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Useful Stats: State Business Churning Statistics, 2004

Monday, April 10, 2006

Using data from the Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy, SSTI has prepared a table presenting business churning statistics and rankings for all 50 states and the District of Columbia for 2004. Business churning, a measure of new firm births and existing firm deaths as a share of total firms (small businesses with employees), is seen as a major driver of innovation and growth.

  • Read more about Useful Stats: State Business Churning Statistics, 2004

Brookings Looks at TBED Outside the Techpoles

Friday, October 10, 2003

Ask most state and local technology-based economic development (TBED) professionals what they are trying to accomplish in their community or region and the majority will probably draw on a few of the well-known high tech centers of the country for examples. Many books, studies and reports have scrutinized the success of Silicon Valley, Boston, Seattle, Austin, etc.

  • Read more about Brookings Looks at TBED Outside the Techpoles

Illinois Governor Regionalizes ED Efforts

Friday, October 10, 2003

In mid-September, Governor Rod R. Blagojevich unveiled a new approach to economic development in Illinois– regionalism. While several other states currently use or have explored a regionalized approach to delivering state economic development services, the concept is new for Illinois.

  • Read more about Illinois Governor Regionalizes ED Efforts

Report Highlights Principles to Guide North Carolina’s New Economy

Friday, October 10, 2003

At a time when North Carolina is experiencing record-setting layoffs, the dot-com bubble has burst, and traditional industries are undergoing critical changes, North Carolina needs a cohesive, bipartisan economic development strategy that embraces the dynamics underlying the new economy, according to a new report issued by the Institute for Emerging Issues.

  • Read more about Report Highlights Principles to Guide North Carolina’s New Economy

NSF Awards $68M for New Engineering Centers

Friday, October 10, 2003

Storm prediction, extreme ultraviolet light, clean chemical manufacturing, and implantable electronics for treating incurable diseases — all of the above will be tackled by four new Engineering Research Centers (ERCs) created by the National Science Foundation (NSF) last week. The new centers will receive a $68 million from NSF over the next five years.

  • Read more about NSF Awards $68M for New Engineering Centers

Collaboration Critical to Recent Local TBED Initiatives

Friday, October 10, 2003

Arizona Universities Partner to Create Joint Biomedical Campus

  • Read more about Collaboration Critical to Recent Local TBED Initiatives

Despite Downturn, Industry R&D Holds Steady in 2001

Friday, October 10, 2003

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has given us the first peek at the results of the 2001 survey of industrial research and development expenditures and, while the news is better than expected given the economy, the first figures provide further evidence of the struggles of the U.S. manufacturing base. Issue Brief 04-301, U.S.

  • Read more about Despite Downturn, Industry R&D Holds Steady in 2001

Job Opportunity with the ModForum

Friday, October 10, 2003

The Modernization Forum seeks qualified candidates to serve as a project manager for a one-year position. The manager will plan, staff and facilitate research involving focus groups, phone and mail surveys, and secondary resources related to small manufacturing and the economy. The manager will work in collaboration with contracting organization as part of a highly qualified research team.

  • Read more about Job Opportunity with the ModForum

Next Digest Oct. 31; SSTI Offices Closed to Attend Annual Conference

Friday, October 10, 2003

The SSTI Weekly Digest and Funding Supplement will resume publicaton October 31 as the office will be closed to attend SSTI's 7th Annual Conference, Building Tech-based Economies: From Policies to Practice, on Oct. 20-22.

  • Read more about Next Digest Oct. 31; SSTI Offices Closed to Attend Annual Conference

People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Team Northeast Ohio has picked Texan Robert Farley for its first executive director.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Holmes Foster, chairman of the Iowa Values Fund, has announced his resignation.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Tony Jeff has been selected to serve as executive director of the Manufacturing Extension Partnership of Mississippi.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney appointed Kathy Kottarodis to serve as the state’s first small business advocate. Kottarodis had been director of small business and entrepreneurship within the state’s office of business and technology.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Dan Lohymeyer has stepped down as president of Ohio's IT Alliance.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology has promoted Dan Mills to vice president for regional operations.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 10, 2003

The new executive director of the Center for Regional Economic Issues is Edward Morrison.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Paul Ray has left his position as director of the Colorado Office of Life Sciences and Biotechnology.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

The University of California, San Diego's CONNECT program will begin a search for a new director since Fred Cutler's resignation at the end of September.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Indiana Governor Joe Kernan has nominated Katherine Lyon Davis to serve as Lieutenant Governor. Among her past positions, Davis served as manager of Indiana's 21st Century Research and Technology Fund in 1999.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Julian Manly Earls is the new director of the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Bill Shipp, president of Bechtel BWXT Idaho and lab director of the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, is retiring effective Oct. 25. Paul Divjak will be his replacement.

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Kansas City Prepares Life Sciences Primer

Friday, October 10, 2003

A group of Kansas City bi-state community development organizations, led by KCCatalyst and the Kansas City Area Life Sciences Institute (KCALSI), released a report Friday that illustrates Kansas City’s bi-state life sciences initiative and lays out how the region can become a national and global center for life sciences research and commercialization.

  • Read more about Kansas City Prepares Life Sciences Primer

People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Jennifer Alexander is the new president of the Greater Madison Chamber of Commerce.

Dr. George C. Atkinson has been appointed Science and Technology Adviser to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of State.

The first director for the new Indiana Venture Center will be Steve Beck.

  • Read more about People

People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Jennifer Alexander is the new president of the Greater Madison Chamber of Commerce.

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People

Friday, October 10, 2003

Dr. George C. Atkinson has been appointed Science and Technology Adviser to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of State.

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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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With OZ expansion looming, research shows program has little net jobs impact

Thursday, March 26, 2026
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. 
IAC
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