MURFREESBORO — With
Middle and East Tennessee being a major player among four states and 69
counties, leaders from across the region gathered at MTSU recently to discuss
future strategy on advanced manufacturing of automobiles.
And in the far-reaching aspects of it all, there will be
far-reaching implications for MTSU in the Tennessee DRIVE for the Future Manufacturing
Community initiative. The effort is part of the Obama program initiated in 2013
called Investing in Manufacturing Communities Partnership, or IMCP.
“Our students will be working on many advanced technologies
that don’t even exist today, and that’s the goal,” said professor Charles
Perry, who serves as chairholder of the Russell Chair of Manufacturing Excellence
in the Department of Engineering Technology at MTSU. He was among 80 people —
from academics, industry and government — who attended the Tennessee Valley
DRIVE meeting in the Business and Aerospace Building.
The
IMCP program is an initiative designed to revolutionize the way federal
agencies leverage economic development funds. It encourages communities to
develop comprehensive economic development strategies that will strengthen
their competitive edge for attracting global manufacturer and supply chain
investments.
Tennessee Valley is one of 12 IMCP groups eligible for $1.3
billion in federal economic assistance from 11 federal agencies and program.
Tennessee
DRIVE for the Future, led by Chuck Shoopman, assistant vice president
with the Institute for Public Service at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville,
will seek collaboration between colleges and universities including those in
the UT and Tennessee Board of Regents systems, manufacturing, workforce
development and others.
“We (MTSU) have an opportunity to gain federal grant money
for the purpose of workforce development, boosting research assets and
utilizing the supply chain,” Perry said.
Professor Andrienne Friedli, assistant to the vice provost
for research and director of the Center for Advancement of Research and
Scholarship, said with MTSU’s year-old mechatronics engineering program
established with nearly 100 students enrolled and the Science Building open,
the university looks forward to contributing to workforce development and
innovation in support of the automotive industry, including the supply chain.
“Hosting the first planning meeting was an opportunity for MTSU to help broaden the community of
participants and to brainstorm about the best strategies to capture federal
funding for the DRIVE region,” Friedli said. “The mechatronics engineering
program has already submitted one National Science Foundation proposal with a
letter of support from the DRIVE executive committee. Along with partners in
the DRIVE team, we hope to win grants designed to strengthen the auto industry
through academic, government and industry collaboration.”
Through
IMCP, the federal government is rewarding best practices by coordinating
federal aid to support communities’ strong development plans and managing grant
programs across multiple departments and agencies.
No money is guaranteed to the group, Shoopman said, adding
that if they do not apply for funding, no money will come their way.
“We’ve got a new asset here and we’ve got to take advantage
of it,” Shoopman said. “If we don’t submit any proposals, we won’t get any
money.” He urged the partners to work together to leverage relationships, ideas
and assets of the region.
Tennessee Valley includes Middle and East Tennessee,
southern Kentucky, northern Alabama and northwest Georgia. Middle and East
Tennessee feature Nissan North America plants in Franklin and Smyrna, a General
Motors plant in Spring Hill and the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga.
Breakout session presenters included James King, TBR vice
chancellor for Tennessee Technology Centers; John Townsend, TBR executive
director for Workforce Development; Dan Marcum, executive director of Southern
Middle TN Entrepreneur Center and NEST TN; John Morris, president and CEO of
Technology 2020; Tom Brewer, president of Tennessee Automobile Association and
director TTU; and Paul Jennings, executive director at the University of
Tennessee Center for Industrial Services.
Attendees heard a live Skype presentation from Bernard
Swiecki, assistant director of the Automotive Communities Partnership and Ann
Arbor, Michigan-based Center for Automotive Research. He shared how Mexico has
made a major impact in the auto manufacturing industry.
“This is driving excellent opportunities for higher
education,” said Ginger Hausser, TBR director of external affairs. “… This is a
workforce issue and an economic issue. By coming together, we think we can
really advance the automobile industry in the region.”
The DRIVE executive board will meet in September in
Nashville.
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