Our position on SBIR
Reauthorization:
Small Business California has
advocated for a fair, long-term reauthorization to the
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR/STTR) programs
to advance the role of genuine small businesses in
high-tech research. California is the leading recipient
of SBIR awards. Currently, the SBIR program allocates
2.5% of the Federal extramural R&D budget to small
technology businesses, accounting for over $2 billion a
year in research dollars awarded to small companies.
These dollars have been enormously productive in
promoting technology innovation. For example, as of
2005, the SBIR program has generate over 87,000 patents,
more than the entire university system, and with 1/20th
of the research dollars. Fully 25% of R&D 100 Awards,
given to recognize the 100 most important technology
innovations each year, go to SBIR firms.
Key legislation in the 111th
Congress:
S. 1233 SBIR/STTR Reauthorization
Act of 2009 (Senators Landrieu and Snowe) – SUPPORT
Small Business California has
strongly supported compromise legislation for SBIR
reauthorization passed in the Senate. The Senate bill
proposes to extend the SBIR program until 2023 with a
gradual, 0.1% per year increase in the SBIR allocation
from 2.5% currently to 3.5% in 2020 (excluding the NIH
program). The Senate bill offers a compromise on the
contentious issue of the participation of large venture
capital controlled companies in the SBIR program,
allowing 18% of venture controlled large companies to
participate in the NIH component of SBIR, and 8% of
venture controlled large companies to participate in the
SBIR programs of the remaining agencies. S. 1233 also
makes a moderate increase to the standard award levels
to $150,000 in Phase 1 and $1,000,000 in Phase 2.
H.R. 2965 SBIR/STTR Reauthorization
Act of 2009 (Rep. Altmire) – OPPOSE
The House version of SBIR
reauthorization has proposed to change the definition of
a small business to include the subsidiaries of large
venture capital firms, which may have hundreds of
millions, if not billions of dollars under management.
Small Business California strongly opposes this takeover
of a successful small business program by a narrow
special interest.
The SBIR program has been highly
successful in fueling innovation genuine small
businesses over the last 25 years, using the traditional
definition of a small business as a company with fewer
than 500 employees owned by individual in the United
States. This definition includes the subsidiaries of
investment companies where the total assets controlled
by the parent add up to fewer than 500 employees. The
SBIR program has never excluded investments by venture
capital companies or major corporations in small
high-tech firms, provide these large interests do not
control to company.
Bay
Area Innovation Alliance
2010
Breakfast Schedule and Events
www.BAINNOVATION.ORG
Schedule of Events
Tuesday, September 14 and November 9
BAIA San Francisco Meeting
Panera Bread, SOMA
Friday,
October 8 and December 10
BAIA Silicon Valley Meeting
Café
Borrone, Menlo Park
Meeting
Locations:
SILICON
VALLEY:
CAFÉ
BORRONE
1010 El Camino Real
Menlo Park, CA (Next to Menlo Park
Caltrain)
(650) 327-0830
cafeborrone.com
SAN FRANCISCO (SOMA):
PANERA BREAD
301 King Street
San Francisco, CA 94158
415-777-2080
panerabread.com
CONTACT INFO:
info@bainnovation.org
BAIA Silicon Valley
Christopher White
650-806-0187
Chris.ActiveSpectrum@gmail.com
BAIA San Francisco
Rob Nakamura
(415) 806-0187
robnak@advancedgeneticsystems.com
GOOGLE GROUP:
bayinnovation@googlegroups.com