Little Hoover On California Stem Cell Agency
The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine -- the state's stem cell agency -- was created by Prop 71, and is still governed under its rules. For more than six months, the Little Hoover Commission -- a California body that studies government structure and reform -- has been investigating CIRM, which has struggled with governance issues. (I reported on this last month in the Scientific American).
Last week, Little Hoover staff disclosed some of its preliminary recommendations for changing the agency, as reported at the California Stem Cell Report. At first blush, the proposed changes, which have not been formally released, make sense to me. Reducing the size of the board. Concentrating executive power in one official of the agency (currently, the president and the board chair share executive power). And changing the quorum rule, which often has hamstrung the agency's board.
The difficult part will be enacting such measures. It's far from clear that the board has the power, or inclination, to make these changes. Under Prop 71, making changes to the agency requires a 70 percent vote of the legislature (or another vote of the people). Neither will be easy to achieve.
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$3 billion stem cell agency
The agency now apparently is looking for its future funding from the biotech industry, which would put it in the unusual position of being perhaps the only state agency funded by industry. See http://californiastemcellreport.blogspot.com/2009/06/cirm-eyeing-major-r...