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Smart growth:
Universities and state agencies
work together to strenghten Virginia's
economy
by Doug
Childers
for Virginia Business
August 2007
Universities are often viewed as havens for academia,
where faculty are far more immersed in books and ideology
than business realities. But universities can be powerful
economic engines, playing a key, if often unseen, role
in driving local and state economies.
A tech-savvy university can be the deciding factor for
high-tech companies looking to expand. When nonprofit
research institute SRI International considered where
to build a biotech research center, the presence of James
Madison University distinguished Rockingham County and
Harrisonburg from other sites. The Menlo Park, Calif.-based
group's Center for Advanced Drug Research will study
and develop new diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines
for infectious disease and biodefense.
Several partners worked together to recruit SRI, including
JMU, the Shenandoah Valley Partnership, the Virginia
Economic Development Partnership (VEDP) and officials
from Rockingham County and Harrisonburg. "From the
beginning, this was a team effort," says Robin Sullenberger,
chief executive officer of the Shenandoah Valley Partnership. "JMU
came early and energetically to the table."
SRI's center in Rockingham should be finished in the
second quarter of 2009. Currently, SRI is using offices
on JMU's campus, and the university is preparing lab
space for SRI.
During the next 10 years, SRI expects the center to
create 140 new jobs, which could lead indirectly to an
estimated 400 jobs and an infusion of $160 million into
the local economy.
The SRI project is JMU's biggest economic development
project so far, says John Noftsinger, the university's
associate vice president of academic affairs for research
and public service. "It really is going to be a
regional transformative event. The secret's out about
the Shenandoah Valley."
The Center for Advanced Drug Research is just one recent
example of economic development success at Virginia's
universities. In 2005, Virginia Tech partnered with several
groups to persuade Corning Inc. to invest $12 million
in its Danville plant. The university also worked with
Virginia Secretary of Commerce and Trade Patrick Gottschalk,
the VEDP, the city of Danville, the Workforce Services
division of the Virginia Department of Business Assistance,
Virginia Secretary of Technology Aneesh Chopra and the
Institute for Advanced Learning and Research.
"The Danville plant had a large proportion of mature
products and also a specialty focus on short-run new
product development, and there was a desire to bring
on some new products for the Danville plant that would
be good for Corning's business," says Tim Franklin,
executive director of the Danville-based Institute for
Advanced Learning and Research and a Virginia Tech employee.
Franklin says the institute, which Virginia Tech helped
create five years ago, was crucial because it demonstrated
the role research can play in stimulating economic development
in the region. "The [Gov. Timothy M.] Kaine administration
then said, ‘We're going to help stabilize and grow
this key corporate citizen with this group that's already
in place.' "
Corning's commitment will create 50 new jobs and help
stabilize employment in the Southside region. Virginia
Tech has also formed a research and development partnership
with Corning and the Institute for Advanced Learning
and Research. Full-time and adjunct faculty from Virginia
Tech lead all the institute's research programs.
In Southwest Virginia, the University of Virginia, U.Va.
College at Wise and Virginia Coalfield Economic Development
Authority are working together to stimulate the local
economy.
As a part of the plan, the College at Wise is offering
the commonwealth's first software engineering degree,
with support from U.Va.'s engineering school. The global
defense and technology company Northrop Grumman and IT
and business process services provider CGI have plans
to create more than 700 jobs in Lebanon in Russell County,
and the new degree program will help work-force development
there.
In Richmond, recruitment efforts to cement Philip Morris'
position in the city are about to pay off. The company
is scheduled to open its 450,000-square-foot, $350 million
research center in the Virginia BioTechnology Research
Park. Virginia Commonwealth University was a founding
partner of the park.
Officials from the biotech park and VCU initiated the
first meetings with Philip Morris in August 2004 and
were soon joined by city and state representatives.
Robert T. Skunda, president and chief executive officer
of the biotech park, says VCU's proximity is a major
reason companies move to the park. "Without VCU's
leadership, the park wouldn't be a reality."
For the last three years, economic development officials
at Virginia's universities have been meeting three or
four times a year to fine-tune their recruitment efforts.
Currently, 14 educational institutions participate. VEDP
has been involved with the group since its second meeting.
Other state agencies — including the Virginia Department
of Business Assistance, the Virginia Department of Housing
and Community Development and the Virginia Tourism Corp. — often
join them.
"The purpose of the group is to create an economic
development system that fully integrates higher education
and the state, regional and local economic development
organizations," says Ted Settle, director of Virginia
Tech's Office of Economic Development.
"It's necessary for the commonwealth to align
its message around Virginia's core research
strengths, build a systematic relationship between the
commonwealth's economic development team and the universities
and leverage those core strengths into business-created
jobs and investment," says Liz Povar, VEDP's director
of business development. "That solid link between business,
universities and the economic development team is
the foundation for Virginia's long-term economic success — and the
success of the United States, for that matter."
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