| Published February 21, 2012 |
Volume 20, Number 2
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The Tri-Valley is Emerging as a New Center for Innovation
The regional economic climate, like the nation’s, has not been at
its strongest in recent years. While the situation is currently
improving on both fronts, a number of changes have occurred in the
Tri-Valley during this time which should help the area economy come
back stronger and more vibrant than before, increasing both the
region’s wealth and its ability to weather this sort of recession in
the future.
“The Tri-Valley is really becoming another center
of gravity in the Bay Area for what we think of as the innovation
economy,” says Scott Peterson, deputy director of the East Bay Economic
Development Alliance (East Bay EDA). While the Tri-Valley does not yet
have a nickname like “Silicon Valley,” the confluence of
ground-breaking businesses, national laboratories, and the collective
brainpower of experts in a huge variety of disciplines means that the
region is becoming a magnet for both ambitious entrepreneurs and
established industry leaders seeking to break new ground in their
fields.
These are some of the conclusions reached in the East
Bay EDA’s recent publication, “Building on Our Assets.” The study,
which serves to identify the region’s opportunities and challenges for
future growth, is the result of an in-depth analysis of employment,
business, workforce, infrastructure, and land use characteristics, as
well as interviews with East Bay business executives.
“Innovative
companies are playing (a significant role) in driving the economy, and
that includes sectors such as information technology, clean technology,
and professional, scientific, and technical service-related occupations
and firms,” says Peterson. “What we take from that is that the national
labs that are in the East Bay, and in the Tri-Valley in particular with
Sandia and Lawrence Livermore, are helping to launch and spark
creativity and innovation in business.”
The East Bay is
particularly strong in this regard. UC Berkeley is ranked by the
National Research Council as the top-ranked graduate research
institution in the country, and the three national laboratories —
Sandia, Lawrence Livermore, and Lawrence Berkeley — are more than exist
in any other region. These institutions employ over 30,000 directly and
have played a role in supporting many of the region’s professional,
scientific, technical and information service and advanced
manufacturing businesses, according to the East Bay EDA report.
Industries that have benefited from this synergy include engineering,
scientific research and development, biotechnology, pharmaceuticals,
biofuels, and other clean energy activities. The region’s innovation
engine has not gone unnoticed by investors, either; in terms of venture
capital investment, the East Bay ranks second only to Silicon Valley in
industrial (clean) energy, semiconductors, and electronic
instrumentation, and companies here in computer technology, consumer
and business products, and biotech also rate highly.
“What the
report shows is the linkage between these research institutions and
spinoff companies or even just brand new companies, and how much we
need to do here in the East Bay to help them grow,” adds Peterson.
While
the national laboratories and other public research institutions are by
definition a hotbed of ideas, Peterson notes that these entities are
not alone in that regard. “The health care research that Kaiser
Permanente is doing, particularly on the information technology side,
is quite remarkable,” he says. Kaiser’s IT campus, which is located in
Hacienda, is ground zero for an innovative program which has seen the
entire organization move away from paper to electronic health records,
under the “KP HealthConnect” banner. The vast database holds the
history of 9 million patients, making it the largest private sector
electronic health care database in the world, and Kaiser has recently
rolled out mobile applications to give their members access to their
records via smart phone. “This is the future of health care. This new
level of connectivity is happening (in) real time, and it is happening
on a larger scale than anything like it in the world,” says George
Halvorson, chairman and CEO of Kaiser Permanente. “The fact that a
Kaiser Permanente patient in an emergency room in Paris or Tokyo can
simply pull out their mobile device and have immediate and current
access to their own medical information is an evolutionary and
revolutionary breakthrough for medical connectivity.” The records are
also proving to be a boon to researchers, who are using them to track
treatments and outcomes for Kaiser patients and share the findings with
the worldwide medical community.
Overall, the report notes
that the region’s professional, scientific, and technical services
(PSTS) industries are strong and growing. While employment in this
sector has increased nationwide over the last 15 years, growth in the
East Bay has outpaced the nation, state, and even the rest of the Bay
Area in that time. The East Bay EDA forecasts an annual growth rate of
3 percent in the PSTS sector over the next decade, making this area a
significant driver of the regional economy, and notes that these
highly-skilled jobs offer salaries that are almost double the area
average. The Tri-Valley is well represented in this area, thanks to
nearby companies involved with computer systems; scientific research
and development; architecture and engineering; and management,
scientific, and technical consulting.
The East Bay EDA report
also identifies a number of other Tri-Valley assets. Perhaps the single
most important factor in giving the region economic strength and
resilience is the diversity of businesses in the area. Unlike some
locales which depend largely on a single industry, the study identifies
no less than 12 key industries in the East Bay, most of which are
prominent in the Tri-Valley. They include computer systems design and
related services; scientific research and development services,
including biotechnology and clean energy; architectural, engineering,
and related services; management, scientific, and technical consulting
services; semiconductor and other electronic component manufacturing;
navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control instruments
manufacturing; medical equipment and supplies manufacturing; and
pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing, all of which can be found in
Hacienda.
The diversity of businesses goes hand-in-hand with
another regional strength: an impressive workforce full of capable
employees. Over 46 percent of the East Bay workforce are college
graduates, a higher figure than both California as a whole (37.5
percent) and the nation (35.2 percent). On the opposite end of the
spectrum, only 13.4 percent of East Bay residents failed to complete
high school, significantly less than the California average of 19.4
percent and the national average of 15.1 percent. As one East Bay
business leader told the East Bay EDA, “In the Bay Area, the quality of
talent for startup companies is unmatched. Firms in the East Bay can
access the rich, talented labor force of the entire San Francisco Bay
Area.”
The workforce picture is not entirely rosy, however.
The Baby Boomers now beginning to leave the workforce are the best
educated generation of any in the nation’s history, but those entering
the workforce fall short of that mark. Peterson sees this as one of the
key challenges facing the region in coming years but notes that a
proactive approach could mitigate any future issues. “The report shows
how important it is for us to link the current employers with the
workforce preparation system, so that those companies can be more
engaged in helping develop curricula today that their future employees
are going to need for the jobs of tomorrow,” he explains. “Linking
business with education and workforce preparation programs is really
important in making sure that businesses in the long term are really
sustainable and viable. We do have a well-qualified workforce here and
we just need to keep it that way.”
The other building blocks to
a successful regional economy are in place and growing. The
Tri-Valley’s transportation infrastructure, for example, is among the
strongest in the Bay Area. Interstates 580 and 680, whose expansion
greatly influenced Hacienda’s initial development in the 1980’s,
continues to serve the region well. The Bay Area Rapid Transit system
(BART) has continued its expansion into the Tri-Valley with the opening
of the West Dublin/Pleasanton station and plans are afoot to extend the
line to Livermore. Extensions to Pittsburg and Antioch in Contra Costa
County will bring an even greater pool of potential employees into the
Hacienda commuteshed. Meanwhile, many roadway-based regional transit
services will continue to serve the area, as will the Altamont Commuter
Express (ACE) train.
The good news, the East Bay EDA report
concludes, is that the fundamentals of the regional economy are strong.
“The East Bay possesses human, physical, and cultural assets that are
the envy of other regions. This report seeks to illustrate how these
assets help drive our economic growth and prosperity. They are the
reason why many companies start and expand here. They are why a
talented workforce chooses to live here.”
For further
information on the East Bay’s economic climate, download the East Bay
EDA’s complete report, “Building on our Assets,” from the
organization’s web site at www.EastBayEDA.org.
i-GATE Leading the Way in Public-Private Partnerships
One
of the keys to the Tri-Valley’s economic success has been the ideas and
technology generated by the combined assets of public organizations
like Sandia and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories and the area’s
vibrant business community. These organizations have joined forces once
again to create i-GATE, Innovation for Green Advanced Transportation
Excellence, one of six designated innovation hubs (iHub) in California.
i-GATE is a regional public-private partnership designed to
maximize the economic potential of green transportation and clean
energy technologies. Programs include efforts to provide opportunities
for collaboration and expedited technology transfer, entrepreneurial
education and assistance, the i-GATE Academic Alliance, and an
incubator for the development of green businesses. Participating
organizations include Sandia and Lawrence Livermore national
laboratories, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Joint BioEnergy
Institute, the cities of Livermore, Pleasanton, Dublin, and San Ramon,
universities including Cal, UC Davis, and CSU-East Bay, a host of
venture capital firms, and many other public and private institutions.
As
part of i-GATE’s ongoing operations, two corporations have been formed:
National Energy Systems Technology, or NEST, and the i-GATE Development
Corporation. As the name implies, NEST is an incubator designed to
foster technology-based economic development and supports new science
and technology companies to develop green transportation and clean
energy technologies. Towards this end, NEST offers entrepreneurial
mentoring and educational services; technology transfer assistance;
collaboration opportunities; and more. The i-GATE Development
Corporation assists in these efforts by providing facilities for NEST
start-up firms.
Another key element is the i-GATE Academic
Alliance, an effort to provide entrepreneurial education, technology
commercialization support, and internship opportunities related to
transportation and renewable energy. Academic partners include the
University of California at both Berkeley and Davis, CSU East Bay, Las
Positas College, Golden Gate University, the University of Michigan,
and the University of Oklahoma.
For more information, access the i-GATE web site at http://tinyurl.com/8x37p89.
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