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Advancing Job Creation Now
In his recent annual address to the House of Representatives, Speaker
DeLeo, citing missed opportunities when innovators like Mark Zuckerberg
opt to start their companies elsewhere, called for a renewed commitment
to grow jobs by reasserting the Commonwealth’s edge as home to the
innovation economy.
To ensure that job creation remains the top legislative priority at
the State House, the House and Senate Chairmen of the Joint Committee on
Higher Education have put forth a creative proposal to continue pushing
the jobs growth agenda in what Massachusetts does best – research and
innovation.
The bill crafted by Representative Tom Sannicandro and Senator
Michael Moore, An Act to Strengthen Research and Innovation in the
Commonwealth, would invest $100 million in a matching grant fund that
would be used to leverage more than $300 million in additional funding
from private sources. This funding will better position the
Commonwealth to maintain its standing as the global leader in cutting-edge research across a wide spectrum of industries and disciplines – in
the sciences and engineering, from green technology to healthcare to
robotics to game design to wherever research drives the next great
discovery – and keep in Massachusetts the jobs that inevitably will flow
from spin-off businesses evolving from such innovation.
The news from Washington, DC, remains disconcerting. Budget gridlock and
debt reduction efforts require Congress to contemplate significant cuts
to discretionary spending. This creates great uncertainty for academic
medical centers and research universities, as such funding pressures
undermine the Commonwealth’s competitive advantage and threaten our
ability to cultivate long-term job growth. Although Massachusetts’
economy is emerging from the recession at a faster rate than the rest of
the nation, any sustained growth is undeniably linked to the success of
our research and innovation sectors.
This matching grant fund is one way to help Massachusetts help itself –
by reaping the benefits of the jobs and technological advancements
provided by research and innovation. Every $1 of state investment would
be required to attract at least $3 in funding from private sources,
including venture capital. That money would support projects located in
Massachusetts, be used to hire employees from Massachusetts, and
attract business that want to be located near groundbreaking research. It would encourage the type of public-private partnerships among
universities that led to the construction of the Massachusetts Green
High Performance Computing Center in Holyoke. And the fund would help
drive our competitive advantage in a knowledge-based economy – the
brainpower being harnessed by our world-renowned public and private
colleges and universities.
The Legislature should not – indeed cannot – miss this opportunity to
continue growing jobs. Speaker DeLeo is correct that Massachusetts has
established itself as a world leader in innovative research. And quick
passage of this legislation would be a strong message to the rest of the
world that Massachusetts intends to keep its competitive edge.
Richard J. Doherty
President
AICUM, Inc.
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