San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BLACK WORKERS STILL FEW, FAR BETWEEN IN BIOTECH INDUSTRY

Lack of diversity, stemming from variety of issues, is a problem

- BY JONATHAN WOSEN

San Diego biotechs are working to erase cancer, light up nerves during surgery and scan thousands of molecules with artificial intelligen­ce.

The industry’s workforce, however, is less futuristic than its goals.

Black people account for 6 percent of the county’s overall workforce but just 3 percent of biotech, according to the San Diego Workforce Partnershi­p. Hispanics or Latinos, who represent a third of the county’s workforce, make up 16 percent of biotech.

To understand the dearth of diversity, we reached out to past and present biotech employees and recruiters and the county’s research institutes, universiti­es and colleges.

People highlighte­d several issues, including limited diversity in academic pipelines that feed into biotech, companies recruiting within their own network bubbles, and explicit and implicit bias in reviewing applicatio­ns.

And getting hired is just the beginning. Black people within the industry said they had to work even harder to get noticed and rewarded for taking on challengin­g projects that would allow them to climb the corporate ladder. That may explain why minorities are especially scarce

at the highest rungs of biotech.

None of these issues are new; biotech’s lack of diversity has been documented for more than 20 years. But the topic has taken on new urgency lately.

“I think this is a good opportunit­y now, with George Floyd, where we can all go back and really reflect and find ways out of systemic racism,” said Paul Mola, one of San Diego’s few Black biotech CEOS. “And, by God, what many don’t understand is that we all get better. The society gets stronger. The country gets stronger.”

Early challenges

The average San Diego biotech CEO is 56 years old, according to a 2015 report by Liftstream, a U.K. life science executive search firm. But the barriers that keep Black people out of biotech start far earlier in life.

A Union-tribune investigat­ion showed that Black and Latino public school students seldom have teachers who look like them. That holds true throughout higher education, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

“I’m happy to mentor students from underprivi­leged background­s,” said Guy Salvesen, dean of Sanford Burnham Prebys’s graduate program. “But I’m an old White guy.

“I might say the right things, and I try to act on the right things, but I’m not the right kind of mentor. I don’t have the same background.”

Having mentors and role models who look like you matters, says Jervaughn Hunter, a Black bioenginee­ring graduate student at UC San Diego who is working on new, minimally invasive ways to treat heart disease.

It’s a project that’s hard to explain to family back in his hometown of Port Gibson, Miss., home to less than 2,000 people. Growing up, Hunter didn’t know anyone in biotech — or that such careers existed.

“There’s no one there to actually exemplify what that career is, so no one thinks to go into it,” Hunter said.

That creates a sort of selffulfil­ling cycle, he says. You don’t see yourself represente­d in a career, so you don’t pursue it. And because you don’t pursue it, you’re not represente­d.

In Hunter’s case, a brochure from the University of Alabama at Birmingham that mentioned a biomedical engineerin­g program piqued his interest.

While at the university, Hunter noticed that some of his peers were joining labs as volunteers.

“I had no idea what that even entails,” Hunter said. “And then you find out that a lot of it is volunteer. If you’re not having college paid for and you have to work a job, you can’t really go and do these volunteer positions.”

A numbers game — or maybe not

Hunter was able to land a position as a paid lab assistant, where he gained valuable research experience before applying to UCSD for graduate school. But the issues of access, representa­tion and cost that he points to partly explain why there are so few Black students in the programs that train the next crop of biotech workers.

The Union-tribune reached out to a number of local institutes.

The percent of Black students ranged from a 10-year average of 1.5 percent for UC San Diego’s biotech-related doctoral programs to 4.5 percent for Miracosta College’s bachelor’s in biomanufac­turing. Percentage­s for programs at SDSU, Sanford Burnham Prebys and Scripps Research Institute hovered in the range of 3 percent to 4 percent.

Experts call this the pipeline problem — the idea that there simply aren’t enough qualified members of underrepre­sented groups to hire.

But Ron Lewis, a chemist at MEI Pharma and one of the company’s few Black employees, doesn’t buy that argument.

“We know what universiti­es are producing these scientists, what scientific meetings these students are going to,” Lewis said. “It’s a matter of asking internally, ‘Are we going to the right places?’”

Lewis has spent more than a decade helping organize an annual meeting held for Black chemists and chemical engineers. Participan­ts get to share their research and interview with representa­tives from pharma giants such as Bristol-myers Squib, Eli Lilly and Merck.

Many companies fill open positions without casting such a wide net. San Diego biotechs tend to be small — odds are you’ve never heard of most of them. These companies aren’t subject to much public scrutiny about their hiring practices.

Without a fresh infusion of diverse candidates locally or elsewhere, expecting more diversity is a bit like shuffling a deck of cards and hoping to get more hearts.

Even when Black candidates apply, their applicatio­ns often get weeded out because they don’t fit the mold hiring managers expect, said Ava Mason, who was often one of the only Black women at the biotech and pharma companies where she worked for 20 years. She now runs a nonprofit that exposes underrepre­sented children to science, technology, engineerin­g and math.

“The constructs of hiring are set up to eliminate us at all kinds of different levels,” Mason said. “If the candidate didn’t go to a top-100 school, we can’t hire them. If the candidate didn’t graduate in consecutiv­e years, we can’t hire them. Well, who do you think you’re eliminatin­g? A lot of us.”

Other times, biases aren’t so subtle. Lewis remembers applying for jobs early into his career without any luck. A human resource manager offered to look over his resume and, noticing sections that identified Lewis as a person of color, suggested he remove them. That’s when Lewis’ fortunes started to change.

“It’s amazing how the script kind of flipped,” Lewis said. “The phone started ringing. You’re getting emails back saying they want to follow up.”

Difficult conversati­ons

Given those challenges, it’s perhaps no surprise that Paul Mola is one of the only Black biotech CEOS in San Diego.

Mola heads Roswell Biotechnol­ogies, a Sorrento Valley company working to develop low-cost, rapid DNA sequencing technology. He was born in Kenya and immigrated to the United States in his 20s. Before founding Roswell in 2014, his career included stints at Roche, Life Technologi­es and Human Longevity.

As one of the few Black people in the industry, he’s often felt like he had to work twice as hard just to get noticed: “There was never a moment when I thought otherwise, frankly.”

That once meant spending an evening holed up in the office preparing for a presentati­on and, rather than going home, checking into a hotel to take a quick shower before returning to work.

“It’s like a never-ending marathon where, unlike my peers, I am running on a muddy road,” Mola wrote in an email.

Mola spoke about his struggles and jump-started a broader conversati­on about race at his company during an internal meeting on June 26, about a month after the death of George

Floyd.

Employees in masks gathered around an office table while others tuned in via Zoom. Some spoke about struggling with the knowledge that relatives had fought against the civil rights movement. Others shared their own experience­s with discrimina­tion.

At times, the room filled with laughter. Other times, with silence. Some speakers choked up.

Through it all, everyone kept returning to the same question: What do we do now?

In response, Mola said that Roswell is working on specific diversity targets for both the overall company and its leadership team: “We have an opportunit­y as an organizati­on to be different, to showcase what is the right way to do diversity.”

For the moment, however, Mola is one of two Black employees at Roswell and the only Black board member. He estimates that of the company’s roughly 50 employees, about 10 percent are Black or Hispanic and 30 percent are women.

Accountabi­lity for change

Historical­ly, there has not been much data tracking diversity in the local biotech workforce. Biocom, a San Diego-based California life science trade group, issues annual reports charting the industry’s economic footprint in San Diego and statewide.

These reports don’t look at diversity. But they tout that the average San Diego life science employee earns about $130,000 a year.

Median household income for Black households in San Diego was nearly $55,000 in 2018, according to the Center on Policy Initiative­s, a nonprofit focused on economic justice.

“I think we’ve got a lot of work to do,” said Joe Panetta, Biocom’s president and CEO.

National data show that this isn’t just a local issue. The Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on, or BIO, a national trade group, issued a January report that 66 percent of biotech employees who disclosed their race were White, 24 percent Asian, 6 percent Hispanic and 4 percent Black. Those numbers shift substantia­lly at the CEO level, where 88 percent of company heads are White, 5 percent Black, 3 percent Asian and 3 percent Hispanic.

In 2017, the group issued target goals for increasing gender diversity among biotech leadership roles and board seats. Currently, women occupy 30 percent of executive spots and 18 percent of board seats. BIO aims to have women hold 50 percent of biotech leadership roles and 30 percent of board seats by 2025.

At the time, the organizati­on did not issue similar goals around racial and ethnic diversity.

“We really hadn’t fully put our arms around issues of race,” said Dr. Michelle Mcmurry-heath, BIO’S new president.

That seems poised to change under Mcmurryhea­th’s leadership. In June, she became the first Black woman to head the organizati­on. She says that BIO will soon issue a range of diversity-focused plans, ranging from promoting diversity among clinical trial patients to making sure that companies can easily find candidates from underrepre­sented groups when it’s time to fill an open position.

Hunter might one day be one of those candidates. His heart disease research project has reinforced a passion for turning scientific discoverie­s into new treatments and medical devices.

Once he graduates, he says, he could see himself joining a startup (or possibly starting one) or a biotech or pharmaceut­ical company, and “even moving on to the C-suite eventually.”

“Through hard work,” he adds.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Roswell Biotechnol­ogies’ Paul Mola, holding a silicon chip wafer, is one of San Diego’s few Black biotech CEOS.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Roswell Biotechnol­ogies’ Paul Mola, holding a silicon chip wafer, is one of San Diego’s few Black biotech CEOS.
 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T PHOTOS ?? CEO Paul Mola (right) talks with principal scientist Venkatesh A. Govindaraj at Roswell Biotechnol­ogies in Sorrento Valley. He said he's often felt like he had to work twice as hard as his White colleagues to get noticed.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T PHOTOS CEO Paul Mola (right) talks with principal scientist Venkatesh A. Govindaraj at Roswell Biotechnol­ogies in Sorrento Valley. He said he's often felt like he had to work twice as hard as his White colleagues to get noticed.
 ?? MICHELLE GILCHRIST U-T ??
MICHELLE GILCHRIST U-T
 ??  ?? Jervaughn Hunter, a Black bioenginee­ring graduate student at UC San Diego, said growing up he didn't know anyone in biotech, or that such careers existed.
Jervaughn Hunter, a Black bioenginee­ring graduate student at UC San Diego, said growing up he didn't know anyone in biotech, or that such careers existed.

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