“…For example, in 2004, NHGRI collaborated with the DOE and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) to establish the first four CEERs. 61 , 63 In 2020, it continued the funding for three CEERs (see Table 4 ) using a limited competition request for proposals (renewal of current CEERs only) with the indication that “NHGRI plans to maintain the CEER program at approximately its current level of funding through FY 2023.” 64 In 2019, it funded the Center for ELSI Resources and Analysis (CERA) to build the community ELSI researchers and provide a web-based platform to enhance the production, sharing, and use of ELSI research (for CERA rationale, see Oliver and McGuire, 65 Kaye et al, 66 and Bell et al 67 ). Although a small portion of the budget, the program has also provided formal support for ELSI studies embedded in large genomics initiatives sponsored by other NHGRI divisions such as the CSER Consortium, eMERGE, the Human Microbiome Project, the Wellcome Trust/NIH H3Africa Initiative, and the NBSeq initiative, as well as supplements to other NIH grants with ELSI components.…”