Montana
Bozeman Landed Hyundai’s New Horizons Studio R&D Center. Now Montana Is On The Hunt For More Manufacturing
The state of Montana has a wealth of riches to attract in newcomers, together with 4 full seasons providing a variety of outside actions, no visitors, a low price of dwelling, and pleasant individuals, to call only a few.
Now a consortium of presidency, educational and enterprise leaders within the state, together with the Montana Manufacturing Affiliation beneath the Montana Chamber of Commerce, has been working for the previous few years on a set of different points of interest to attract one particular form of newcomer to Large Sky Nation: producers. Whereas Montana already has over 4,100 manufacturing firms with over 21,400 workers producing $3.8 billion in financial output, state leaders see much more alternative in that sector.
“We’re leaning into our state’s strengths with our western life-style, entrepreneurial spirit and high-quality training system that’s nimble and conscious of evolving workforce wants,” defined Todd O’Hair, President & CEO of the Montana Chamber of Commerce. “We’re focusing on companies that not solely have synergies with these rising sectors, however who additionally wish to develop into part of the material that’s Montana. It is a relationship state, and we wish companies that need to be a part of our group.”
Scott Sehnert, Vice President of First Safety Financial institution and Board Chair of the Montana Manufacturing Affiliation, agreed. “Our manufacturing base and rising hi-tech business is creating facilities of excellence throughout the Large Sky State,” he added. “We’re seeing shut collaborations to handle challenges throughout the business, akin to workforce, cyber safety, housing, and the availability chain. Prior to now 18 months, we have now skilled important funding and M&A exercise in Montana-born firms. There’s quite a lot of optimism for our continued development.”
Hyundai Motor Group’s New Horizons Studio (NHS) is an ideal instance of the form of companies they’re going after. Final Could the Silicon Valley-based unit of the Korean automaker introduced it might construct its R&D middle in Bozeman, on Montana State College’s Innovation Campus, taking a definitive step towards precise manufacturing of the Final Mobility Automobile (UMV) idea the group had been engaged on since 2020.
It was 4 years in the past on the Client Electronics Present (CES) that Hyundai launched its UMV idea. Named Elevate, it was the product of the corporate’s Middle for Robotic-Augmented Design in Residing Experiences (CRADLE), its enterprise capital accelerator. The show on the 2019 CES featured a one-fifth scale mannequin of the UMV, envisioned as an EV with motors at every wheel, with the wheels mounted on five-jointed legs that would convert the car from a rolling one to a strolling one on the fly. The intent was to make a car able to traversing terrain no present car may navigate, for functions together with city emergency response and mountain search and rescue.
In September 2020, the idea was turned over to the freshly minted NHS, established in Silicon Valley to concentrate on the real-world improvement of UMVs. John Suh, the Hyundai Vice President who had led CRADLE, took over management of the brand new group. Forbes first coated the story at the moment, however again then really producing the Elevate was nonetheless only a want. “Full-size take a look at timing? Arduous to say,” stated Suh on the time. However now, with its new $20 million middle in Bozeman, NHS is specializing in manufacturing of auto prototypes and finally finish consumer industrial manufacturing as properly.
“Montana is rapidly changing into a hub for high-tech firms and entrepreneurs with a rising expertise pool of expert labor within the fields of engineering, quantum computing analysis and pure science,” stated Suh, who now serves as Vice President and Founding Director of NHS. “Montana additionally has the 4th highest fee of latest entrepreneurs within the U.S. This sizzling market is attracting new budding expertise that provides New Horizons Studio and Hyundai Motor Group the perfect alternative to develop our UMV enterprise with contemporary and progressive considering in new hires.”
What’s exceptional about Bozeman touchdown the NHS R&D Middle is that the deal concerned no particular incentives, such because the tax breaks or mortgage ensures that now routinely play a major consider firms’ choices about the place to find new amenities. As a substitute, there have been different main concerns that drove the NHS location choice. Chief amongst these is the supply of high-skilled, technically oriented individuals–each scholar researchers and full-time employee graduates–from Montana State College. One other is the prepared availability of extraordinarily rugged trails and off-road terrain for testing the UMV. And a 3rd is the gathering of pro-business and pro-manufacturing initiatives the enterprise consortium has already delivered, akin to a rise within the enterprise tools tax exemption from $100,000 to $300,000 that the state legislature handed in 2021.
“When Hyundai Motor Group selected Montana for its New Horizons Studio, it despatched a message to job creators and innovators world wide that Montana is open for enterprise,” stated Montana’s Governor Greg Gianforte. “With our business-friendly setting, booming hi-tech sector, and unmatched high quality of life, we’re making the Treasure State the perfect place within the nation to do enterprise.”
Now Gianforte and the state legislature are working with enterprise teams on one other spherical of manufacturing-friendly reforms to be prioritized within the legislative session simply kicking off. That prolonged checklist contains one other enhance within the enterprise tools tax exemption, this time to $1 million. Additionally a part of the bundle are product legal responsibility reform, protections in opposition to third-party litigation financing, holding dropping events chargeable for environmental litigation prices, and incentivizing truthful settlement provides for lawsuits.
By going after enhancements to the elemental enterprise setting slightly than throwing out one-off “pot-sweeteners” to lure new manufacturing companies, state leaders imagine they’ll arrange a extra constant, sustainable, and long-lasting draw for industrial companies. It’s an method that definitely units Montana other than a lot of its opponents. “With customized help and shut collaboration with our enterprise companions, educational and authorities leaders, we accelerated the enlargement of Hyundai Motor Group to and relationships in Montana,” stated Scott Osterman, Director of the Division of Commerce for the State of Montana “The analysis and manufacturing of their UMVs will present new alternatives for Montana firms hungry to develop and innovate.”
Montana
Montana authors talk about state's 'political hell-raiser,' archaeology • Daily Montanan
Historian and author Marc Johnson gives a book talk next month about Burton K. Wheeler, “one of the most powerful politicians Montana ever produced,” as part of the Montana Historical Society’s lecture series.
Johnson will speak from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 8, at Touchmark, 915 Saddle Dr. in Helena. He will talk about his book, “Political Hell-Raiser: The Life and Times of Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana.”
“(Wheeler) came of political age amid antiwar and labor unrest in Butte, Montana, during World War I, battling Montana’s powerful economic interests and championing farmers and miners as a crusading United States attorney,” said the announcement from the Montana Historical Society. “Wheeler went on to become one of the most influential, and controversial, members of the United States Senate during three of the most eventful decades in American history.”
Also in January, author and University of Montana archaeology professor Douglas MacDonald will discuss his “Land of Beginnings: The Archaeology of Montana’s First Peoples.”
The book talk takes place from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 16, at the Lewis & Clark Library, 120 S. Last Chance Gulch in Helena.
“While researchers have learned a great deal about the origins of the first people to call this region home, questions remain about which route or routes they took and when they made this journey,” said the Montana Historical Society about the book talk.
The organization also said the Original Governor’s Mansion will be open for free guided tours at noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 26, and on Saturday, Dec. 28.
“The Queen Anne-Style mansion will be decorated for the holiday season through the weekend with surprises for visitors of all ages,” said the announcement.
For more information, contact Darby Bramble at [email protected].
Montana
Montana Ag Network: Sleigh ride season kicks off in Montana
On a frosty morning in late December, Marce Hoffman backs two huge draft horses out of a barn at the historic 320 Ranch south of Big Sky.
“Step up, step up,” Hoffman instructs the horses as he maneuvers them toward a waiting sled. It’s time to take the animals out for a turn on a trail they’ll know well by the end of the winter season. They’ll tread the path up to seven days a week during the holidays and five days a week after that. The animals strain in their harnesses, eager to pull and run.
“They’re fresh. They won’t be fresh come New Year’s, though; they’ll be all muscled up, ready to go,” said Hoffman.
The 320 has a long history. It was homesteaded as two separate ranches more than 125 years ago.
“1912 they combined them to form 320 acres That’s how the ranch became known as the 320,” explained Hoffman as he practiced the history lesson he gives while narrating the ride through the high, narrow valley the ranch is nestled in, just outside the boundary of Yellowstone National Park.
In 1936, Bozeman doctor Carolyn McGill purchased the ranch.
Hoffman said, “She fell in love with this area on different hunting trips, trips down into the Yellowstone Park.”
You might recognize McGill’s name from somewhere else.
“Caroline started the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman; was actually called the McGill Museum when it first opened up,” said Hoffman.
Current owner Dave Bass purchased the ranch in 1985.
Hoffman explained that’s when the ranch really began to grow into a tourist Mecca. He said, “He (Bass) bought it up from a 20 gust capacity over 200 that we have today.” He pointed to cabins that drifted by, framed by the mountains and the Gallatin River. It’s the view guests get as they take a one-hour trail ride in the sleighs. Hoffman ticked off the sights: “You get to see Cinnamon Mountain, Burnt Top Mountain. We’ll be able to see the Spanish Peaks when we go along the Gallatin here. Looking back you’ve got a view of Monument.”
As he drives onto a flat, straight stretch of the trail, the horses get frisky. “These guys are gonna air out right here,” he cautioned, just as the horses break into a run. It demonstrated the challenge of managing big Percheron horses around guests.
“Our number one priority is keeping everybody safe. So we always have to be constantly looking at the equipment. As far as the people, probably the hardest part is herding them up and getting them on the sleighs,” Hoffman laughed as he allowed that it is probably harder to manage the passengers than the animals.
Sitting next to him, Head Wrangler Logan McDaniel said she enjoyed working at the ranch.
“I like, of course, to drive and work with the horses but also meeting people from all around the world. You get to meet people from all different parts of life, all kind of different places,” she said. “They’re here for vacation. You get to kind of realize a little bit of people’s life story. It’s pretty cool just to meet different people.”
And the horses?
Hoffman said, “We’re looking for good disposition, you know. We’re not looking for heavy pullers we’re just looking for horses that are pretty docile and easy-going horses. They’re not gonna win any pulling competitions here.”
But these workhorses are no slouches.
“We’ll pull 18 people no problem and these guys are big horses,” said Hoffman.
He said that translates to about 18 hands and nearly 2,000 pounds each. As the horses cool down after their workout, Hoffman wiped them down and explained how these animals cope with the harsh winters at the ranch.
“You know those horses are on hay, you know free choice grass hay and water. They do pretty well. We’ve got a lean-to for them to get out of the wind. But for the most part, you know, they’re pretty hearty animals,” he said.
By late afternoon, as dusk descends on the ranch, guests begin to wander toward a pair of the big sleighs. They board the blanket covered seats for a ride out to the other end of the valley where a wood-floored canvass tent awaits. It’s heated and features a bar serving snacks, hot cocoa, cider, and more. A fire crackles in a pit surrounded by seats outside. After a bit of rest, the passengers will climb back into the sleds for a ride back to the ranch restaurant.
Taking in the view around them, Hoffman and McDaniel reflected on their jobs. Hoffman said, “There’s a lot of people that never seen a horse or been around horses, so it’s a good opportunity to you know, to introduce them to the horses.”
McDaniel added, “It’s cool watching people fall in love with the horses. That’s why I kind of do this. It’s to see people fall in love with horses like I do.”
Montana
Missoula Sentinel pipeline aiding Montana State's run to FCS national championship game
MISSOULA — Montana State’s path to Frisco, Texas, for the FCS national championship has been built by Treasure State natives.
For Rylan Ortt, Adam Jones and Zac Crews, that road started with the decision to become Bobcats — and spurn the hometown Montana Grizzlies — after playing high school football at Missoula Sentinel.
“Rylan was the first guy to grow up a Griz fan and make that jump over to Bozeman for a lot of different reasons,” Sentinel football coach Dane Oliver told MTN Sports. “And so that kind of laid the foundation. And I know Zac and Adam both looked up to Rylan.
“You know how recruiting works, if they’re having a positive experience wherever they’re at, it helps when they hear from a kid that they trust and know.”
Ortt joined Montana State in 2019 after a stellar Sentinel career playing quarterback and throwing the javelin. As the Spartans’ QB, Ortt threw for 2,098 yards and rushed for 750 yards as a senior in 2018.
In the javelin, he won the 2019 Class AA state championship with a throw of 208 feet, 8 inches.
Once in Bozeman, Ortt transitioned to safety. He redshirted in 2019, and the 2020 season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the four years since, he has emerged as one of the leaders on a defense full of Montana guys.
This season, he leads the Bobcats with 75 total tackles. He’s also caught one interception and forced and recovered a fumble.
“He sacrificed a lot for our (Sentinel) program just having to play quarterback,” said Oliver, who played for the Grizzlies and was a member of their last national title team in 2001. “And hopefully that’s helped him being a safety, and maybe the knowledge you gain from the quarterback perspective has allowed him to have success at that level.”
While Ortt has been a stalwart in MSU’s secondary, Jones has had a breakout season on offense. He burst onto the scene in the Bobcats’ season-opening come-from-behind win at FBS New Mexico when he rushed for 167 yards, including a 93-yard touchdown that sparked the fourth-quarter comeback.
Jones this season has become the most prolific freshman runner in program history, rushing for 1,134 yards and 14 touchdowns. Against Idaho in the quarterfinals of the FCS playoffs, Jones accounted for 95 yards and four touchdowns with starting running back Scottre Humphrey sidelined.
“He’s got all the traits of what it takes to be great,” Oliver said of Jones. “You know, (Jones is successful) maybe a little earlier than I expected. I think the thing that Adam had going for him (in high school) was he was a three-sport athlete. You know, he was a heck of a baseball player, did hockey and football.
“He was always physical. … He’s got the hockey nature, so he’s not afraid of contact. But he’s put on some weight. He can finish runs, always falls forward, he’s got great vision. He’s got all the qualities of a back.”
Jones, Crews and fellow Cats Dylan Rollins and J.J. Dolan each played a part in helping Sentinel win Class AA state football championships in 2020 and 2021. Prior to the 2020 title, the Spartans’ last championship came in 1972.
Crews, a sophomore, has turned into a contributor on the defensive line with 24 total tackles and 2.5 sacks.
Dolan is a redshirt freshman, and Rollins, the 2020 Gatorade Montana player of the year and a 2021 Sentinel grad, is a freshman after beginning his college career at BYU and serving an LDS mission.
Now they’re all part of an MSU program aiming to end its own drought and win its first national championship since 1984.
“It’s fun to see them go on to be successful, not just the ones that play college football,” Oliver said. “It’s made me realize why I do this. It takes a lot of time and energy to coach high school football.
“So, just to see them grow into young men and have success and be fulfilled in it, whatever career they choose, and those guys are doing it on a public stage, and so obviously super rewarding for myself and all our staff to see the success they’re having.”
Montana State (15-0) will play North Dakota State (13-2) for the FCS national championship on Jan. 6.
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