Southern Research seeking up to $5M from city for program

Southern Research plans to develop a unique public health data system program to connect personalized medical data, including genomic, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics and other forms of data to clinical data to support public health.

The program is expected to create over 50 new jobs over the next five years.

And the Birmingham-based organization is going before the Birmingham City Council with a request for a program funding agreement to help with the effort.

If approved, the city will support the program by allocating funding received from the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 in an amount not to exceed $5 million.

The Birmingham City Council will consider the agreement at its regular council meeting on March 19.

In January, Southern Research opened a new biotechnology commercialization hub to support the city’s growing biotech community in a space on its campus on Birmingham’s Southside. Birmingham-headquartered Brasfield & Gorrie completed renovations ahead of Station 41’s opening, which includes wet lab space, office space, shared lab equipment and services to support biotech startup growth for up to 12 companies.

This move follows Birmingham’s recent designation as one of 31 regions across the country as a federal Tech Hub.

Birmingham Business Journal

Michael Randle

Michael Randle