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Best Practices for Biotech Assistance to be Explored

Friday, February 4, 2000

Cincinnati and St. Louis are partnering to hold a three-day symposium to examine best practices in biotechnology-based economic development. Growing the Life Science Industry will be held March 1-3 at the Kingsgate Conference Center on the University of Cincinnati Medical Campus. Speakers from a dozen states will share their regions' approaches for life science economic development.

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Tackling the Digital Divide. . . and S&T Worker Preparedness

Friday, January 28, 2000

Activities to address the digital divide and the S&T workforce shortage have increased recently. The following are a sampling of efforts underway to understand and address the growing inequalities in technology access and assimilation.

  • Read more about Tackling the Digital Divide. . . and S&T Worker Preparedness

Tackling the Digital Divide. . . and S&T Worker Preparedness

Friday, January 28, 2000

The National Academy Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit organization, and President Clinton have announced the selection of 12 public high schools to pilot the Academy of Information Technology program. The program is intended to prepare predominantly at-risk high school students for careers in information technology fields. The program will provide a ninth-through-twelfth-grade curriculum with opportunities to partner with community colleges, universities, and businesses.

  • Read more about Tackling the Digital Divide. . . and S&T Worker Preparedness

People

Monday, June 13, 2005

John Hanak is the new director of the Purdue Technology Center of Northwest Indiana.

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People

Monday, June 13, 2005

President Bush has nominated Dr. William Jeffrey as director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The nomination is subject to Senate confirmation.

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People

Monday, June 13, 2005

Bob Shriver recently resigned as director of the Nevada Commission on Economic Development. Tim Rubald, the commission's director of business development, has been named interim director.

  • Read more about People

Connecticut Commits $100M for Stem CellsMassachusetts Overrides Gov's Stem Cell Veto

Monday, May 30, 2005

Yesterday proved a big day for supporters of stem cell research as measures advanced in both Connecticut and Massachusetts. The Massachusetts law described in the May 16 issue of the Digest became law immediately after the state Senate voted 35-2 and the House voted 112-42 to override Gov. Mitt Romney's veto.

  • Read more about Connecticut Commits $100M for Stem CellsMassachusetts Overrides Gov's Stem Cell Veto

SACI Misses First Cut on House Budget

Monday, May 30, 2005

The Administration's proposal to replace 18 federal programs targeting different elements of community and economic development with a single, smaller program called the Strengthening America's Communities Initiative (SACI) received another blow last week (see the Feb. 14 issue of the Digest for more information on SACI).

  • Read more about SACI Misses First Cut on House Budget

NY S&T Office to Become Public Foundation

Monday, May 30, 2005

New York's lead agency for promoting tech-based economic development (TBED) in the state soon will have a new name, if not a complete makeover. Under enacted budget legislation, the New York Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research (NYSTAR) will become the New York State Foundation for Science, Technology and Innovation by Jan. 1, 2006.

  • Read more about NY S&T Office to Become Public Foundation

Louisiana Business & Technology Center Awarded for Sustained Success

Monday, May 30, 2005

Louisiana State University's Business and Technology Center (LBTC) recently received the National Business Incubation Association's (NBIA) 2005 Randall M. Whaley Incubator of the Year award, recognizing overall excellence in business incubation programs. The award is NBIA's most prestigious honor, presented as a tribute to NBIA's first chairman.

  • Read more about Louisiana Business & Technology Center Awarded for Sustained Success

U.S. Leads World in Nanotech - For Now

Monday, May 30, 2005

The U.S. is currently the global leader in nanotechnology R&D, number of nanotechnology start-up companies, and research output as measured by patents and publications. However, that role is under increasing competitive pressure from other nations, according to an assessment of the multi-agency National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI), which organizes federal nanotechnology research.

  • Read more about U.S. Leads World in Nanotech - For Now

States Commit to Worker Training Programs for Economic Growth

Monday, May 30, 2005

Recognizing the benefits of a skilled workforce to match the new manufacturing and high-tech jobs of the 21st Century, states are turning to worker training and retraining programs in order to remain economically competitive. During the past month, Tennessee, Nebraska and Connecticut committed a combined total of $37 million for worker training initiatives.

  • Read more about States Commit to Worker Training Programs for Economic Growth

Ship Out to Shape Up: Pakistan Sending 15,000 Students Abroad

Monday, May 30, 2005

While many regions, states and countries are lamenting a drain of talent from their area, the Pakistan Higher Education Commission is taking an opposite strategy to strengthen the nation's science and research capacity: sending up to 15,000 of its brightest students to study selected disciplines abroad through its Foreign Ph.D. Scholarship Program.

  • Read more about Ship Out to Shape Up: Pakistan Sending 15,000 Students Abroad

China's Goal: Quadruple GDP by 2020

Monday, May 30, 2005

In the opening ceremony of the 2005 FORTUNE Global Forum, held in Beijing on May 16, Chinese President Hu Jintao broadly outlined the course his country is taking to reach a goal of quadrupling its 2000 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by the year 2020. Science, technology and innovation figure prominently in the strategy.

  • Read more about China's Goal: Quadruple GDP by 2020

Washington Creates $350M Life Science Fund

Monday, May 16, 2005

Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire last week signed a bill creating the Life Sciences Discovery Fund (see the Feb. 7 issue of the Digest).

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The Up and Down of CAPCO Programs

Monday, May 16, 2005

One starts up. Another bites the dust. The Certified Capital Company (CAPCO) Program, a complicated and controversial tool used by some states to encourage venture capital investments, finds its beginnings in one region while seeing its demise in yet another.

  • Read more about The Up and Down of CAPCO Programs

Arizona Angel Capital Tax Credit Passes

Monday, May 16, 2005

Arizona's investment and technology communities are the anticipated winners from the state legislature's recent passage of a tax credit encouraging angel capital investments in start-up Arizona tech firms.

  • Read more about Arizona Angel Capital Tax Credit Passes

Massachusetts Gov. Returns Stem Cell Bill to Legislature

Monday, May 16, 2005

As expected, Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney rejected last week Senate Bill 2039, the bill supporting stem cell research. Exercising a power not enjoyed by all governors, Gov. Romney sent the measure back to the legislature with four amendments for consideration, rather than vetoing the measure.

  • Read more about Massachusetts Gov. Returns Stem Cell Bill to Legislature

ConnectKentucky Unveils Maps to Identify Gaps in Broadband Service

Monday, May 16, 2005

Moving forward with the governor's statewide broadband initiative, the ConnectKentucky Steering Committee and Gov. Ernie Fletcher recently unveiled Phase I Maps to illustrate service gaps and to serve as an economic development resource for communities.

  • Read more about ConnectKentucky Unveils Maps to Identify Gaps in Broadband Service

Rhode Island Going Wireless?

Monday, May 16, 2005

While many states are striving to increase broadband availability (see the Kentucky story above, for example), a Providence-based nonprofit released a study this month promoting the feasibility of making Rhode Island the first entirely networked state for broadband wireless.

  • Read more about Rhode Island Going Wireless?

Task Force Created to Attract VC to Southern Region

Monday, May 16, 2005

The South represents 20 percent of the nation's economic activity but attracts only 9 percent of the total U.S. venture capital invested. In an effort to bring those numbers closer together, the Southern Growth Policies Board recently announced the creation of a multi-state task force dubbed VentureSouth. Virginia Gov.

  • Read more about Task Force Created to Attract VC to Southern Region

Parents' Attitudes Toward Higher Ed May Present Barrier to TBED

Monday, May 16, 2005

Sometimes when people are surrounded by others who share backgrounds, beliefs or opinions, they assume everyone thinks that way -- or should. It is one of the negative side effects or symptoms of the phenomenon known as "group think."

  • Read more about Parents' Attitudes Toward Higher Ed May Present Barrier to TBED

Three for Rural America

Monday, May 16, 2005

Encouraging economic growth in rural America is the topic of a recent report, a new $500 million economic development investment program, and an upcoming conference worth further investigation.

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Useful Stats: State Population Projections Through 2030

Monday, May 16, 2005

A child born in the U.S. today who obtains a master's degree directly after college and high school will have been in the job market for only 1-2 years in 2030. Many people in the tech-based economic development community want that girl or boy to study math, science or engineering. A more basic question, though, is where will that child live as a young adult?

  • Read more about Useful Stats: State Population Projections Through 2030

SSTI 2005 Conference Update

Monday, May 16, 2005

The first conference mailer went to the post office yesterday, but we're too excited to delay announcing that the website for SSTI's 9th Annual Conference is now available to accept registrations and provide preliminary information for the tech-based economic development (TBED) community's premier professional development event of the year. The conference will be held on Oct.

  • Read more about SSTI 2005 Conference Update

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Recent news from SSTI Weekly Digest

Which states stand to benefit the most from the new Opportunity Zone criteria?

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Just 19% of the approximately 25,000 census tracts potentially eligible for Opportunity Zone (OZ) designation are “More likely to attract OZ investment, with larger impact,” per the Urban Institute’s new OZ Designation Tool.1 The majority (68%) of potentially eligible tracts were found to be “Less likely to attract OZ investment,” while the remaining 13% were determined likely to attract capital regardless of OZ designation.

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When disaster strikes, TBED initiatives are focusing on economic and social impacts 

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Disaster relief is not directly within the purview of technology-based economic development organizations. Nonetheless, disasters frequently impact the partners and constituents of TBED organizations and exacerbate the social determinants of economic growth. Therefore, teams of people from TBED organizations frequently choose to step up and step out of their economic development sphere and engage in societal recovery from disasters.

                                     

Roundup of 2025 off-year elections 

Thursday, November 6, 2025

This week’s 2025 off-year elections resulted in two new governors, solidified legislative Democratic majorities in New Jersey and Virginia, and the approval of significant ballot measures in California and Texas. While the gubernatorial campaigns centered on affordability and tapped into an electorate’s concerns about state and national economies, they also kick off speculation on the 2026 midterms.  

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