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TBED People on the Move

Friday, July 19, 2002

Angie Dvorak is leaving her position as CEO of the Mississippi Technology Alliance to become vice president of research for the University of Southern Mississippi. The University saw a 25 percent increase in research funds last fiscal year, climbing to a record $62.6 million.

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TBED People on the Move

Friday, July 19, 2002

Joe Raguso has left the California Technology, Trade and Commerce Agency to become vice president for strategic and corporate partnerships for SRI International. Raguso served the agency as Deputy Secretary for the Division of Science, Technology and Innovation.

  • Read more about TBED People on the Move

TBED People on the Move

Friday, July 19, 2002

Keith Servis has left his position as director of programs at the New York Office of Science, Technology, and the Advancement of Research to return to the New York Department of Health.

  • Read more about TBED People on the Move

TBED People on the Move

Friday, July 19, 2002

Thomas Still has been selected at the new president of the Wisconsin Technology Council. Still, currently associate editor of the Wisconsin State Journal, will fill the vacancy created by Larry Kline's departure this past spring.

  • Read more about TBED People on the Move

TBED People on the Move

Friday, July 19, 2002

Patrick Tam started this week as the new executive director of SIRTI, the Spokane Intercollegiate Research and Technology Institute. Tam comes to SIRTI from a Seattle-based international technology transfer company.

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TBED People on the Move

Friday, July 19, 2002

Robert Templin, Jr., has been named the new president of Northern Virginia Community College, effective August 17. Templin, currently a senior fellow at the Morino Institute, was a previous president of Virginia' Center for Innovative Technology.

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The little matter of a survey...

Friday, July 19, 2002

Our heartfelt thanks to all of you who so far have completed our annual readers' survey. A record number of responses!

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Montana Legislature Passes $60 Million VC Act

Monday, April 18, 2005

Venture capital investments in Montana may have become a little more attractive last Friday as the Montana House of Representatives passed the Montana Equity Capital Investment Act, moving the legislation to Gov. Brian Schweitzer for his consideration and expected signature.

  • Read more about Montana Legislature Passes $60 Million VC Act

New Mexico Adds Tax Credit, Loan Program to TBED Portfolio

Monday, April 18, 2005

Tech firms in New Mexico received happy tax news on April 4 as Gov. BIll Richardson signed several bills to encourage economic growth across New Mexico.

  • Read more about New Mexico Adds Tax Credit, Loan Program to TBED Portfolio

New York Budget Calls for New Oversight of Empire Zones

Monday, April 18, 2005

New York's Empire Zones Program dodged a veto from Gov. George Pataki as an agreement was met with the legislature to restructure the program. The state budget, signed into law last week, extends the program and allows for an additional 12 zones to be created throughout the state.

  • Read more about New York Budget Calls for New Oversight of Empire Zones

Federal R&D Tax Credit to Become Permanent?

Monday, April 18, 2005

Legislation that would extend and expand the federal research tax credit was introduced in the U.S. Senate last month. Senate Bill 627 seeks to make permanent the research credit that was first enacted in 1981 and is set to expire Dec. 31, 2005. The bill, sponsored by Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), also would provide an alternative simplified credit for qualified research expenses and increase the rates of the alternative incremental credit.

  • Read more about Federal R&D Tax Credit to Become Permanent?

Recent Research: Tax Credits Are Good for Companies, But Do They Make Good Policy?

Monday, April 18, 2005

Do tax credits pave the way for more investment in R&D and equity investments in new enterprises? Or, do they reward companies and venture capitalists for investments they would have made anyway?

Discussions on these questions can become quite heated and fueled by data supportive of both sides, as two new academic analyses demonstrate.

  • Read more about Recent Research: Tax Credits Are Good for Companies, But Do They Make Good Policy?

Useful Stats: State Rankings of GSP Per Capita: 1999-2003

Monday, April 18, 2005

Gross State Product (GSP) is considered, at least in theory, to be an effective measure of the "value added" by a state's economy. That is, the figure represents the sum of all net industrial activity within the state, where net activity is defined as total outputs (sales or receipts and other operating income, commodity taxes, and inventory change) minus total inputs (consumption of goods and services purchased from other industries or imported).

  • Read more about Useful Stats: State Rankings of GSP Per Capita: 1999-2003

Governor Establishes Alabama Research Alliance by Executive Order

Friday, July 12, 2002

Last week, Governor Don Siegelman signed Executive Order Number 71, which establishes the Alabama Research Alliance, a partnership among Alabama’s research universities, the business community and state government. The mission of the research alliance is to foster economic development in Alabama by investing in existing and new research initiatives at Alabama’s research universities.

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GRA Expands VentureLab To Georgia’s Research Universities

Friday, July 12, 2002

The Georgia Research Alliance (GRA) is facilitating the expansion of VentureLab at the state’s research universities. Piloted at the Georgia Institute of Technology, VentureLab is a strategy for enhancing and accelerating the process of spinning new technology-based enterprises out of university research.

  • Read more about GRA Expands VentureLab To Georgia’s Research Universities

Recent Reports: Calfornia Analyzes R&D Activity on County Level

Friday, July 12, 2002

The California Technology, Trade and Commerce Agency (TTCA) has released A County Level Analysis of California's R&D Activity 1993-1999, which, for the first time, offers California state and regional policymakers a county-by-county, instead of statewide or national, analysis of research and development trends.

  • Read more about Recent Reports: Calfornia Analyzes R&D Activity on County Level

Recent Reports: Cyberstates 2002 Finds IT Employment Grew 1 Percent Nationally

Friday, July 12, 2002

The AEA's sixth annual survey of employment in the electronics and information technology sectors revealed 20 states experienced more IT job losses than creations in 2001. Texas led the way with more than 3,000 job losses while South Dakota experienced the greatest percentage loss of its IT workforce at 14 percent.

Nationally, only 80,000 jobs were added in the year, compared with 440,000 in 2000.

  • Read more about Recent Reports: Cyberstates 2002 Finds IT Employment Grew 1 Percent Nationally

Recent Reports: MCG Report Reveals Increase in Number of Small Businesses in Arizona

Friday, July 12, 2002

Of Arizona's 664,454 businesses, 98 percent qualify as small businesses with fewer than 100 employees, according to a study released by the Arizona Department of Commerce and the Arizona State University's Center for the Advancement of Small Business. The study was conducted by the Masters Consulting Group (MCG), an MBA student organization at ASU's College of Business.

  • Read more about Recent Reports: MCG Report Reveals Increase in Number of Small Businesses in Arizona

Recent Reports: Virginia's CIT Examines State's Telecom Industry

Friday, July 12, 2002

Virginia is one of the most connected states in the country with 5.19 million access lines, 2.76 million wireless telephone subscribers and 218,808 high-speed lines, according to a report issued by Virginia’s Center for Innovative Technology (CIT).

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State & Local Tech-based ED RoundUp

Friday, July 12, 2002

Arizona

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Digest Survey Eyes More Responses

Friday, July 12, 2002

SSTI extends a friendly reminder there is still time for readers to complete the 2002 SSTI Weekly Digest survey. As mentioned in a separate e-mail earlier this week, the survey results help us determine the editorial direction and content of future Digest issues.

  • Read more about Digest Survey Eyes More Responses

SBA Seeks Tibbetts Nominations

Friday, July 12, 2002

Nominations are being accepted currently for the 2002 Tibbetts Awards to recognize those small firms, projects, organizations and individuals judged to exemplify the very best in Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) achievement.

Named for Roland Tibbetts – acknowledged as the father of the SBIR program – the Tibbetts Award Program is administered by the Small Business Administration (SBA).

  • Read more about SBA Seeks Tibbetts Nominations

Idaho Partnership Creates Regional S&T Office

Friday, July 12, 2002

Governor Dirk Kempthorne has announced the creation of TechConnect East, a regional science and technology office to be located at the Idaho State University Incubation Center in Pocatello, Idaho.

  • Read more about Idaho Partnership Creates Regional S&T Office

Metro Areas Are Key to U.S. Jobs, Economy

Friday, June 28, 2002

The nation's metropolitan areas were responsible for "driving the economic performance of the nation as a whole last year," accounting for 98 percent of job growth and 86 percent of national economic growth, according to a new report prepared for the U.S. Conference of Mayors by DRI/WEFA.

  • Read more about Metro Areas Are Key to U.S. Jobs, Economy

Tallahassee Compared with Nation's Largest MSAs in New Economy Index

Friday, June 28, 2002

The Center for Economic Forecasting and Analysis at Florida State University has completed a New Economy index for Tallahassee, showing how the Florida capital compares with 66 MSAs and, in a second analysis, a comparison of 20 Florida MSAs. Tallahassee ranks 11th among all MSAs assessed, a finding the authors suggest confirms "the city's economy has a number of very strong advantages."

  • Read more about Tallahassee Compared with Nation's Largest MSAs in New Economy Index

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Recent news from the SSTI Digest

Data centers may be inevitable, but state and local resistance is growing

Thursday, March 26, 2026
People in the U.S. may be in favor of the using internet, social media, and artificial intelligence, but they are increasingly skeptical of and concerned about the data centers that make all these things possible. Common themes of their skepticism were recently expressed by data center opponents in Michigan who “fear lost farmland and destroyed habitat, noise pollution from thousands of humming servers, strain on the electric grid and higher bills as utilities spend mightily on infrastructure to power the facilities, and strain on rivers and aquifers amid data centers’ use of water to cool servers.” Michiganders are not alone. 
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When the Opportunity Zone program was authorized by Congress in 2017, there was high hope that it would give a significant boost to the employment rates of those living in the poorest areas of our cities. Unfortunately, a new research paper adds to the growing findings of the program’s shortcomings and disappointing outcomes, just as the next race to establish new OZ designations is set to begin.   
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Innovation Advocacy Council visits the Hill on your behalf

Thursday, March 26, 2026
“We few, we happy few” shouldn’t have been so bloody few if Shakespeare’s Henry V were honest 400+ years ago. Flash forward, and a merry band of brothers and sisters represented the TBED community well as they visited DC’s Capitol Hill this week to remind Congressional offices of the importance of several federal programs for funding strategic regional innovation initiatives. And it was nothing like Henry V’s Battle of Agincourt. In truth, regional innovation is and always has been a nonpartisan issue, but there are other pressures afoot to capture Congress’s attention and purse strings. 
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