The Fields Institute Turns Twenty-Five 170725 Final book with covers | Page 31

Where it All Began 9 We got a very friendly hearing but had no reason to believe that we had advanced our prospects. In fact, as soon as we got back Vic told me that as he was convinced we had hit a brick wall, he was going to resign as Chairman of the Committee. Violating the Marsden Separation Requirement Almost immediately, however, we were contacted by an official of NSERC. Apparently more than one member of the Standing Committee was demanding to know why something of the self-evidently high quality of the Fields Institute proposal had no prospect of funding. While we had not been asking NSERC for support, this was not as unfair a question as it may have seemed to NSERC staff. There was, in fact, no NSERC program at the time for which our proposal would have been eligible for. But there was, as it turned out, a program whose requirements could be subjected to interpretation sufficient for it to be used in a way that was clearly never intended. That would provide half the support we needed. The question was whether Ontario, also lacking any program for which we qualified, could provide the other half. I managed to convince Vic to stay on while we saw this possibility through and we served as Co-Chairs of the Fields Institute Committee until the funding eventually came through. The Importance of Deputy Ministers At this time, Ontarios Deputy Minister of Colleges and Universities was Tom Brzustowski, who had been the Vice President Academic at Waterloo when I began the campaign for a mathematics institute. Tom had been encouraging to us, and with the appearance of joint funding with NSERC, he secured his Minister’s support as well. And then the Liberals