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Florida
Enters Biotech Race with $510M for Scripps Institute
November 3, 2003
Reprinted from
SSTI Weekly Digest, a publication of the State
Science and Technology Institute.
With a $310
million commitment passed by the state legislature and as much as
$200 million in additional support from the county government, the
California-based Scripps Research Institute has agreed to locate
its first branch or satellite office in northwest Palm Beach County,
Florida.
In return for
the financial support, Scripps is to work toward employing as many
as 545 workers on the site by 2011. At $935,780 per job - if the
545 target is met over the eight-year period - the project could
be the most expensive tech-based economic development risk yet undertaken
by the public sector.
The state and county government will be providing Scripps the land,
the infrastructure, the building, equipment and other physical assets
for a state-of-the-art research laboratory and administrative complex.
Scripps will supply the intellectual capital, potentially the human
capital, and the prestige. Up to $155 million of the state's contributions
may be repaid by Scripps over 20 years through royalties on technology
developed at the new lab.
Florida, of
course, is assuming that the new Scripps lab is only the first and
most critical piece of the gambit. Gov. Jeb Bush compared it to
the initial groundbreaking from Walt Disney World and the NASA Kennedy
Space Center. The state is banking on other pieces to fall into
place as a result: more federal life-science related research funding
to the state's public research universities, spinoff companies from
Scripps and university-generated technology, other companies being
attracted to the area to be close to Scripps, royalty and licensing
income, tax revenues from the higher-skilled employees and higher-valued
properties, etc.
Gov. Bush projects
overall, Scripps Florida's impact will boost the state's gross domestic
product by $3.2 billion over the next 15 years and create 6,500
local jobs directly from spinoffs from Scripps Florida. The state
projects an additional 44,000 jobs would be created by biotech firms
that would locate near the institute.
Some of that
enthusiasm stems from looking at the area surrounding the $280-million-a-year
base operations for the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla,
Calif. The affluent community just north of San Diego is home to
one of the world's largest concentrations of biotechnology firms
- 40 said to have been spun out of the Scripps facility, alone,
according to Florida media reports. La Jolla, however, also is home
to the University of California, San Diego and the UCSD CONNECT
program, elements of the vibrant entrepreneurial tech community
lacking in the Palm Beach location.
The legislature
took less than a week to review and approve the state's share of
the inducement package. Caught in the wake - to the disappointment
of economic development and university leaders in other parts of
the state - were several tech-based economic development projects
with much smaller price-tags that did not receiving funding. For
example, $8 million for the University of South Florida to purchase
Tampa-area land for an 87-acre research park and bio-incubator dedicated
to bioengineering and life science technologies, was dropped from
the final bill, as was $10 million for the Natrional High Magnetic
Field Laboratory in Tallahassee.
Scripps anticipates
opening its Florida operations next summer with 31 employees.
More information
on the announcement is available on Gov. Bush's website: http://www.myflorida.com/b_eog/owa/b_eog_www.html.main_page
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