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Useful Stats: Academic Pork 1990-2002

Friday, October 25, 2002

The use of Congressional earmarks on federal agency budgets to support projects and programs in academic institutions has exploded since 1996, according to statistics compiled by and reported in the September 27, 2002 issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education.

  • Read more about Useful Stats: Academic Pork 1990-2002

People

Friday, October 25, 2002

Anthony Armstrong returns to the Indiana 21st Century Research and Technology Fund as its new director.

Bay Area Regional Technology Alliance (BARTA) has been renamed the TechVentures Network as the Bay Area's leading source of access to financing, business data and services for emerging technology.

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People

Friday, October 25, 2002

Anthony Armstrong returns to the Indiana 21st Century Research and Technology Fund as its new director.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 25, 2002

Bay Area Regional Technology Alliance (BARTA) has been renamed the TechVentures Network as the Bay Area's leading source of access to financing, business data and services for emerging technology.

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People

Friday, October 25, 2002

John Bradley is the Tennessee Valley Authority's as its first chief of economic development. Bradley had been senior vice president of economic development at the Memphis Regional Chamber of Commerce.

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People

Friday, October 25, 2002

Randy Goldsmith resigned as President & CEO of the Oklahoma Technology Development Corp to assume the role of President and CEO of the San Antonio Technology Accelerator Initiative.

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People

Friday, October 25, 2002

J.A. Hans Roeterink, chief technical officer and vice president of network operations for T-Systems in New York, is the new executive director of the Alaska Science & Technology Foundation. Roeterink begins Nov. 1, succeeding Jamie Kenworthy.

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People

Friday, October 25, 2002

Dennis Yablonsky, who has been serving as CEO for both the Pittsburgh Digital Greenhouse and the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse for most of the past year, has decided to focus exclusively on the biotech initiative. His replacement as president and CEO at the Pittsburgh Digital Greenhouse is David Ruppersberger.

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Administration Outlines R&D Budget Priorities for 2007

Monday, July 18, 2005

Homeland security R&D, high-end computing, the National Nanotechnology Initiative, and the President's Hydrogen Fuel Initiative are among the interagency R&D priorities that will receive a special focus in agency budget requests, according to a memorandum outlining the Administration's R&D budget priorities for 2007.

  • Read more about Administration Outlines R&D Budget Priorities for 2007

Publisher's Note: Stickley, Sheets Join SSTI

Monday, July 18, 2005

SSTI is proud to announce the addition of two new staff members to its team. Sheri Stickely will join SSTI on Aug. 15 as a Vice President. Sheri is leaving the Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Technology (OCAST) to join SSTI. She has served most recently as Interim Executive Director and has been with OCAST since its inception in 1987.

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Illinois Uses Executive Order to Fund Stem Cell Research

Monday, July 18, 2005

While some state legislatures debate banning public funds for some or all stem cell research, others are using whatever funding tools they have available to advance the controversial science. Some states use tobacco settlement money, others use revenue bonds, and still others use direct appropriations. Some states use voter referenda while most stay within the traditional state legislative process. The newest twist comes from Illinois, where Illinois Gov.

  • Read more about Illinois Uses Executive Order to Fund Stem Cell Research

Oregon Legislature Passes University Venture Development Funds Bill

Monday, July 18, 2005

The Oregon Legislature overwhelmingly passed S.B. 853 last week, creating venture development funds to facilitate technology commercialization for students and faculty at the state's seven public universities.

  • Read more about Oregon Legislature Passes University Venture Development Funds Bill

Fed Issues Sobering Look at Current Economic Recovery

Monday, July 18, 2005

For many practitioners, the quickest summary of a recent 16-page analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York might be "something has to change." Looking at job creation since the recovery began three years ago, Richard Freeman and William Rogers III state in The Weak Jobs Recovery: Whatever Happened to "The Great American Jobs Machine"? that this is the worst recovery in all post-World War II recoveries.

  • Read more about Fed Issues Sobering Look at Current Economic Recovery

GAO Report Highlights Economic Performance Measure

Monday, July 18, 2005

The quality of the economic performance assessment of federal programs has improved, but gaps still remain in the application of the measures used, according to the latest report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO).

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EPI Book Explores Discrepancies in Business Indices

Monday, July 18, 2005

A new resource published by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) argues that indices claiming to measure the same thing - namely, the capacity or potential for economic growth - often vary widely in their results and are not effective yardsticks of economic potential.

  • Read more about EPI Book Explores Discrepancies in Business Indices

Michigan Life Science Initiative Threatened at Ballot Box

Friday, October 18, 2002

A ballot proposal being put forth by Citizens for a Healthy Michigan would reduce funding for Michigan Life Sciences Corridor sponsored projects by nearly $50 million annually, estimates a report released by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation (MEDC).  The annual reduction includes both the cut in direct funding and required matching funds for Corridor funded projects.

  • Read more about Michigan Life Science Initiative Threatened at Ballot Box

New ATP Awards Announced

Friday, October 18, 2002

The Advanced Technology Program (ATP) has announced 40 awards potentially totaling $101.6 million in ATP funding matched by an industry cost-share of $92 million if carried through to completion. These awards were selected from proposals submitted to 2002 competition.

  • Read more about New ATP Awards Announced

Central Tennessee Gets New Life Science Campus

Friday, October 18, 2002

Construction is underway for the Cool Springs Life Sciences Center (CSLSC), a $74 million biomedical research facility planned for Franklin, TN, 15 miles south of Nashville. When completed, the 10-acre center will be home to life sciences-focused R&D facilities for biotech, pharmaceutical and medical device companies.

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NCOE Report Provides Policymakers with a New Vision of the Economy

Friday, October 18, 2002

The National Commission on Entrepreneurship (NCOE) has released the American Formula for Growth – Federal Policy and the Entrepreneurial Economy, 1958-1998, a report that provides an extensive review of the role of public policy during the “entrepreneurial revolution” of the past 40 years.

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Information Technology and the Labor Market

Friday, October 18, 2002

In the 1990s, the dialogue on information technology (IT) centered on dot.coms and e-commerce, and little focus was placed on the effect of IT on the labor market. Richard Freeman addresses this issue in The Labour Market in the New Information Economy, an NBER working paper released this month.

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Classified Research at MIT Should Be Off Campus, Panel Recommends

Friday, October 18, 2002

A Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty committee has suggested that the university provide off-campus facilities to help faculty perform classified public service or research involving the nation’s security. In the Public Interest, a report of the Ad Hoc Faculty Committee on Access To and Disclosure of Scientific Information of MIT, presents recommendations for the university in handling classified work in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

  • Read more about Classified Research at MIT Should Be Off Campus, Panel Recommends

Tech-based ED RoundUp: New Beginnings

Friday, October 18, 2002

The economic downturn and continuing state and local fiscal problems are not stopping most efforts to develop tech-based economies. Here are a few examples of recent groundbreakings from around the country.

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NASA Funds Workforce Development Projects

Friday, October 18, 2002

NASA has selected 45 consortia in the National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program (Space Grant) to receive funding for aerospace workforce development. A total of $3.56 million is being awarded in response to the proposals submitted by the state organizations to NASA's Education Division in the Office of Human Resources and Education at Headquarters in Washington.

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People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Peter Jobse has been named executive vice president and chief operating officer of Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology.

Patrick Jones, executive director of the Biotechnology Association of the Spokane Region, has been named executive director of Eastern Washington University's new Institute for Public Policy and Economic Analysis.

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People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Peter Jobse has been named executive vice president and chief operating officer of Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology.

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Recent news from the SSTI Digest

The state of US venture capital investment in four charts. How might your innovation startups fare if investment trends hold?

Thursday, January 15, 2026

With 2025 behind us, and some time for the data to stabilize, we can look back at VC activity and try to understand what it means for TBED efforts going forward. The VC storyline of 2025 should be familiar to anyone who has been following investment news. Record funding rounds, huge amounts of capital deployed, questions of an AI bubble. Where amongst the big flashy lights of AI mega-deals do we find the subtlety and nuance that informs TBED investor activity and policy?

venture capital
startups

FSGG appropriations language favors innovation programs

Thursday, January 15, 2026

The Financial Services and General Government appropriations bill for FY 2026 passed the House of Representatives yesterday and now moves to the Senate where passage is also expected. The bill sets spending levels for several agencies supporting regional innovation, economic development, and investment. Foremost are the Treasury and Small Business Administration; selected highlights are provided below.

fy26budget
sba
cdfi
higher ed

New benchmarking tool illuminates how AI is accelerating job market changes

Thursday, January 15, 2026

All too often, jobseekers and employers seem to exist in non-compatible realities. While jobseekers flood the job market with descriptions of their generalized skills in communication, leadership, and problem-solving to fill various roles in different sectors, employers are looking for the more specific skills that will get the job done, say the authors of a report from the Wharton School and Accenture. And they propose that AI is accelerating this shift from a role-based economy to a skills-based economy.

AI
jobs
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