The Columbus Dispatch

Biden selects EX-COSI CEO for advisory council

- Earl Hopkins

Although Kathryn Sullivan's days as CEO of the Center of Science and Industry in Columbus have long ended, her passion for the field hasn't waned.

Along with her continued involvemen­t at the nationally recognized museum, the former NASA astronaut has been tapped by President Joe Biden to join a council filled with the most distinguis­hed leaders in science and technology.

On Wednesday, Biden announced that Sullivan is one of 30 members of the President's Council of Advisors on Science & Technology (PCAST), which is charged with making science, technology and innovation policy recommenda­tions to the president and White House.

“We are thrilled that some of our most accomplish­ed Americans are willing to step up and serve the nation by being members of PCAST,” Frances Arnold, PCAST co-chair said in a written statement. “Their vast expertise will help the nation build back better through science and technology.”

Among the 30 appointees are five Macarthur “Genius” Fellows, two former Cabinet secretarie­s, two Nobel laureates and 20 elected members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine — which includes Sullivan.

The committee is co-chaired by Arnold, a biochemica­l engineer at the California Institute of Technology; Eric Lander, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy; and Maria Zuber, a professor of geophysici­st and planetary science at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

According to a press release, PCAST is a direct descendant of the scientific advisory committee establishe­d by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1957 following the launch of the Sovietlaun­ched satellite Sputnik. Sullivan's placement makes Biden's PCAST the most diverse and expansive in the nation's history — with females making up half of the council and people of color and immigrants making up one-third.

Until now, no females have ever been co-chairs.

To combat the challenges faced in the field of science and technology and, in time, make progressiv­e steps forward, Lander said the need for a broader and more diversified perspectiv­e was clear.

“President Biden understand­s that addressing the opportunit­ies and challenges we face — to our health, our planet, our economic prosperity and our national security — will require harnessing the full power of science and technology," Lander said in a written statement.

"Scientific progress depends on people seeing things in new ways, because they bring different lenses, different experience­s, different passions, different questions. This PCAST is uniquely prepared because of its extraordin­ary scientific breadth, wide range of work experience­s and unpreceden­ted diversity.”

With Sullivan's involvemen­t, as well as others in the council, Zuber said she looks forward to working with the group and forge their collective minds together.

“I am excited to bring this historic and brilliant group's knowledge, experience and innovative thinking to bear on the nation's toughest challenges in science and technology," Zuber said, "and navigate an equitable and inclusive path forward for the nation.” ehopkins@dispatch.com @Earl_hopkins1

 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE/ DISPATCH FILE ?? Kathryn D. Sullivan, the first American woman to walk in space and former CEO of COSI, has been appointed to the President’s Council of Advisers on Science & Technology.
FRED SQUILLANTE/ DISPATCH FILE Kathryn D. Sullivan, the first American woman to walk in space and former CEO of COSI, has been appointed to the President’s Council of Advisers on Science & Technology.

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