Showing posts with label cirm jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cirm jobs. Show all posts

Monday, December 14, 2020

Need Work? California's Stem Cell Agency Looking to Hire Ten

Looking for a job with an exciting and unique $12 billion stem cell research funding organization in the Golden State of California.?

The state stem cell agency, which is now into everything from "aging as a pathology" to mental health, is looking to hire 10 persons to fill posts ranging vice president of science to administrative assistant.

While the positions are yet to be officially posted online, here is the list of expected openings, according to the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the stem cell agency is officially known. 

(Update: On Jan. 2, applications for seven of these positions were available on the CIRM web site.)
  • Senior Executive Assistant
  • Senior Science Officer, Review
  • Project Manager, Review
  • Vice President of Science
  • General Counsel
  • Grants Management Specialist
  • Administrative Assistant
  • Director of Finance
  • Business Services Officer
  • Senior Science Officer
Here is a link to the pay schedule at CIRM. Here is a link to a document dealing with the agency's compensation program as of today.

Official postings for the positions could come as early as late this month. They will appear on this CIRM web page.

CIRM currently has 33 employees. Proposition 14 contains a nominal cap of 70 but also permits the number to grow substantially if the employees are compensated through cash that is not part of the agency's official state bond funding. 

CIRM is currently based in Oakland, Ca. 

Monday, February 29, 2016

Scientists to Executive Assistants: California Stem Cell Agency Seeking to Fill Four Positions

Looking for stem cell work in warm and dry California?

The state’s $3 billion stem research effort is seeking four persons to fill slots as an executive assistant to the vice president of therapeutics, project manager for medical affairs and centers and two science officer positions, one on the discovery team and another in therapeutics.

The job descriptions and requirements, along with salary ranges, can be found on this Web page.

The agency is headquartered in new offices in downtown Oakland, overlooking Lake Merritt, close to public transportation. The offices are also only a 30-minute walk from the waterfront saloon where author Jack London misspent a portion of his youth.

Wednesday, September 09, 2015

California Stem Cell Agency Seeking to Fill High Level Positions

The $3 billion California stem cell agency is looking for a handful of new employees, including a top level executive who could be paid as much as $250,000 a year.

Openings for four positions are currently up on the Web site of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), as the agency is formally known.  


The listings with two different titles are for one job only.  The ultimate title of the successful candidate will depend on their level of prior experience, according to the agency.

The director of therapeutics position carries a maximum salary of $250,065.   The job would involve managing budgets of $600 million plus. The job listing also said candidates should know “what ‘great’ looks like and (use) that vision to set clear direction that is fully understood by the therapeutic team.”

The position would report to the vice president for therapeutics, Ramona Doyle, a former Genentech executive who joined CIRM in July.

The agency is currently based in San Francisco but will be moving its headquarters to Oakland this fall.

Friday, May 02, 2008

Stem Cell Snippets: Surfing the Big Wave to Practicing PR

Trounson's Longings – CIRM President Alan Trounson says he "absolutely" misses being in the laboratory. Trounson (photo at right) made the comment in an interview late last month on Australian radio. He told interviewer Monica Attard on ABC radio that "I still wake up at night thinking I’m in the laboratory." Trounson also talked about how grant money was luring Australian researchers away from their country. "It’s like surfing in the big surf and unless you can catch the wave you’re never going to get the thrill of it. If you are sitting there and waiting for the wave to come and ... you might get on it, you might not because there’s really not much funding...." He went on to say that "a lot of really good scientists have relocated (from various places) to California because of the money and because of the opportunity."

Liberals Criticize Grant to California Stem Cell Firm – The state is New Jersey. The firm is StemCyte of Covina, Ca. The money relatively small – only $589,000. But a New Jersey state grant in that amount inveigled the company to open a New Jersey facility, creating 12 jobs. Questionable financial decision for the state, said the New Jersey Policy Perspective group, while higher education and transportation budgets are being cut in that state.

CIRM PR Contract – The California stem cell agency is looking for some public relations assistance, specifically a communications special projects manager. Under the terms of the RFP, compensation would amount to $90,000 under a 13-month "all inclusive contract including all administrative expenses and travel." The consultant would be required to work no more than 30 hours a week on an as-needed basis. Deadline for applications is May 19 with the award date scheduled for May 26 and possibly earlier. The agency has also posted job openings for a communications manager, IP attorney, scientific officer and two administrative coordinators (one senior).

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Stem Cell Snippets: Hanky-Panky to Jobs for Those Love Long Hours


Enviros Against Stem Cell Lab/Classroom Building -- An activist group and the city of Santa Cruz have blocked construction of an $80 million facility at UC Santa Cruz that would house stem cell research activities. A judge halted the project for environmental reasons. The four-story facility would include stem cell labs and service nearly 1,400-science students.

Scientific Integrity – The California stem cell agency has based many of its policies and rules on assumptions of nearly universal scientific integrity. Glenn McGee(see photo), writing in The Scientist and on the blog of the American Journal of Bioethics, indirectly questions those assumptions. He cites studies that show widespread hanky-panky in the authorship of peer-reviewed pieces, particularly in cases where senior researchers claim authorship even when they are marginally involved. McGee also has suggestions for reform. Interestingly, the entry point for his article is a matter that figured in the controversy over approval of a California stem cell agency grant to a subsidiary of the CHA Health Systems of South Korea.

Yolo Stem Cell Land Deal – Land developer Angelo Tsakopolous has shelved his land development deal that would have also established a stem cell research center in Northern California near UC Davis and Sacramento. Jeff Raimundo, a spokesman for Tsakopolous, told the California Stem Cell Report that the controversial proposal has been put off. California stem cell Chairman Robert Klein lobbied local government officials on behalf of the proposal, but they shied away from the effort. The concept of the plan was also supported by the International Stem Society for Stem Cell Research. Tsakopolous is a persistent man, however, and his proposal could well surface again in one form or another.

Stem Cell Lab Grants – On Oct. 2, the California stem cell agency will consider rules concerning administration of $222 million in grants for stem cell lab construction. The Facilities Working Group will take up the proposal prior to consideration by the CIRM Oversight Committee the next day.

NAS Stem Cell Meeting in California – Coming up Oct. 8-9 in Irvine, Ca., is a National Academy of Sciences conference called "Therapeutic Cloning: Where Do We Go From Here?" A host of top flight scientists are listed as speakers. The session will address such questions as sources of eggs and alternative methods of creating pluripotent cells.

Looking for Work? -- If you are interested in working across the street from the home field of the San Francisco Giants baseball team, CIRM is looking for a few good men and women. Jobs available at the agency include associate legal counsel, grants management specialist, paralegal and scientific officers.. Long hours are guaranteed. (CIRM headquarters is near the Giants field.)

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