• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 15 comments on Biosafety Labs to Open This Week

  1. I’m glad that the Biosafety lab is opening! I have 100% faith in it that nothing will go wrong. go wrong. go wrong. go wrong. go wrong…

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy’s_law

    1. Side note: I’m all for the studying and research to better improve our medical knowledge and help prevent/cure viruses, etc., but in the middle of a city?

      1. You do realize that many buildings at BU are full of BSL2 labs that have been functioning safely for many years? The reason for having NEIDL in the city, and in Boston in particular, is because Boston is a hub for biomedical research – the location of this lab will allow for a variety of collaborations that wouldn’t otherwise be feasible were the lab located outside of the greater Boston area. It also allows researchers at Boston University to do research in a convenient location that wouldn’t otherwise be possible in our less up-to-date facilities.

  2. This is a good thing for BU to research. REsearch on deadly bioterroism agents in BL 3 and 4 labs is not. Those agents should not be in a populated area.

  3. I took one of the tours that was offered last year. The security and safety protocols in place were waaaaaaay beyond what I could imagine. I will have no problem with BSL-3 and BSL-4 research being done there once they get those approvals. Check out the other stories and videos that describe some (not all) of the safety features. There is good reason it cost $200 million and not $50 million to build.

    1. Have you read or seen the Hot Zone (nonfictional story about the outbreak of a deadly virus from a biolab)? While it’s true safeguards may be in place and are very strictly followed, it is not about every time that they follow procedure or succeed, it is about that one time that they, or something out of their control, fails.

      1. Classic case of people not understanding something and therefore fearing what they can’t understand. Scientific progress shouldn’t be punished because people are are irrational and confuse hollywood with reality.

        1. I was stating the Hot Zone to show the potential of things that can happen when something goes wrong. And it was historical non-fiction book as well–same plot. If something goes wrong, it’s easy to say in hindsight that they didn’t understand what they were doing.

          If the pathogens are contagious, deadly, and not easily curable, then they should probably be studied in a more secluded region.

          And please don’t accuse me of wanting to punish scientific progress–I do not believe there are many people out there more for scientific progress than me.

      2. One of the reasons for the outbreak in the Hot Zone was also because they had no idea what the virus was at the time or what type of proper precautions to take, they do now. Also, there are many labs at the medical center that are already doing BSL3 research, and agents at the BSL4 level such as Marburg and ebola aren’t nearly as contagious as one might think, the Hot Zone just over sensationalized them.

        1. Isn’t a lot of research based on the fact that we don’t know about these new viruses? I understand we may also be solving for cures/prevention, etc., but couldn’t the same lack of understanding cause the same thing again? We may know more about Ebola, etc. now, but there will be other new viruses that could be dangerous that we don’t yet understand.

      3. Actually, the Hot Zone is a story about how these labs were able to identify a new virus that appeared on its own – there was never any release of anything from the labs themselves. And as LO mentioned, these labs have precautions on top of precautions on top of precautions, and there is no feasible way that anything will escape unless MAJOR problems occur.

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