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NYC biotech industry to get big boost from new de Blasio initiative

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Photo of Dr. Harold VarmusDr. Harold Varmus Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a $500 million initiative to spur the development of the city’s biotech industry, a sector that includes medicinal research, pharmaceuticals and other fields.

Although the city is home to 100 research foundations and nine medical centers, the mayor said there is untapped potential for researchers and entrepreneurs.

“It is a sector that fits here in New York City that really keys into some of our real attributes and competitive advantages,” he said.

One of the biggest investment proposals in the LifeSci NYC initiative is the creation of an Applied Life Sciences Campus, similar to the Cornell Tech school that will open on Roosevelt Island next year.

The proposed campus, which will either be set up on the East Side or Long Island City, will be operated in conjunction with at least two schools. It will bring together instructors and companies to educate future innovators, according to the mayor.

Harold Varmus, M.D., a senior associate at the New York Genome Center who will be co-chairing the mayor’s Life Sciences Advisory Council guiding the initiatives, said when he did his studies in the San Francisco area, he benefited from a close association between academia and industry.

Varmus, a Nobel laureate who also teaches at Weill Cornell Medicine, said when he moved to New York years later he was shocked that there wasn’t a similar environment for science.

“It’s largely because it has been overshadowed by sports and fashion and finance and the other great things that make New York a wonderful place to live,” he said.

In addition to the campus, the initiative, which the mayor said will be funded by the city, calls for a $50 million investment to expand research facilities at existing medical centers and institutions and $300 million in tax incentives over a decade to entice life science businesses and firms to move to the city.

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