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Legislative S&T Position Available

Friday, December 4, 1998

The Michigan Legislative Service Bureau has an opening for a Science Research Analyst. Duties include researching scientific and technical topics of interest to the Michigan legislature and analyzing the technical accuracy of legislation. Applications for the position are due by December 18. The complete job posting is available on the SSTI website at http://www.ssti.org.

  • Read more about Legislative S&T Position Available

Publisher's Note: Digest Change in January

Friday, December 4, 1998

To continue to bring you the SSTI Weekly Digest, we will offer the Digest only through paid subscriptions, effective January 8, 1999.

  • Read more about Publisher's Note: Digest Change in January

Massachusetts Technology Collaborative Releases Innovation Index

Friday, November 27, 1998

The Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC) released its second annual Index of the Massachusetts Innovation Economy earlier this month. The report tracks 31 performance indicators and explores the implications of each indicator on the long-term growth and stability of the Massachusetts economy.

  • Read more about Massachusetts Technology Collaborative Releases Innovation Index

ATP Correction & Notice of Proposers' Conferences

Friday, November 27, 1998

The November 20 SSTI Weekly Digest article on the current Advanced Technology Program (ATP) competition should have stated the following information on ATP's indirect cost policy:

  • Read more about ATP Correction & Notice of Proposers' Conferences

NSF Invests $10 Million in New Engineering Research Centers

Friday, November 20, 1998

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has invested $10 million to fund the first year of new Engineering Research Centers (ERCs) in Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, South Carolina and Virginia. Each of the five centers will receive $2 million in the first year from the NSF, leveraged by support from industry, state governments and partnering universities. NSF will support the centers for five years, after which the support agreement is subject to renewal.

  • Read more about NSF Invests $10 Million in New Engineering Research Centers

1998 Venture Capital Investments Continue to Increase

Friday, November 20, 1998

PricewaterhouseCoopers recently announced that venture capital investments in the third quarter of 1998 set an all-time high of $3.77 billion, just slightly above the previous record of $3.73 billion set last quarter despite the current stock market turmoil. Compared to the third quarter of 1997, investments increased 29% over the $2.92 billion reported one year ago.

  • Read more about 1998 Venture Capital Investments Continue to Increase

Brandinger Resigns; NJ Seeks Executive Director

Friday, November 20, 1998

The long-time executive director of the New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology, Jay Brandinger, recently announced his decision to resign as Executive Director of the New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology. Consequently, the Commission is seeking an Executive Director.

  • Read more about Brandinger Resigns; NJ Seeks Executive Director

RESEARCH AND EXPERIMENTATION TAX CREDIT EXTENDED

Friday, November 6, 1998

The omnibus spending bill signed into law last week also includes extensions of several tax credits, including the Research and Experimentation Tax Credit which expired on June 30 of this year. The R&E Tax Credit is now in effect, retroactively, for the period from July 1, 1998, to June 30, 1999.

  • Read more about RESEARCH AND EXPERIMENTATION TAX CREDIT EXTENDED

ELECTION `98 WRAP-UP: TECH ISSUES PASS, 13 NEW GOVERNORS ELECTED

Friday, November 6, 1998

Maine and Oklahoma voters both approved ballot initiatives designed to encourage technology-based economic development, while voters in other states elected 13 new governors. Eight legislative chambers also switched control.

  • Read more about ELECTION `98 WRAP-UP: TECH ISSUES PASS, 13 NEW GOVERNORS ELECTED

GAO REPORTS DOE LACKS EFFECTIVE STRATEGY FOR IMPLEMENTING LAB REFORMS

Friday, October 30, 1998

The Department of Energy has been unable to demonstrate that it can effectively manage the reform of its national laboratory system, the General Accounting Office (GAO) says in a new report. Consequently, GAO recommends that Congress consider alternatives to the present relationship between DOE and the laboratories. In response to on-going congressional concerns about DOE’s progress in making systemic changes, GAO evaluators were asked to:

  • Read more about GAO REPORTS DOE LACKS EFFECTIVE STRATEGY FOR IMPLEMENTING LAB REFORMS

CALIFORNIA MAY EXPAND RTA NETWORK

Friday, October 30, 1998

California is considering expanding its network of Regional Technology Alliances (RTA), which is a component of the Goldstrike Partnership. The Goldstrike Partnership, a program of the California Trade and Commerce Agency's Office of Strategic Technology (OST), supports the development, application, and commercialization of technology to create jobs, respond to industry changes, and foster competitiveness.

  • Read more about CALIFORNIA MAY EXPAND RTA NETWORK

MANUFACTURING EXTENSION PROGRAM CITES ACCOMPLISHMENTS, LOOKS TO FUTURE

Friday, October 23, 1998

Nearly 70,000 manufacturers received services from the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) from July 1995 through December 1997, according to a new report released by MEP.

  • Read more about MANUFACTURING EXTENSION PROGRAM CITES ACCOMPLISHMENTS, LOOKS TO FUTURE

OKLAHOMA VOTERS TO DECIDE TECH TRANSFER ACTIVITIES

Friday, October 23, 1998

Two of the state-wide issues Oklahomans will decide on November 3 would allow major changes in the way the state conducts technology transfer activities. The purpose of the initiatives is to promote the commercialization of university research and support university innovation.

  • Read more about OKLAHOMA VOTERS TO DECIDE TECH TRANSFER ACTIVITIES

Report Says U.S. Still Leader in Innovation but no Room for Complacency

Friday, October 9, 1998

A new report issued by the Council on Competitiveness maintains that the U.S. must have a strong, sustained commitment to investment in science and technology to maintain its global competitiveness. In Going Global: The New Shape of American Innovation, the Council focuses on support for basic research, the need for a skilled talent pool, and favorable legal, regulatory and accounting rules to promote U.S. innovation as three key factors for innovation.

  • Read more about Report Says U.S. Still Leader in Innovation but no Room for Complacency

MAINE RESIDENTS TO VOTE ON BOND ISSUE

Friday, October 9, 1998

Mainers will vote on Election Day on a research and development bond issue that if passed would allocate $20 million to improve the Maine economy by supporting innovative research and development in the fields of biotechnology, computers and other information technology, aquiculture and marine technology, forestry and agriculture, and advanced materials.

If passed, funding from the bond issue would be allocated to the following:

  • Read more about MAINE RESIDENTS TO VOTE ON BOND ISSUE

FELLOWSHIP POSITIONS AVAILABLE:

Friday, October 9, 1998

Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships announces a competition for U.S. citizens in leadership positions with significant professional experience (10-20 years) for Fellowships to:

  • Read more about FELLOWSHIP POSITIONS AVAILABLE:

CONGRESSIONAL SCIENCE POLICY STUDY CALLS FOR INCREASED STATE-BASED PARTNERSHIPS

Friday, October 2, 1998

"State-based organizations have considerable advantages over the federal government in assisting in the commercial development of new technologies including their proximity to the firms that will actually employ new technologies, their close relationships with local university systems, and their ability to focus their efforts," says an extensive policy study recently completed by the U.S. House Science Committee.

  • Read more about CONGRESSIONAL SCIENCE POLICY STUDY CALLS FOR INCREASED STATE-BASED PARTNERSHIPS

COMMENTS SOUGHT ON PROPOSED CHANGES TO ATP SELECTION CRITERIA

Friday, October 2, 1998

The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s (NIST) Advanced Technology Program (ATP) has issued a request for public comment on several changes to ATP rules.

  • Read more about COMMENTS SOUGHT ON PROPOSED CHANGES TO ATP SELECTION CRITERIA

SSTI CONFERENCE A SUCCESS

Friday, October 2, 1998

The State Science and Technology Institute 1998 Annual Conference, "Science & Technology Programs: Catalysts for Economic Growth," was a success with over 100 S&T professionals from 30 states and the District of Columbia attending. The conference, which was held in

  • Read more about SSTI CONFERENCE A SUCCESS

MORE THAN $3 BILLION SPENT BY STATES ON R&D

Friday, September 25, 1998

States spent more than $3 billion on research and development in fiscal year 1995, according to a new National Science Foundation-funded report. The report, the most thorough study ever undertaken of state government R&D expenditures, was conducted by Battelle and the State Science and Technology Institute.

  • Read more about MORE THAN $3 BILLION SPENT BY STATES ON R&D

ADMINISTRATION SEEKS GREATER DIVERSITY IN TECHNOLOGY WORKFORCE

Friday, September 18, 1998

Last week President Clinton called on the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy’s National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) to develop recommendations for achieving greater diversity in the United States’ scientific and technical work force.  By 2010, approximately half of America's school-age population will be from minority groups. As stated by the White House, minority participation in science and engineering careers should keep pace with this growing diversity.

  • Read more about ADMINISTRATION SEEKS GREATER DIVERSITY IN TECHNOLOGY WORKFORCE

VIRGINIA SELECTS THREE NEW CENTERS

Friday, September 18, 1998

Innovative manufacturing, plasma and photon processing, and Internet technology will be the focus of three new Centers of Excellence in Virginia. The Commonwealth of Virginia and Virginia’s Center for Innovative Technology (CIT) recently announced the selection of these three new Centers as the second-generation of CIT’s Technology Development Centers program.

  • Read more about VIRGINIA SELECTS THREE NEW CENTERS

CONNECTICUT ALLOCATES $30 MILLION TO BUILD BIOTECH LAB SPACE

Friday, September 11, 1998

Connecticut Innovations, Inc. recently allocated $20 million of new state funds and $10 million of its own funds to develop biotechnology laboratory space in Connecticut. Connecticut Innovations’ new facilities fund can be administered using a variety of investment vehicles. The fund may offer loan or lease guarantees, enhancing the credit of companies that would not otherwise be able to qualify for leases.

  • Read more about CONNECTICUT ALLOCATES $30 MILLION TO BUILD BIOTECH LAB SPACE

HIGH-TECH INDUSTRIES DRIVING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ACTIVITY

Friday, September 11, 1998

Four industries (aerospace, computers and office machinery, electronics and communications equipment, and pharmaceuticals) are growing at a rate more than twice as fast as other manufactured goods,  thereby driving national economic growth around the world, according  to a National Science Foundation (NSF) Issue Brief, High-Tech Industries Drive Global Economic Activity (NSF 98-319).

  • Read more about HIGH-TECH INDUSTRIES DRIVING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ACTIVITY

EPSCoT UPDATE

Friday, September 11, 1998

The first round of applications for the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Technology (EPSCoT) have been submitted. Eighteen of the nineteen eligible states participated, either by submitting single-state applications or by collaborating with others to produce multi-state applications. In all, 25 applications were received, requesting over $9.4 million in funding.

  • Read more about EPSCoT UPDATE

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