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Displaying 7526 - 7550 of 9254
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State & Local Tech-based ED RoundUp

Friday, June 21, 2002

Albuquerque, New Mexico

Tenants of the Sante Fe Business Incubator have seen their one-story building increase from 10,000 sq. ft. to 30,000 sq. ft., according to a story by the Albuquerque Journal. The expansion is part of a $2.5 million project funded by the federal Economic Development Administration (EDA), the Regional Development Corporation and other agencies.

  • Read more about State & Local Tech-based ED RoundUp

Recent Research: Will Nanotech Be the Next Seed of Technology Growth?

Monday, March 28, 2005

Nearly every university and community seeks to cultivate a niche in new technologies ­ nurturing venture capital, technology transfer and knowledge networks. Many policies have focused on biotechnology as the kernel of future economic development. Meanwhile, budding nanotechnology has started to show its first blooms in the commercial sector.

  • Read more about Recent Research: Will Nanotech Be the Next Seed of Technology Growth?

Hawaii Lawmakers Pass Two Bills to Encourage VC Investment

Monday, March 28, 2005

To encourage investment in high tech companies, the Hawaii Senate recently passed Senate Bill 1695, authorizing $120 million for the State Private Investment Fund (SPIF) and Senate Bill 1696 to allow fiduciaries to make equity investments.

  • Read more about Hawaii Lawmakers Pass Two Bills to Encourage VC Investment

Changing Mindset Critical for Arizona Bioscience Success, Study Advises

Monday, March 28, 2005

Arizona must begin viewing medical and educational institutions as a major economic driver of the state economy in order to become a leader in the biosciences industry, according to a new report from the Arizona Board of Regents.

  • Read more about Changing Mindset Critical for Arizona Bioscience Success, Study Advises

SW Virginia Study Identifies Challenges to Growth for Small Metros

Monday, March 28, 2005

While some regional assessments attempt to benchmark economic indicators of smaller regions to those of notable accomplishment such as Silicon Valley or Research Triangle Park, a new study from the Center for Regional Strategies at Virginia Tech compares regions with similar economic and demographic characteristics, a potentially more useful model for other metro areas.

  • Read more about SW Virginia Study Identifies Challenges to Growth for Small Metros

Useful Stats: S&E Grad Students & Post-Docs by State, 2002

Monday, March 28, 2005

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has released Graduate Students and Postdoctorates in Science and Engineering: Fall 2002, a collection of 54 statistical tables presenting the distribution of graduate students in science and engineering (S&E) across population segments, fields of science or engineering, and by college and state. Overall long-term trends for S&E graduate students from 1975 to 2002 and short-term trends from 1995 to 2002 by detailed fields are presented as well.

  • Read more about Useful Stats: S&E Grad Students & Post-Docs by State, 2002

TBED Organizations & People Update

Monday, March 28, 2005

Jerry Lonergan, president of Kansas, Inc., is resigning effective April 1. A bill to dissolve the state's policy and planning organization passed the Kansas Senate last week.

  • Read more about TBED Organizations & People Update

PPI Releases 2002 State New Economy Index

Friday, June 14, 2002

One of the most widely used barometers of states' relative positions in technology-based economies has been updated and expanded. The 2002 State New Economy Index: Benchmarking Economic Transformation in the States, published by the Progressive Policy Institute's Technology and New Economy Project (PPI) and released online this week, offers an innovation-oriented public policy framework for the states to foster success in the New Economy.

  • Read more about PPI Releases 2002 State New Economy Index

Maine Voters Approve $35 Million in Tech-based ED Bonds

Friday, June 14, 2002

The results of Tuesday's primary election in Maine reveal the state's voters continue to be committed to improving their economy through technology-based economic development. Winning approval at the ballot was Question 2, allocating $35 million in bond revenues for 11 specific projects - a majority of which were tied directly to research and technology-based economic development.

  • Read more about Maine Voters Approve $35 Million in Tech-based ED Bonds

Illinois Creates $60 Million Tech VC Fund

Friday, June 14, 2002

The Illinois General Assembly has passed legislation to encourage venture capital investment in technology businesses across the state. HB3212 creates the Technology Development Fund, which permits the State Treasurer to use up to 1 percent of the state's total investment portfolio for equity investments through Illinois venture capital firms.

  • Read more about Illinois Creates $60 Million Tech VC Fund

Ontario Launches $51 Million Biotech Strategy

Friday, June 14, 2002

Canada already has seen its number of biotech firms grow from 227 in 1997 to 400 in 2000, second only to the U.S. in biotech concentration. Last week's announcement of a $51 million (Canadian) biotechnology strategy is intended to further strengthen the Ontario's position in health research and commercialization.

  • Read more about Ontario Launches $51 Million Biotech Strategy

Report Defines, Identifies Leading U.S. Biotech Centers

Friday, June 14, 2002

Nine metropolitan areas have been identified as the nation's possessing the greatest concentration of the U.S. biotechnology industry in a new Brookings Institution report entitled Signs of Life: The Growth of Biotechnology Centers in the U.S.

  • Read more about Report Defines, Identifies Leading U.S. Biotech Centers

Lilly Foundation Commits Another $138M for Indiana Higher Ed

Friday, June 14, 2002

Few private foundations across the country have made a comparable commitment in size or duration toward improving a single state's ability to participate in a knowledge-based economy as the Lilly Foundation has for Indiana. The latest round, reported in this week's online Chronicle of Higher Education, promises a total of $138 million to match donations received by Indiana's accredited colleges and universities.

  • Read more about Lilly Foundation Commits Another $138M for Indiana Higher Ed

Useful Stats: 2002 Federal S&E Obligations with Universities, by State

Monday, March 21, 2005

The National Science Foundation has released its report on Federal Science and Engineering (S&E) Support to Universities, Colleges and Nonprofit Institutions for Fiscal Year 2002, revealing the government distributed nearly $24.4 billion to the nation's research institutions during the year. The figure is 8.5 percent higher higher than the FY 2001 total of $22.5 billion.

  • Read more about Useful Stats: 2002 Federal S&E Obligations with Universities, by State

Congressional Actions Challenge Economic Development Revamp

Monday, March 21, 2005

The fate of the Advanced Technology Program and the Administration's entire reorganization of federal economic development efforts also took hits, as parts of a series of Congressional votes on the budget. However, these votes are only the first step in a along budget process.

Senate Saves CDBG with Coleman Amendment

  • Read more about Congressional Actions Challenge Economic Development Revamp

ATP Strikes Out in House, Gets On Base with Senate

Monday, March 21, 2005

With Opening Day less than two weeks away, a baseball analogy is only fitting to suggest NIST's Advanced Technology Program (ATP) is in for a long season. Since 1990, ATP has provided early-stage funding for 768 projects to accelerate the development of innovative technologies that promise significant commercial payoffs and widespread benefits.

  • Read more about ATP Strikes Out in House, Gets On Base with Senate

Massachusetts Launches Tech Commercialization Awards

Monday, March 21, 2005

Sometimes a little money is all that may be required to discover that an innovation in the lab is worth millions in the marketplace. At least that's the goal of a small grant program launched this afternoon by the Massachusetts Technology Transfer Center (MTTC). The MTTC Tech Commercialization Awards will provide $5,000 mini-grants for technology assessments and investigations by academic and industrial researchers within the Commonwealth.

  • Read more about Massachusetts Launches Tech Commercialization Awards

Wisconsin University System Joins Consortium to Compete for Defense R&D Funds

Monday, March 21, 2005

As trends in federal funding priorities shift from domestic R&D to defense-related R&D, universities are scrambling to get their piece of the pie. The president's fiscal year 2006 budget request for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) includes increased funding of 6.6 percent over the fiscal year 2005 appropriation (see the Feb. 14 issue of the Digest).

  • Read more about Wisconsin University System Joins Consortium to Compete for Defense R&D Funds

North Carolina Unveils Plans for Defense Related Business Incubator

Monday, March 21, 2005

The rapid increase in federal spending for defense and homeland security has led a number of states to establish initiatives targeting potential economic development from these activities. North Carolina becomes the latest of those states, with its proposed Defense Technology Innovation Center.

  • Read more about North Carolina Unveils Plans for Defense Related Business Incubator

Broadband 'Master Plan' Unveiled for Rural New Hampshire

Monday, March 21, 2005

Broadband access is considered by most to be a key ingredient for encouraging innovation and building a local tech-based economy. Access for many rural areas, however, remains geographically or financially out of reach. Earlier this month, the New Hampshire Rural Development Council (NHRDC) unveiled a plan to change that for the businesses, government and individuals in the northern portion of the Granite State.

  • Read more about Broadband 'Master Plan' Unveiled for Rural New Hampshire

More Undergraduates Fit "Nontraditional" Profile, NCES Report Shows

Friday, June 7, 2002

The U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has released its annual progress report on education, The Condition of Education 2002, presenting 44 indicators on the conditions and trends in elementary, secondary and postsecondary education. In one of two special analyses, the report focuses on the experience of nontraditional college students, who comprise the majority of college students today.

  • Read more about More Undergraduates Fit "Nontraditional" Profile, NCES Report Shows

New Hampshire Lays Out Local Potential for Biotech

Friday, June 7, 2002

Besides supporting life science research in universities, one of the other key areas states and communities are using to encourage the growth of a local biotech industry is by supporting an increase in the availability of wet lab and other biotech facilities. Biotech space, however, is extremely expensive compared to other traditional tech incubator facilities for a variety of reasons (design, HVAC, environmental, security, regulatory, etc.)

  • Read more about New Hampshire Lays Out Local Potential for Biotech

State Fiscal Crisis Gets Uglier

Friday, June 7, 2002

Christmas or Hanukkah for state coffers usually comes in April as taxpayers rush to meet the deadline for filing personal tax returns. Unfortunately, according to the latest survey released by the National Conference of State Legislatures this week, State Fiscal Update-June 2002, states collected $8.6 billion less in individual tax collections this April than a year ago. Much of the drop — 21 percent overall — came in final income tax payments, which fell nearly 29 percent compared to last year.

  • Read more about State Fiscal Crisis Gets Uglier

Study Finds Increasing Women Engineers Depends on School, Peer Support

Friday, June 7, 2002

Comprising a majority of the U.S. workforce, women make up only 8.5 percent of the nation's engineers. A number of programs have been launched over the past decade to recruit more women into the field, and while women now represent 20 percent of all engineering students, women remain more likely than men to switch out of the field, particularly in the first two years of college, concludes a recently released study.

  • Read more about Study Finds Increasing Women Engineers Depends on School, Peer Support

TBED Programs Changing with the Times

Friday, June 7, 2002

Economic downturns have a way of encouraging states, universities and communities to assess, refine and re-invigorate their strategies to promote growth and prosperity. The current recession is no exception. With the widely recognized roles played by science and technology in economic success, the news of changes and additions to tech-based economic development strategies from across the country is not too surprising. Here are some recent highlights:

  • Read more about TBED Programs Changing with the Times

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Innovation Advocacy Council visits the Hill on your behalf

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