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University of Wyoming

July 3, 2008

Wyoming SBIR/STTR Initiative (WSSI) Newsletter
No. 0-08
(Past Newsletter Issues)

This Wyoming SBIR/STTR Initiative (WSSI) Newsletter is available in its entirety at http://www.uwyo.edu/sbir/newsletter/nwsltr_080702.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., 8/1/08; 28 days – submit to WSSI@uwyo.edu
DHS (S&T) SBIR FY082 - due 7/8/08; 5 days
DHS (DNDO) SBIR FY081 - due 7/16/08; 13 days
HHS/NIH 2008 SBIR/STTR Grants: due 8/5/08 - 33 days
USDA SBIR GRANTS - due 9/4/08; 63 days
NASA SBIR/STTR - released 7/7/08; due 9/4/08; 63 days
DoD 2008.3 SBIR CONTRACTS - released 7/28/08; due 9/24/08; 83 days
2008 SBIR/STTR SOLICITATION RELEASE SCHEDULE  – All Agencies; Courtesy of ZYN Systems at www.zyn.com

CONTENT

1.0 Congratulations To Our June Phase 0 Award Winners
2.0 Congratulations to our Recent SBIR Award Winners!

3.0 Editorial Rerun - House SBIR Reauthorization Bill - Action Required!!!
4.0 New USDA Solicitation (RFA) Especially Attractive to Rural Regions (Wyoming)
5.0 Read Rick Shindell's 'SBIR Insider' Latest Newsletter - Subscribe!

6.0. Acknowledgements and Publication Information

1.0 Congratulations to our June phase 0 award winners

Square One Systems Design, Inc. - Jackson
Principal Investigator: Robert Viola
Email:  viola@sqr-1.com
Phase 0 Title: Autonomous Tri-Sphere Robot for LCS Hull Inspection
Phase I Target:  DoD/Navy

X-L Space Systems - Wheatland
Principal Investigator: Michael Carden
Email:  xlspace@hughes.net
Phase 0 Title: Soldier Integrate Microclimate Studies & Analysis
Phase I Target:  DoD/Army

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2.0  congratulations to our recent sbir award winners

Congratulations to Kevin Luke and Z4 Energy, Buford, for receiving a $25,000 NSF Phase IB SBIR Award for their ‘Advanced Aeroelastic Composite Rotor for Small-Windmill Generators’ project.

Congratulations to Robert Viola and Square One Systems Design, Jackson, for receiving two SBIR awards; a $100,000 Air Force Phase I Award for their ‘Linear Cryo-Motion for Space Simulation Testing’ project, and a $1.1 million NIH Phase II award for their ‘Universal Micromanipulation Robot for X-Ray Crystallography’ project.

Congratulations to David Bloom and Alces Technology, Inc., Jackson, for receiving a $100,000 NSF Phase I SBIR award for their ‘Micro-Compliant-Interconnect-Mechanism (MCIMs)’ project.

Congratulations to Ronald Kensey and Kennon Aircraft Covers, Inc., Sheridan, for receiving a $200,000 Air Force Phase II Award for their ‘Adjustable Attachment Device for Aircraft Blankets’ project.

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3.0 editorial rerun: house sbir reauthorization bill - action required!!!

We continue to be appalled by the irresponsible action of the U.S. House in their total abdication to the BIO/VC special interests as defined in the 2008 SBIR Reauthorization legislation, H.R. 5819. It is obvious to this observer that the majority of the House members supporting this bill had absolutely no idea of the meaning and consequences of their vote (Barbara Cubin is a notable exception; she was one of only 43 Representatives to vote against H.R.5819). But, it also now appears possible that by crafting the legislation in secret and bringing it to the House floor at the last minute may be the downfall of the entire nefarious enterprise. The bill is so outrageously over-the-top as to virtually guarantee it will not be endorsed by the more responsible and deliberative Senate.

By keeping the SBIR budget fixed at its current level while tripling the Phase I and Phase II award levels, the House legislation has, in one sweep of the pen, reduced the total number of possible SBIR awards by 67%! But it gets much worse than that. The provisions that allow a Phase II award to be made without a prior Phase I award, allowing more than one Phase II award for the same project, and allowing Phase II awards to exceed the $2.2 million cap, will result in a further drastic reduction in the number of Phase I awards (the SBIR program is a ‘zero sum game’; one $2.2 million Phase II award will eliminate seven $300,000 Phase I awards). The disastrous outcome of H.R. 5819 would be that the total number of SBIR awards will be reduced by an estimated 75-80%; a consequence so egregious that one can only hope that it is an unintended consequence of H.R. 5819, and one the entire Senate will overwhelmingly reject. If these provisions of H.R. 5819 are allowed to become law, it will mark the end of the invaluable and irreplaceable contribution of the SBIR/STTR program to the development of Wyoming’s emerging tech-based small business sector.

Having said all of the above, the time left for the Senate to reauthorize the SBIR program is perilously short, especially with the pressure of other pending legislation and the distractions of an election year. Without the benefit of insider information, it appears to this observer that it is probable the Senate will not bring SBIR reauthorization legislation up for a vote this session, leaving the fate of the SBIR program up to the formulation of some sort of continuation legislation. In this observer’s opinion, these eventualities leave open the very real possibility that the very determined BIO/VC lobbies will work effectively to bring about another secret last-minute coup by attaching their legislation onto some other must-pass legislation, a tactic that is, unfortunately, frequently employed. Paranoid perhaps, but both the precedent and the motivation are in place.

WHAT YOU CAN DO; LET THE SENATORS KNOW OF YOUR CONCERNS

Senator Enzi: phone - 202.224.3424; FAX 202.228.0359; Toll Free - 888.250.1879 .
Legislative Director, Randi Reid randi_reid@enzi.senate.gov.
Small Business Legislative Assistant, Travis Jordan travis_jordan@enzi.senate.gov.

Senator Barrasso – 202.224.6441; FAX – 202.224.1724

Senator John Kerry is the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship. Let him know of your concerns – phone - 202.224.2742; FAX 202.224.8525

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4 .0  New USDA Solicitation (RFA) Especially Attractive to Rural Regions (Wyoming)

The USDA Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program offers grants to qualified small businesses (including small and medium-sized farms) in support of high quality, innovative research related to important scientific problems and opportunities in agriculture that could lead to significant public benefit if successfully commercialized. The USDA SBIR program has awarded more than 2000 grants since its inception in 1983, allowing hundreds of small businesses to explore their technological potential and profit from the commercialization of their innovative ideas.

Three of the topic areas - Small And Mid-Sized Farms, Marketing and Trade, and Rural Development - are particularly relevant to small farms and ranching enterprises and other small businesses focused on development of new or application of existing technologies to address a problem or an opportunity in rural communities.  More applications in these topics are encouraged.

The FY09 SBIR Request for Applications (RFA) was released on June 27, 2008 with a closing date of September 4th, 2008. Please check the Web site for more information.

All FY2009 proposals must be submitted electronically through Grants.gov and all attachments must be submitted as a Portable Document Format (PDF).  Note that the registration process for submitting applications electronically can take as much as two weeks to complete, and registration must be finished prior to submitting an application. To complete the registration process, go to www.grants.gov and click on the “get registered link” under the applicants menu.

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5.0 READ rick Shindell's Latest 'SBIR insider' newsletter

Rick Shindell's ZYN Systems ‘SBIR GATEWAY’ WWW.ZYN.COM is a reliable source of info of interest to the the SBIR Community.  His latest 'SBIR INSIDER' newsletter contains the following items of particular importance:

• House SBIR Reauthorization Bill gets "Cool" Reception in the Senate
• Important Changes and Trouble in Homeland Security's SBIR Programs
• DARPA Gets New SBIR Program Manager
• Behind the Scenes of the 2008 Spring National SBIR Conference in Orlando
• NIST Technology Innovation Program (TIP) Update
• Registration Opens for DoD's 2008 Beyond SBIR Phase II Conference & Exhibition
• 2008 Navy Opportunity Forum Recap

To view this issue and to subscribe, go to: HTTP://WWW.ZYN.COM/SBIR/INSIDER/SB-INSIDER06-12-08.HTM

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6.0 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND PUBLICATION INFORMATION

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.

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END