Wyoming SBIR/STTR
Initiative (WSSI) Newsletter
No. 01-08
(Past Newsletter Issues)
This Wyoming SBIR/STTR Initiative (WSSI) Newsletter is available in its entirety at http://www.uwyo.edu/sbir/newsletter/nwsltr_080107.htm.
It is published by the Wyoming SBIR/STTR Initiative (WSSI). Please visit our website at www.uwyo.edu/sbir for complete program information (including links to participating federal agencies, support agencies, conferences, archives of this newsletter, etc.) Contact WSSI@uwyo.edu to be added to or removed from the Distribution List for this newsletter.
SOLICITATION COUNTDOWN
WSSI Phase 0:
due
5:00 p.m., 2/1/08; 25 days – submit to
WSSI@uwyo.edu Mountain Meadow Wool, Inc., Buffalo
A
growing number of WSSI/SBIR client companies
have been applying to members of our Wyoming congressional delegation for
federal appropriations earmarks – FY08 budget requests from seven existing and
potential WSSI clients total $32 million. For obvious reasons, this source of
funding is becoming increasingly popular among our tech-based small businesses –
total Wyoming funding over the 25 years of the SBIR program is approximately
equal to the one year FY08 earmark request total.
DoD SBIR
Contracts 2008.1: due 1/9/08 - 2 days
DoED
SBIR Contracts: due 1/22/08 - 15 days
NOAA SBIR 2008-1: due 1/23/08 - 16 days
DOC/NIST SBIR-TT: due 1/23/08 - 16 days
DOC/NIST SBIR-R: due 1/25/08 - 18 days
DHS SBIR:
due 2/4/08 - 28 days
DoD STTR
Contracts: released 1/22/08; due 3/19/08 - 72 days
HHS/NIH 2008
SBIR/STTR Grants: released 1/15/08; due 4/5/08 - 89 days
2007 SBIR/STTR
SOLICITATION RELEASE SCHEDULE – All Agencies; Courtesy of ZYN Systems at
www.zyn.com
CONTENT
1.0 Congratulations To Our December Phase 0 Award Winner
2.0 Federal Appropriation Requests Due In
January
3.0 NIH Launches Manufacturing
Assistance Program
4.0 NSF Announces SBIR/STTR Diversity Program
5.0 Montana Launches Fund-of-Funds
6.0 High-Tech Brings Rural Towns Back to
Life (Including Ten Sleep)
7.0 Web Resource for New Business Ideas
8.0 USDA Impact SBIR Newsletter
9.0 State Competitiveness Rankings - Wyoming Ranks Tenth
10. Blogsite for Wyoming Entrepreneurs
11. Acknowledgements and Publication Information
1.0
Congratulations to our December phase 0 award winner
Principal Investigator: Valerie Spanos/Karen Hostetler
Email: mmwool@vcn.com
Phase 0 Title: Collective Protection for Military Working Dogs Utilizing
Wool Fiber
Phase I Target: DoD-CBD2.0
Federal Appropriation
Requests DUE in January
To be considered for a FY09 budget earmark, your request should be submitted to
our two senators and our representative during January 2008. Prior contact with
our congressional delegation is encouraged to ensure compliance with the process
– for example, a request form should be completed and submitted before the end
of January as a part of the process. To receive a request form, call:
Senator Barrasso – Tel 202-224-6441
Senator Enzi – Tel 202-224-3424
Representative Cubin – Tel 202-225-2311
NIH has announced the availability of a Manufacturing Assistance Program (MAP) for NIH SBIR Phase II Awardees from 2003 to the present. For details, go to: http://grants.nih.gov/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-08-025.html
The Manufacturing Assistance Program is one
of the NIH Technical Assistance Programs for helping SBIR awardees transition
their SBIR-developed technologies into the marketplace. The goal of MAP is to
help identify, address, and develop a strategy to overcome the manufacturing
issues related to the commercialization of SBIR-developed products.
In a partnership with the National Institute of Standards and Technology's (NIST)
Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) program (http://www.mep.nist.gov),
participants will have access to MEP's nationwide network of non-profit
manufacturing centers. Each participant will be assigned to a center that will
provide technical support needed to move to a developmental stage that requires
decisions in manufacturing transition strategies. This can include, but is not
limited to:
- method of scale up;
- cost estimation;
- quality control;
- prototyping;
- design for manufacturability;
- facility design;
- process development/ improvement;
- vendor identification and selection;
- plant layout;
- other similar issues.
The National Science Foundation's (NSF) Directorate for Education & Human Resources' Division of Human Resource Development, and the Directorate for Engineering's Industrial Innovation and Partnerships, released Program Solicitation 08-528 amongst other items, includes a call for SBIR/STTR Diversity Collaborative Supplements for spring 2008 requests.
The program title is: Centers of Research Excellence in Science and Technology
(CREST) and HBCU Research Infrastructure for Science and Engineering (HBCU-RISE).
SBIR/STTR diversity collaborative supplement proposals are invited from current
SBIR/STTR grantees and their CREST or HBCU-RISE institution partners.
SBIR/STTR supplements seek to promote partnerships between academe and the
small-business community. In particular, SBIR/STTR Phase II grantees may partner
with CREST/HBCU-RISE institutions with the intent of developing the scientific
or engineering underpinnings of the SBIR Phase II technology. As such, it is
important that the SBIR/STTR supplemental project be related to the research
areas for which the institution is receiving CREST/HBCU-RISE support. For FY
2008, the target date for these proposals is March 14, 2008. Inquiries and
proposals to this track are not submitted to CREST but directly to SBIR/STTR in
the Directorate for Engineering.
Complete information is available at:
http://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=nsf08528
A long-delayed equity capital program in Montana is
on its way to becoming a reality. Montana, which received no venture capital
investment in 2006 according to the PricewaterhouseCoopers Moneytree survey, has
struggled to attract the interest of venture capital firms. The Montana Equity
Capital Investment Act, sponsored by State Sen. Jeff Mangan and signed by Gov.
Brian Schweitzer in 2005, was intended to make the state more attractive to
outside investors, but never seemed to get off the ground.
As reported in the
April 18, 2005
issue of the SSTI Weekly Digest, Senate Bill 133 called for the
creation of a $60 million Montana Equity Fund to attract out-of-state investment
and increase in-state venture activity. A governor-appointed board was to
contract with an outside investor group to capitalize and manage the Equity Fund
and a subfund targeted toward investments in strategic industries. The $60
million would be issued in tax credits to investors to offset any shortfalls in
scheduled returns on their investments. The Fund, however, was not created right
away. In the subsequent two years, concerns about the law's constitutionality
and the availability of funding continually delayed its implementation.
Gov. Schweitzer finally announced the appointment of five Montana Capital Equity
Investment Board members in October to move forward with the fund. When the
Board met earlier this month, members decided to move forward with the program
and dismissed the idea of filing a "test case" to verify the constitutionality
of the law. Instead, the Attorney General, Mangan and other state officials gave
testimony relating to the program. Board members are now ready to move forward
with the program and are currently investigating fund-of-fund programs in other
states to find a suitable model.
The text of the Montana Equity Capital Investment Act is available at:
http://data.opi.state.mt.us/bills/2005/billhtml/SB0133.htm
Three trends are
fueling growth in some rural areas, says Bill Gillis, director of the Center to
Bridge the Digital Divide in Spokane, Wash. Mobile dot-commers with "golden
Rolodexes" are launching tech-based companies. Eco-fuel growth and rising corn
prices are pumping money toward entrepreneurs in traditional breadbasket
industries. And government investments in broadband and high-tech "incubators"
(subsidized office space geared toward high-tech businesses) are allowing local
economies to branch out beyond the cotton and corn fields:
Christian Science
Monitor
Ideablob (www.ideablob.com): Have you ever had a “crazy” business idea but weren’t sure how to get someone to fund it? If so, you might check out Ideablob, a new site where you can share a business idea and maybe get $10,000 for it in the process. The site solicits ideas regarding any kind of business proposal, and then opens up on-line voting for a month. The idea with the most votes is awarded $10,000 that can be used to help make a dream into reality. The site announced its first monthly winner in October with Chicago-based entrepreneur Tom Kriegelstein’s idea to create new orientation software for incoming college freshmen
SBIR Impact is a quarterly newsletter for small businesses interested in the USDA-SBIR program and for institutions and organizations that support the small business community and rural America. Click on the headers to take you to the newsletter.
SBIR Staff and Responsibilities
The latest edition of the Beacon Hill Institute’s (BHI) annual State
Competitiveness rankings shows that Utah has emerged as the US’s most
competitive state economy. Utah assumes the top rank over Massachusetts, which
had held the No. 1 spot for the previous two years. The BHI Index tracks
forty-two different measures in a variety of areas such as infrastructure,
environmental policy, government and fiscal policy, and technology. Utah’s
impressive performance is attributed to competitive advantages in areas of
government and fiscal policy, infrastructure, and new business development. The
top five performing states are (in rank order): Utah, Massachusetts, Colorado,
North Dakota, and Idaho. Among the states that have seen the greatest
improvement on the BHI are Montana, New Mexico, and Rhode Island.
Download the December 2007 Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University report,
State
Competitiveness Report 2007.
The Wyoming Business Council has established a source of useful information for Wyoming entrepreneurs - a blogsite. It's at http://www.wyospace.com/ - check it out and add your comments.
TO BE ADDED
TO OR REMOVED FROM THE DISTRIBUTION LIST FOR THIS NEWSLETTER, SEND NAME,
ADDRESS, PHONE NUMBER, AND EMAIL ADDRESS TO WSSI@uwyo.edu
This newsletter is published monthly as part of the Wyoming SBIR/STTR Initiative
(WSSI). The mission of the Initiative is to increase the number of federal Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer
(STTR) Program awards to Wyoming. The Wyoming Business Council (WBC) funds the
initiative which is administered by the University of Wyoming Research Office.
Please contact Gene Watson ewatson@wyoming.com with your comments.
END