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Displaying 8051 - 8075 of 9294
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Don't Get Closed Out of the SSTI's 8th Annual Conference

Monday, August 2, 2004

Seattle 2003 Sold Out. Register Early to Ensure a Seat in Philadelphia

We heard from some of you last year about your disappointment and disbelief that you couldn't attend our annual conference in Seattle because it was sold out. It happens with SSTI conferences because our first concern is the quality of the event for our participants.

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Tech Fares Well in Wisconsin Biennial Budget

Friday, August 3, 2001

On July 16, both houses of Wisconsin’s state Legislature passed a state budget including numerous incentives for technological development. The budget covers state spending for a two-year period that began July 1. Gov. Scott McCallum has until August 30 to approve the budget; several of the tech-related items were in the Governor's first state of the state and executive budget addresses.

  • Read more about Tech Fares Well in Wisconsin Biennial Budget

larta Assesses Southern California Bioscience Industry

Friday, August 3, 2001

Despite many indications that show strong potential for growth, Southern California's bioscience industry still faces challenges, according to a new report from the Los Angeles Regional Technology Alliance (larta). Released July 19, Heart of Gold: The Bioscience Industry in Southern California highlights the strengths of the region's industry and honestly assesses the ways that the industry can overcome its weaknesses. The report was created to present a full 

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Pittsburgh Mayor to Lead 'Tech City' Tour for SSTI Conference

Friday, August 3, 2001

Tom Murphy says when he first took office as Mayor of Pittsburgh in January 1994, the city was suffering from one of the worst inferiority complexes in its history. To be sure, Pittsburgh once was known first and foremost as being the capital of steelmaking in the U.S. By 1994, the devolution of U.S. steelmakers during the past 25 years had taken its toll on the steel city, physically, economically and psychologically.



  • Read more about Pittsburgh Mayor to Lead 'Tech City' Tour for SSTI Conference

Useful Stats: USDA SBIR Phase I Results

Friday, August 3, 2001

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has posted its selections for the FY 2001 Phase I solicitation of the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. Using information obtained from Ruth Lange of the USDA SBIR Program Office and the USDA website, SSTI has prepared the accompanying table presenting the state-by-state distribution of proposals, awards and total funding provided for the Phase I cycle.

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State & Local Tech-based ED Round Up

Friday, August 3, 2001

Birmingham, Alabama

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Education Department Offers Research Funding Opportunities

Friday, August 3, 2001

The DOEd Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research invites applications for Fiscal Year (FY) 2002 awards under the following programs. More information is available under the July 31 announcements of the Federal Register: http://www.ed.gov/legislation/FedRegister/announcements/

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NASA, NSF Take Hits in House Budget

Monday, July 26, 2004

It seems discussion on Capital Hill of the burgeoning federal deficit is loudest when the House, Senate or Administration considers the VA, HUD and Independent Agencies appropriations bill. Perhaps the bill always serves as the fall guy because alphabetically it is the last of the 13 appropriations bills Congress considers, then ignores and then hurriedly mushes together with the other unpassed funding bills several months into the new fiscal year.

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Flat CDFI Funding Rare "Highlight" in House VA, HUD, Independent Agencies Bill

Monday, July 26, 2004

In an appropriations bill where cuts are viewed as good news -- compared to the President's request for program termination, that is -- the small Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund could consider itself very lucky after Friday's full House Appropriations Committee mark-up of the VA-HUD and Independent Agencies bill.

  • Read more about Flat CDFI Funding Rare "Highlight" in House VA, HUD, Independent Agencies Bill

Governor's $30.5M New Economy Initiative Funded in Delaware

Monday, July 26, 2004

July has been a tech-friendly month for Delaware Gov. Ruth Ann Minner. On July 14, the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) named her "BIO Governor of the Year," recognizing her contributions toward growing the state's biotechnology industry, one of the strongest concentrations in the country. Further attesting to her grasp of biotech issues, Gov. Minner also serves as a co-chair of the National Governors Association Biotechnology Partnership.

  • Read more about Governor's $30.5M New Economy Initiative Funded in Delaware

House Passes Committee Legislation to Reauthorize MEP

Monday, July 26, 2004

Earlier this month, a Science Committee bill that would reauthorize the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) program and create a more robust manufacturing sector cleared the U.S. House of Representatives.

  • Read more about House Passes Committee Legislation to Reauthorize MEP

South Dakota Dedicates $2.8M to University Research Centers

Monday, July 26, 2004

Gov. Mike Rounds announced last week the creation of four new specialized research centers at the state's public universities. The $2.8 million in awards mark South Dakota's first foray into using university-based research investments as a tool to grow the state's economy, the governor said.

The four 2010 Research Centers are:

  • Read more about South Dakota Dedicates $2.8M to University Research Centers

U.S. Entrepreneurial Activity Increased in 2003, But Job Growth Lags, Study Finds

Monday, July 26, 2004

Encouraging entrepreneurship has been a predominant focus since the recession and jobless recover, but a recent report from one of the country's leading colleges for entrepreneurial education cautions the current wave of new business starts will not cure many job woes.

  • Read more about U.S. Entrepreneurial Activity Increased in 2003, But Job Growth Lags, Study Finds

$40 Million Biotech Commercialization Fund Seeded in Minnesota

Friday, July 27, 2001

One of the few new spending bills to make it through the 2001 session of the Minnesota Legislature provides $10 million in seed money for technology commercialization through a new Biomedical Innovation and Commercialization Initiative (BICI – pronounced beach-ee). The BICI appropriation is contingent upon state economic development officials securing a three-to-one private sector match.



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Ohio Creates Aerospace/Defense Advisory Council

Friday, July 27, 2001

Ohio Governor Bob Taft last week signed legislation creating the Ohio Aerospace and Defense Council to examine state and federal laws, rules, and policies that affect the two industries and associated federal installations in Ohio. Ohio is home to Wright Patterson Air Force Base, the state’s largest single-site employer, and the NASA Glen Research Center in Cleveland.



Six objectives are to be addressed by the council:

  • Read more about Ohio Creates Aerospace/Defense Advisory Council

Southeastern PA To Map Nanotechnology Assets

Friday, July 27, 2001

The Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern Pennsylvania has issued a Request for Proposals to develop an asset-mapping study of the nanotechnology sector in the four-state Philadelphia Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area.



  • Read more about Southeastern PA To Map Nanotechnology Assets

Rhode Island Tech Council Assessing IT Industry Needs

Friday, July 27, 2001

The Rhode Island Technology Council (RITEC) is launching a benchmarking survey this week of the state’s information technology (IT) industry to determine how the council and state economic development organizations can be most effective at addressing the sector’s needs in light of the continued restructuring of the national IT industry.

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Is Government Policy to Blame for S&E Worker Shortage?

Friday, July 27, 2001

Brain drains and a lack of technically skilled workers, both scientists and engineers, are commonly heard complaints of state and local tech-based economic development practitioners across the country. But are federal and state innovation policies part of the problem? Paul M. Romer, of the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University, says yes in Should the Government Subsidize Supply or Demand of in the Market for Scientists and Engineers?



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'Wanted: Women in Science and Engineering,' Report Says

Friday, July 20, 2001

Women made significant progress in the sciences over the last two decades, but gains have stalled — and in some cases eroded — in engineering and computer sciences, according to a report released Tuesday by the National Council for Research on Women (NCRW). The downturn comes despite effective new programs to increase women's participation in these fields. 

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Study Finds Public Support of Basic Research Pays Off

Friday, July 20, 2001

With federal support for the National Institues of Health increasing substantially each year -- to the point now that NIH supports more than 50 percent of the federal basic research budget -- and some states directing millions of dollars each year into health and biotechnology research, one might stop to ask: is it worth it?

  • Read more about Study Finds Public Support of Basic Research Pays Off

Gov. Ridge to Keynote SSTI’s Fifth Annual Conference

Friday, July 20, 2001

Pennsylvania Governor Tom Ridge will deliver the keynote address at Creating Opportunity: Tools for Building Tech-Based Economies, SSTI’s Fifth Annual Conference, which will be held September 19-21, 2001 at the Omni William Penn in Pittsburgh. 



  • Read more about Gov. Ridge to Keynote SSTI’s Fifth Annual Conference

State & Local Tech-based ED Round Up

Friday, July 20, 2001

Albany, New York 

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Useful Stats: 1999 Federal R&D Obligations by State

Friday, July 20, 2001

The National Science Foundation has released Federal Funds for Research and Development: Fiscal Years 1999, 2000, and 2001, Vol. 49, presenting 111 detailed statistical tables. 



  • Read more about Useful Stats: 1999 Federal R&D Obligations by State

People

Friday, July 20, 2001

George Atkinson is taking a year-long leave of absence from his position as a professor in chemistry and optical sciences at the University of Arizona to serve as the first American Institute of Physics science fellow at the U.S. State Department. 



  • Read more about People

People

Friday, July 20, 2001

George Atkinson is taking a year-long leave of absence from his position as a professor in chemistry and optical sciences at the University of Arizona to serve as the first American Institute of Physics science fellow at the U.S. State Department.&nbsp

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Recent news from the SSTI Digest

Compromise on SBIR reauthorization released; Congressional votes expected soon

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

It has been five long, dark months for the nation’s small innovation-focused businesses and the regional innovation systems that rely on them for their strongest startups and future leaders, but a ray of light appeared Wednesday afternoon as a compromise was announced on the stalled reauthorization of the federal SBIR/STTR programs. And, if passed as written, we won’t have to go through this again until September 2031, which shifts future debate until an off-election year.

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Overview of governors’ State of the State & Budget addresses

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

As we come to the end of February, more than half of the governors have either delivered their 2026 State of the State, their Fiscal Year (FY) 2027 Budget addresses, or a combination of the two, laying out their priorities for the coming year. With forecasted revenues for many states tightening, many governors and lawmakers, with a few exceptions, offer cautious or constrained funding priorities and proposed initiatives. 

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Recent Research: Startups with higher scientific orientations face VC funding challenges

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

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