SSTI Digest
Geography: West Virginia
TBED People
Karel Schubert has been appointed executive director of the Bioscience Association of West Virginia. Schubert most recently founded and is the chief executive officer of BioSynectics, a St. Louis-based bioscience firm.
J. Michael Saul, deputy director of the R.I. Economic Development Corporation, who served as interim director for a year, is stepping down. Saul had overseen the agency's capital programs such as the Small Business Loan Fund.
Chelsea Burket has joined the team at Fourth Economy as a research assistant.
TechNet and the Illinois Technology Association announced a new strategic partnership to collaborate on a dual state-federal policy and political program for Illinois' fast-growing and emerging technology companies. s
Job Corner
The West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission is seeking a highly talented and experienced individual for the position of Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer for the West Virginia Regional Technology Park located in South Charleston. The selected individual will have the opportunity to help refine and implement the vision for this property and its role in technology development, economic development, education, research and innovation in West Virginia and the surrounding region.
Legislative Wrap Up: West Virginia and Wyoming Pass Budgets
Budgets recently approved in West Virginia and Wyoming will dedicate new funds for TBED initiatives in the coming year. TechConnect West Virginia is slated to receive $250,000 for its efforts to develop immediate and long-term strategies to capitalize on the state's technology strengths. In Wyoming, lawmakers allocated a portion of Abandoned Mine Land (AML) funds for construction of a science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) undergraduate teaching laboratory and for graduate stipends and fellowships to support students studying energy, natural resources and computational sciences at the University of Wyoming (UW).
Research Parks RoundUp
Often credited with contributing significant revenue to states' economies, research parks also house facilities for workforce training and provide resources for tech-based industries, which is especially important as the nation's employment begins to pick up steam. In West Virginia, officials are building a $15 million advanced technology-training center at the state-owned research and technology park, and in Utah, officials recently broke ground on a building that will house engineers and analysts working on the nation's Intercontinental Ballistic Missile program.
Job Corner
TechConnect WV, a nonprofit advancing technology-based economic development, is seeking an executive director and solicits interest from individuals and entities able to provide services on a contractual basis.
The executive director will provide full-time support for TechConnect in executing an established strategy for promoting the Innovation Economy in WV. Critical skills will involve organizational management, branding/marketing, and financial development through a variety of sources, including state and federal government sources. The candidate should be a self-starter with the ability to work effectively with many organizational partners and a large, diverse board of directors. Experience as an entrepreneur, small business consultant, strategic consultant, or non-profit executive is desirable.
The contract will run concurrent to an 18-month grant, which TechConnect WV seeks to secure by Oct. 1, 2010. Responses will be accepted through Friday, Sept. 17 at blueprintwv@gmail.com.
Research Parks RoundUp
Having the tools and resources to develop innovative concepts and products and move discoveries from the lab to the marketplace is an essential component for building tech-based economies. Research parks, a place where innovative ideas are borne, partnerships between university and industry are created, and companies grow and create new jobs, provide a foundation for the kind of economic growth necessary to compete in a global economy. Over the past few months, development plans and groundbreaking announcements from research parks across the nation have been made.
Construction on the first building of Innovation Park, a Missouri University of Science & Technology Research Park, began in March on what used to be a 60-acre golf course. When completed, the building will provide 18,500 sq. ft. of office suites and shared office space for tenants. The concept for a research park on the Missouri S&T campus has been a topic of discussion for more than 10 years, according to the university. Innovation Park is slated to open in October 2010.
TBED People
Bryan Allinson has joined Ohio University as director of technology transfer.
Martha Connolly, director of the Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute Maryland Industrial Partnership program (MIPS) at the University of Maryland, was given the President's Award at the Greater Baltimore Committee's fifth annual Bioscience Awards ceremony. In 2007, the MIPS program received an SSTI Excellence in TBED Award in the Improving Competitiveness of Existing Industries Category.
Stephen Cross has been selected as Georgia Tech's executive vice president for research. Cross has served as vice president and director of the Georgia Tech Research Institute since 2003.
TBED People
Chris Atkinson is the new director of West Virginia University's Center for Alternative Fuels, Engines, and Emissions (CAFEE).
Patrick Scheuermann will take over as director of NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi, replacing Gene Goldman. Goldman, who has served at Stennis since November 2008, will assume the position of deputy director at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.
Woodrow Whitlow, director of NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, has been named associate administrator for Mission Support at NASA headquarters. Ray Lugo, the deputy director at Glenn, has been named acting director.
Tech Talkin' Govs, Part II
The second installment of SSTI’s Tech Talkin’ Govs’ series includes excerpts from speeches delivered in Colorado, Virginia and West Virginia. Our first installment was in the Jan 13 Digest.
Colorado
Gov. Bill Ritter, State of the State Address, Jan. 14, 2010
“Colorado voters were the first in the country to pass a renewable energy standard. … So, this session let’s think bigger, creating even larger markets for solar, wind, biomass, hydro and geothermal. Let’s increase our standard to 30 percent.
“This will trigger the creation of tens of thousands of new jobs, draw new capital investments and new companies to our state, and keep Colorado at the epicenter of America’s energy revolution. …
TBED People and Organizations
The Piedmont Triad Research Park laid off Bill Dean, director of the park, and Nancy Johnson, marketing director. Park officials said that the park's project manager and executive assistant also were laid off.
Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter announced that he has tapped Don Elliman, director of the Colorado Office of Economic Development, to serve as the state government's first chief operating officer.
West Virginia Group Offers Blueprint for State Tech Economy
TechConnect West Virginia (TechConnectWV) released a new plan on Monday to build a larger and more robust technology economy. The report, West Virginia Blueprint for Technology-Based Economic Development, proposes a four-part, general strategy for TBED and targets several key industries for development.
Two years of study went into the report, which highlights the success that neighboring states, such as Pennsylvania and North Carolina, have had in investing in TBED. The initial study concluded that West Virginia would have to move quickly to remain competitive in light of the progress already being made in other states.
Tech Talkin' Govs, Part VI
The sixth installment of the Tech Talkin' Govs series includes highlights from state of the state addresses from governors in Tennessee and West Virginia.
Tennessee
Gov. Phil Bredesen, State of the State Address, Feb. 9, 2009
"While we are interested in a broad range of business, there is one area where we have a great toehold and prospects, and that is the area of clean energy technology. .
". We are extraordinarily well-positioned here and in the next couple of years, I want to wrap this up even tighter. Here's an idea about how we might go about that: develop a Solar Institute in Tennessee that is the basic research leader in making solar power practical.