Panel Urges State Science and Technology Commission to Invest In Georgia Job Engines

A panel of industry representatives recently meeting in Macon, Ga., USA, has urged the Georgia Study Commission on Science and Technology to recognize the strategic value of Georgia's unique resources and the industries that develop their economic potential, and to create a welcoming environment for venture capital investments and job creation. Speaking at one of a series of Commission field hearings on developing a plan to enhance science and technology in Georgia, the Traditional Industries in Technology Growth panel called attention to the importance of maintaining and nurturing existing industries, on which rural communities depend, and in which technologies are developing innovative products to compete in world markets. The panelists also stressed the need for a high-level forum to develop priorities for research and development and the encouragement of new business investment.

The panelists were: Dan Floyd, operations manager of Renmatix, a biomass technology company founded in Georgia and with significant operations in the state; Phil Jones, Georgia Mining Association, and director of new ventures and disruptive technologies for Imerys; Norman Marsolan, chair of TAPPI and director of the Institute for Paper Science and Technology at Georgia Tech; and Randy McRae, Georgia Paper and Forest Products Association and senior regional government relations manager of International Paper.

Panelists advocated five recommendations:

The Study Commission was created through passage of Georgia S.R. 68. The Commission is to determine the most important needs of technology stakeholders throughout the state and create recommendations to develop and grow science and technology such that Georgia becomes a top technology state. The Commission's recommendations are due to the state legislature in January.

More information about the Commission, including a summary of the Traditional Industries in Technology Growth, is available online.

TAPPI
http://www.tappi.org/