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Southern Growth Outlines Steps to Rural Prosperity

Monday, July 11, 2005

Building high-quality communities is the underpinning of long-term economic development, suggests new Southern Growth Policies Board research.

  • Read more about Southern Growth Outlines Steps to Rural Prosperity

EAST Initiative Seeks President/CEO

Monday, July 11, 2005

The Board of Directors of the EAST (Environmental And Spatial Technology) Initiative invites applications for the position of President/Chief Executive Officer. The EAST model, a result of a collaboration between business and education, is intended to provide K-16 students with access to resources not available in the traditional educational setting.

  • Read more about EAST Initiative Seeks President/CEO

SSTI's 9th Annual Conference: Avoiding the End-of-Summer Blues

Monday, July 11, 2005

Your kids may not be bored of summer yet, but if you're an avid bird watcher, you know the season has already changed to fall as Yellow Warblers and several species of shorebirds begin their migrations south by July 4.

  • Read more about SSTI's 9th Annual Conference: Avoiding the End-of-Summer Blues

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.

  • Read more about Central Tennessee Gets New Life Science Campus

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.

  • Read more about NCOE Report Provides Policymakers with a New Vision of the Economy

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.

  • Read more about Information Technology and the Labor Market

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.

  • Read more about Tech-based ED RoundUp: New Beginnings

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.

  • Read more about NASA Funds Workforce Development Projects

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.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 18, 2002

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

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 18, 2002

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.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Dennis Lower of the Biomedical Research Foundation of Northwest Louisiana is the new leader of the Louisiana Economic Development Council.

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People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Judy McKinney-Cherry is the new director of the Delaware Economic Development Office.

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People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Carl Russell has resigned as president and CEO of Tucson Technology Incubator Inc. Bo Statham, a consultant to UniSource Energy Corp. on new business development and a client adviser at the incubator, has been named interim president.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Dr. Melvyn Schiavelli, senior program officer for the Harrisburg Polytechnic Development Corporation, has been named acting president and CEO, succeeding Dr. Charles Clevenger.

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People

Friday, October 18, 2002

Lt. Gov. Gary Sherrer has left his position as secretary of the Kansas Department of Commerce and Housing to become executive vice president with GoldBanc Corp. Sherry Brown, who had retired from the department, will return to serve as interim secretary.

  • Read more about People

NSF Issues 24 Math and Science Partnership Awards

Friday, October 11, 2002

The National Science Foundation (NSF) recently announced 24 awards under the new Math and Science Partnership (MSP) Program — an anticipated investment of $240 million over five years in projects to improve the achievement of K-12 students in science and mathematics. The Department of Education is an NSF partner in this effort, co-funding two projects involving state education agencies.

  • Read more about NSF Issues 24 Math and Science Partnership Awards

EDA Gives $442.5K to Innovation Philadelphia for Economic Development

Friday, October 11, 2002

Innovation Philadelphia (IP), the public-private partnership dedicated to enhancing the global innovation economy of Philadelphia through technological leadership, received on Monday a $442,500 investment from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration.

  • Read more about EDA Gives $442.5K to Innovation Philadelphia for Economic Development

State Fiscal Crises: Lessons For The Future

Friday, October 11, 2002

Leslie McGranahan, in Unprepared for Boom or Bust: Understanding the Current State Fiscal Crisis, highlights the problems that are inherent in state policy when dealing with the cyclical behavior of the economy.

  • Read more about State Fiscal Crises: Lessons For The Future

NASA Selects Corporation to Lead Innovative Research Institute

Friday, October 11, 2002

NASA has announced the Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA, will team with the National Institute of Aerospace Associates (NIAA), Reston, VA, to create the National Institute of Aerospace (NIA) to perform aerospace and atmospheric research, develop new technologies for the nation and help inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers.

  • Read more about NASA Selects Corporation to Lead Innovative Research Institute

Understanding the Impact of University R&D on Local ED

Friday, October 11, 2002

Universities and the investment they pour into R&D are "major factors" that contribute to a region's economic growth, concludes a recent report funded by the Ewing Marion Kaufman Foundation, NCOE and the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). The report's results show the growth occurs in less time than traditionally has been noted and that small firms innovate at a rate almost twice that of large firms.

  • Read more about Understanding the Impact of University R&D on Local ED

Encouraging Entrepreneurship in a Down Economy

Friday, October 11, 2002

The continuing layoffs of thousands of workers, particularly in the information and communication tech sectors, creates significant hardships for the affected local and regional economies. For instance, a recent Federal Reserve Bank report noted office vacancy rates in Silicon Valley hovering around 40 percent.

  • Read more about Encouraging Entrepreneurship in a Down Economy

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Pew finds partisanship growing in American support for science

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In the 30 years SSTI has been in existence and the 85 years of concerted federal focus on scientific discover and innovation, the priority of public-private R&D investment has been overwhelmingly nonpartisan. A recent report from the Pew Research Center confirms the cold-war, global competitiveness arguments for U.S science and technology still hold sway across political parties, but fissures in who should pay and who should work on science and tech efforts are beginning to grow. 

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Disruption is echoing in empty university halls

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Vacant storefronts and empty downtown office buildings aren’t the only ways the pandemic-accelerated, technology-stimulated move to remote work has negatively impacted community cohesiveness, commitment to place, and economic opportunity resulting from aggregation. According to a newly released analysis of university campuses, the disconnection and under-utilization problem extends deeper into regions than many may realize. 

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