment to, the small business, which must be in the form of an official relationship between the parties, but need not include a salary or other form of remuneration. Each PD/PI on a multiple PD/PI award must commit a minimum of 1.2 calendar months (10% effort) to the project.
There is no time effort requirement for consultants.2. When the small business cannot finish the proposed work by itself and need collaboration and intellectual input from other institutions, subawardee is usually needed. All subawards will need subaward PIs.
3. Yes, you do need letters of support from consultants to show their commitment to the small business.
Feel free to reach out again for additional questions!
at 10:23 pm #687huawang0Participantat 11:09 pm #688Lu@EGCModeratorat 6:35 pm #689huawang0Participant::Do I need bio sketches for consultants as well? The bio sketches will include access to facilities (computers, labs, etc), research interests, publications, employment and awards. I assume the leadership plan is detailing the PIs’ roles, areas of responsibility, org chart, and dispute resolution. What else do I need to include in the leadership plan for the PIs?
Can we work with a company that has offices in US and abroad, as long as the people doing the work is physically in the US? Do they need to be US citizens (or is US permanent residents OK)?
at 7:14 pm #690Lu@EGCModerator::Hua,
You will need biosketches for consultants. Here is the instruction and template from NIH:
https://grants.nih.gov/grants/forms/biosketch.htm
The facility and resource information is usually placed in an individual section, named as “Facilities and Resouces” and you will be able to upload this during submission.Regarding the leadership plan, here is an example for you from NIH:
https://grants.nih.gov/grants/multi_pi/sample_leadership_plans.pdf
You will need to talk about roles/areas of responsibility of the PIs, including
• Fiscal and management coordination
• Process for making decisions on scientific direction and allocation of resources
• Data sharing and communication among investigators
• Publication and intellectual property (if needed) policies
• Procedures for resolving conflictsYes, you can work with such a company. They do not need to be US citizens. Permanent residents and people with legal working visas will be fine too.
at 8:26 pm #697huawang0Participantat 11:56 am #699lindsay@EGCParticipant::Hello, Hua!
The PI for your small business would not need to provide a letter of support. However, if you have a subaward, the subaward PI would provide a letter of support describing their willingness to participate and their role in your project.
I hope this helps! Let us know if you have additional questions.
- This reply was modified 2 years, 2 months ago by Hank Grimmick.
at 3:36 am #701huawang0Participant::I am working on my biosketch. I am a former lawyer and strategy consultant, and not a BS/PhD/MD/engineer, etc (we have other PIs who have these scientific/technical backgrounds). I thus have limited experience to add in the “contributions to science” section of the biosketch. Should I elaborate on whatever “scientific” contributions I have (e.g., I-Corps program, hackathon prize), or not include this section in my biosketch?
at 8:20 pm #702AnonymousInactive::Hi Hua,
In addition to the contributions to science that a researcher may list, you can also list a product that resulted from your work. Products can include publications; patents; audio or video products; conference proceedings such as meeting abstracts, posters, or other presentations; patents; data and research materials; databases; educational aids or curricula; instruments or equipment; models; protocols; and software or netware.
I-Corps is a training program, so it should not be listed as a Contribution to Science. If the hackathon resulted in a product, I would recommend you add that.
at 12:23 am #787huawang0Participantat 1:12 pm #789Wout@EGCParticipant::Hi Hua,
Yes, including references throughout your text is strongly encouraged for SBIR proposals. It is best to provide a reference whenever you make a claim in your proposal, and references to peer-reviewed journals are preferred over websites or “personal communication” references. Using references helps you support statements in your Research Strategy and will show reviewers that you are up to date on the science in the field you propose to work in, and references can highlight your Key Personnel accomplishments and strengths in their biosketches. In fact, a bibliography (compiling all references used throughout your Research Plan) is a required document for a complete submission.
Any other questions, let us know!
Best,
Wout- This reply was modified 2 years, 2 months ago by Hank Grimmick.
at 4:58 pm #794rashimsinghParticipantat 8:44 pm #796nitesh@EGCParticipant::Hi Rashim,
The NIH makes the payments as cost-reimbursements. You may draw funds in advance, but no more than 3 days before the funds are needed. See the NIH Grants Policy on Payments here: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/nihgps/html5/section_6/6_payment.htm
I hope that helps! Let us know if you have further questions.
Best,
Nitesh. -
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