Bill would help to
build research parks
Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - A bill introduced by a
Lowcountry lawmaker could build university research parks and help
attract high-paying jobs, state leaders say.
"We need to capitalize on the existence of our research
universities," said Rep. Bobby Harrell, one of the leading
conceptual and legislative architects behind the initiative. "We can
commercialize the research to create high-paying jobs for the
benefit of the entire state."
The Charleston Republican introduced a bill last week designed to
create of innovation centers, or university research parks, that
match public research with private businesses.
At these centers, which would be located at the major research
campuses of Clemson University, Medical University of South Carolina
and the University of South Carolina, new or existing businesses
could help take a scientist's invention to the marketplace. That
could bring jobs and corporations - and revenue - to the state.
Harrell said the legislation is essential to help transform the
state from an old-world economy of textile mills to a
knowledge-driven economy with high-technology industries.
The bill establishes the innovation centers under a new wing of
the South Carolina Research Authority. The authority conducts
research on a contract basis for entities like the federal
government at three similar research parks across the state.
The authority will provide an initial $3 million to fund the
undertaking, an amount that could increase to $12 million after
three years.
It follows related measures that created the endowed
professorships to attract the top researchers and give universities
money to build top-notch laboratories. "If we are going to catch up
and surpass North Carolina with what they are doing with their
Research Triangle Park, this is the kind of legislation we
need."
North Carolina faced a similarly bleak economic outlook when
lawmakers and state business leaders began planning Research
Triangle Park, the nation's largest and most successful university
research enterprise.
In the 1950s when planning began, North Carolina's per capita
income ranked 47th out of 48 states, said Albert Link, a Research
Triangle Park historian and an economics professor at the University
of North Carolina at Greensboro.
The turnaround in the years since has led other states to place
their economic hopes in the Triangle Park model. The American
Association of Research Parks says there are now 195 parks in 40
states employing an average 3,400 people.
Still, the development of these projects does not happen
overnight, and not all become a resounding success that transforms a
state's economy.
"It takes a long time to go from seed to harvest," said Link, one
of the nation's foremost consultants on research park
development.
"The most critical factor is for university administration to get
the faculty to be the stakeholders in the success," he added. "And
that's a lot easier said than done."
Harris Pastides, USC's vice president for research, called the
bill the "missing link" that creates a place where universities and
the private sector can collaborate for the benefit of the state.
"This is a continuum of taking knowledge that is in our
universities and making it work for the citizens of South Carolina,"
he said.
With nearly half the House signing on as co-sponsors, Harrell
believes the bill will face few obstacles on the floor. "Both
Republicans and Democrats have signed on," he said.
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