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Type

  • weekly_digest (236)
Displaying 1 - 25 of 236
Authored on

Business First Stop Will Assist Appalachian Entrepreneurs in Three-State Region

Friday, January 19, 2001

A new resource for tech-based businesses in rural Ohio, Eastern Kentucky, and West Virginia was launched last week. The Appalachian Regional Entrepreneurship Initiative (AREI) is expanding its efforts to support growth of a technology-based entrepreneurial economy in Appalachia Ohio and neighboring states through a new website, http://www.bizfirststop.com

  • Read more about Business First Stop Will Assist Appalachian Entrepreneurs in Three-State Region

People

Friday, December 1, 2000

Kentucky Governor Paul Patton has appointed Bill Brundage to the serve as the state's first Commissioner for the New Economy. Dr. Brundage will oversee the new Kentucky Innovations Commission, which is attached to the Governor's Office and tasked to oversee the state's $55 million New Economy initiative.

  • Read more about People

Dual Enrollment Has Little Effect on Postsecondary Matriculation in Kentucky, Study Finds

Monday, April 10, 2006

Increasingly states are making it easier for high school students to participate in college courses while still attending high school. The goal of dual enrollment is to encourage more students to attend college, giving them a leg up on a degree. A new report by the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education suggests the efforts are not working in Kentucky.

  • Read more about Dual Enrollment Has Little Effect on Postsecondary Matriculation in Kentucky, Study Finds

PRESIDENT’S BUDGET DRAWS MIXED REVIEWS FROM CONGRESS

Friday, February 26, 1999

Senators Bill Frist (R-TN) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT), Co-chairs of the Science & Technology Caucus, issued a joint statement reacting to the Clinton Administration’s FY 2000 budget request for R&D. Calling the President’s request a "mixed blessing," the senators praised the commitment to civilian R&D, while disagreeing with proposed cuts for defense research of nearly six percent.

  • Read more about PRESIDENT’S BUDGET DRAWS MIXED REVIEWS FROM CONGRESS

CII SEEKS DIRECTOR OF RENEWABLE ENERGY INVESTMENT FUND

Friday, January 15, 1999

Connecticut Innovations, Inc. (CII) is seeking a manager for its Renewable Energy Investment Fund. Responsibilities of the position include providing strategic planning and program direction for the Renewable Energy Investment Fund program. The full position description can be found on the SSTI website at http://www.ssti.org/posting.htm

  • Read more about CII SEEKS DIRECTOR OF RENEWABLE ENERGY INVESTMENT FUND

TORNATZKY GOING WEST; STC SEEKS NEW DIRECTOR

Friday, July 10, 1998

Lou Tornatzky has announced that he will be stepping down from his position as Director of the Southern Technology Council (STC), a position he has held since 1993. Tornatzky will be relocating with his family to the West Coast, but will continue to serve as an STC Research Fellow.

  • Read more about TORNATZKY GOING WEST; STC SEEKS NEW DIRECTOR

People

Friday, April 20, 2001

After seven years of serving as the first president of the Connecticut Technology Council, Laura Kent is resigning her position at the end of June. The Council now boasts over 400 members.

  • Read more about People

Connecticut Releases Draft Plan for IT Workforce Development

Friday, March 23, 2001

With 26 percent more of its workforce involved in information technology (IT) than the national average and with IT-producing industries growing faster in the state than the national average, Connecticut has possibly felt the pinch of the IT worker shortage more than other parts of the country. Add to that the fact that the number of IT-related graduates from the state’s universities and community colleges declined during the late 1990s.



  • Read more about Connecticut Releases Draft Plan for IT Workforce Development

Recent Research: Dimensions of an Individual Global Mindset

Monday, April 17, 2006

Successful companies are forced to change business strategies as market realities shift. It happens all of the time. Browse the business section of your local bookstore and you'll see dozens of titles preaching the need for companies to adopt, adapt and innovate. The continuing restructuring of the U.S. durable manufacturing sector, as alluded to in the Useful Stats piece below, is a vivid example of the importance of abandoning old mindsets for industry: change or die.

  • Read more about Recent Research: Dimensions of an Individual Global Mindset

Connecticut Releases State Technology Study

Friday, September 26, 1997

The Role of Technology in the Connecticut Economy, a new report produced by the Connecticut Technology Council (CTC), provides a comprehensive analysis of the role of technology in the state's economy. Overall, the report reveals both a strong technology contribution to the Connecticut economy, as well as the state's dependence on technology for achieving its economic potential.

  • Read more about Connecticut Releases State Technology Study

People

Monday, April 24, 2006

After seven months on the job, Connecticut Innovations President and CEO Chandler Howard is leaving to pursue an opportunity to establish a community bank in New Haven.

  • Read more about People

Kentucky Innovation Act Calls for $53 Million S&T Investment

Friday, February 18, 2000

Kentucky Governor Paul Patton and House Speaker Jody Richardson have announced a new technology bill to help Kentucky develop an innovation-driven economy. House Bill 572, the Kentucky Innovation Act, is a result of the Science and Technology Strategy designed by the Kentucky Science and Technology Corporation in August, 1999 (see September 3, 1999 SSTI Weekly Digest (http://www.ssti.org/Digest/1999/090399.htm).

  • Read more about Kentucky Innovation Act Calls for $53 Million S&T Investment

Impact of 1999 State Election Results on S&T

Friday, November 5, 1999

In this off-year election, there were only a few races that are significant to the S&T community.



Democrat Paul Patton, incumbent Governor of Kentucky, easily won re-election over three contenders. Patton becomes the first Kentucky Governor to be elected to a second term since 1800.



  • Read more about Impact of 1999 State Election Results on S&T

Connecticut Innovations Nets $21 Million In FY 1999

Friday, October 15, 1999

After only ten years of investments, Connecticut Innovations, Inc. achieved a net income of $21.4 million in 1999, according to Connecticut Innovations’ latest annual report. The corporation reversed a deficit of over $20 million in retained earnings accumulated through 1995 to a positive $24.7 million by June 30, 1999. The corporation's record provides one of the strongest examples of successful state-funded, technology-based seed and venture capital investment to date.

  • Read more about Connecticut Innovations Nets $21 Million In FY 1999

Kentucky Completes S&T Strategic Plan

Friday, September 3, 1999

The Kentucky Science and Technology Corp. (KSTC) has released Kentucky's Science and Technology Strategy, a plan outlining ten specific recommendations in four strategic areas to guide the Commonwealth's future R&D investments. If implemented, the recommendations are expected to have significant impact in just a few years.

  • Read more about Kentucky Completes S&T Strategic Plan

2000 Connecticut Legislature Focuses on Technology

Friday, June 16, 2000

The 2000 session of the Connecticut legislature proved to be an active and favorable one for the state’s technology community and Connecticut Innovations, Inc. The Connecticut Technology Council summarized the session this way, “For the first time in recent memory, the debate at the Capitol was not over whether legislation affecting tech companies would pass, but which legislation affecting tech companies would pass.”

  • Read more about 2000 Connecticut Legislature Focuses on Technology

STC Launches S&T Planning Initiative for South

Friday, April 28, 2000

The Kenan Institute for Engineering, Technology & Science is providing the Southern Technology Council (STC) $150,000 in matching funds over three years to help Southern states increase innovation-driven economic development. A major element of the initiative is annual benchmarking of each state's progress in agreed-upon categories, including: industrial composition, entrepreneurial development, globalization, and human resources.

  • Read more about STC Launches S&T Planning Initiative for South

Hawaii, Connecticut Support Alternative Energy Tech Demos

Friday, October 5, 2001

They may be separated by more than 6,000 miles, but tech-based economic development initiatives in Hawaii and Connecticut have adopted similar strategies to encourage the commercialization of alternative energy technologies: they're buying them. 



  • Read more about Hawaii, Connecticut Support Alternative Energy Tech Demos

Plan to Transform Southern Economy Released

Friday, October 5, 2001

In a bid to make the South a knowledge economy leader, the Southern Growth Policies Board has released Invented Here: Transforming the Southern Economy, a 10-year strategic plan to create an innovation-driven economy in the South. 



  • Read more about Plan to Transform Southern Economy Released

NETT Issues Economic Strategy for Northern Kentucky

Friday, October 5, 2001

The New Economy Transition Team (NETT) of the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce has issued a 73-page plan that, if implemented successfully, could position Northern Kentucky as a center for life sciences and information technology, advanced manufacturing and financial services. 



  • Read more about NETT Issues Economic Strategy for Northern Kentucky

Southern Innovation Index Tracks Innovation, Entrepreneurship in South

Friday, August 30, 2002

The Southern Innovation Index, a strategic plan created with the governments of 13 Southern states and Puerto Rico to promote innovation, entrepreneurship and economic growth in the South, has been released by the Southern Growth Policies Board, a bipartisan public policy group based in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.

  • Read more about Southern Innovation Index Tracks Innovation, Entrepreneurship in South

Connecticut's BioScience Cluster Gains Momentum, Report Shows

Friday, March 29, 2002

Connecticut-based bioscience research and development (R&D) investment in 2001 totaled $3.6 billion, an 18 percent increase over 2000, according to the Seventh Annual Economic Report of Connecticut United for Research Excellence (CURE), Connecticut's bioscience Cluster.



2001 Gains and Future Opportunities, released last week at Yale University, highlights several economic indicators that demonstrate the growth of the bioscience industry in Connecticut, including:

  • Read more about Connecticut's BioScience Cluster Gains Momentum, Report Shows

Landmark ARC Reauthorization Bill Sent to President for Approval

Friday, March 1, 2002

An historic, five-year reauthorization bill for the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) awaits only the President's signature after being approved Tuesday by Congress.



President Bush is expected to sign the legislation into law, making the reauthorization of ARC the longest in its history and only the second congressional reauthorization of the agency since the Carter Administration.



The reauthorization bill contains several key provisions:

  • Read more about Landmark ARC Reauthorization Bill Sent to President for Approval

connectkentucky Plan Prepares State for Tech-driven Economy

Friday, December 20, 2002

Sixty-nine percent of Kentucky businesses use computer technology to handle some of their business functions, but only 36 percent use the Internet and little more than 20 percent have a website, according to a report released by Governor Paul Patton's Office for the New Economy. Kentucky Prepares for the Networked World, which details computer, Internet and website use among the state's businesses, shows more than 50 percent see "no need" to use the Internet.

  • Read more about connectkentucky Plan Prepares State for Tech-driven Economy

Connecticut Governor Announces Plans to Reorganize ED Efforts

Monday, February 20, 2006

Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell is using the midterm budget request as the vehicle to substantially overhaul how the state supports the entire economic development process. Connecticut Innovations, one of the nation's oldest state-created equity finance programs for tech businesses, would be consolidated with departments that cover focus areas ranging from health education and housing to traditional economic development financing.

  • Read more about Connecticut Governor Announces Plans to Reorganize ED Efforts

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