
BTI researcher Isako Di Tomassi just received a national award – and the movement she helped build is worth knowing about.
Di Tomassi, a Ph.D. candidate in the Restrepo Lab at BTI, co-led The McClintock Letters: a grassroots campaign that mobilized over 600 scientists to write opinion pieces in their hometown newspapers defending the importance of federal research funding. More than 200 pieces were published across 45 states, D.C., and Puerto Rico.
On March 10, she and Cornell colleague Emma Scales received the "Meeting the Moment for Public Health" award at Research!America's 2026 Advocacy Awards at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C.
The initiative was named after Barbara McClintock – the Nobel Prize–winning geneticist who spent decades defending curiosity-driven research before her discoveries were recognized. Di Tomassi's own work studies the pathogen behind late blight disease, the same pathogen responsible for the Irish Potato Famine, which continues to threaten food systems today.
"As scientists, and particularly as agricultural researchers, we work for the public," said Di Tomassi. "It is part of our job to communicate with the people that we work for, and to share why our research matters and how it helps people."
We couldn't be more proud. Read the full story here: btiscience.org/explore-bti/ne…
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