(Missoula Current) Montana’s recognition as a Tech Hub by the Economic Development Administration this month will bring new investment and jobs to the state, and could land millions of additional dollars in federal funding, backers said.
The Headwaters Regional Technology and Innovation Hub represents a consortium of Montana stakeholders led by Accelerate Montana at the University of Montana. The group organized, lobbied and secured Tech Hub recognition last week from the EDA, a branch of the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Scott Whittenburg, vice president of research and creative scholarship at UM, said Tech Hub recognition will support two key pursuits in Montana, including autonomous systems – like machine learning – and responding to and mitigating natural and man-made disasters.
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A number of technology companies in Bozeman have already made “tremendous advances” in photonics, Whittenburg said. Coupled with resource management programs at UM, the Headwaters Regional Technology and Innovation Hub could help “supercharge the region” into a global leader of smart, autonomous and remote sensing technologies.
“Photonics devices are essential to autonomous systems and instruments such as lidar, that are required to prevent and mitigate natural disasters like fire, flood and drought,” Whittenburg said. “These awards will help propel Montana photonics to international prominence and strengthen the region’s leadership in management of natural resources.”
Eric Smith, who heads the Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurship at the U.S Economic Development Administration, described the program as a tool to invest in the creation of American technology and the jobs that come with it.
The program has earmarked $11.2 billion for research and development in next-generation energy technologies. That includes $800 million for renewable energy, $1 billion for advanced manufacturing, $1 billion to modernize the electrical grid, and $600 million for research on energy storage.
Whittenburg said the program will also benefit from UM’s own expertise in forestry and rangeland technologies. But really, he added, the project involves a statewide consortium that includes the Montana University System, tribal colleges, the Department of Commerce and venture capital firms, among others.
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“The consortium is also receiving assistance from Sen. Jon Tester’s office and America Achieves,” Whittenburg said.
Getting this far
Tester led a panel discussion in Missoula earlier this year where participants began planning their approach to compete for one of the 30 new Tech Hubs. The effort panned out and Montana was selected from a field of 200 applicants.
“We formed a successful application group named Headwaters Tech Hub Consortium,” Tester said. “When the time came, we leaned hard on the administration and encouraged them to look closely at the good work being done in Big Sky Country.”
Already, Montana is home to more than three-dozen companies focused on photonics. Together, they employ more than 1,000 people with jobs that pay more than the state average.
Nationally, Montana ranks sixth in growth of its labor force growth, and Headwaters believes the photonics and manufacturing industries could add 5,000 new jobs, contributing more than $300 million in total wages to the economy.
In its application, the Headwaters group said “western Montana seeks to develop and deploy smart photonic sensing systems, coupled with autonomous systems, to address critical defense, resource management, and disaster prevention needs.”
Building on that, Tester said the Tech Hub designation will also open the door for Montana to compete for millions of dollars in private investment and federal funding. That too could have far-reaching benefits.
“Securing a tech hub means significantly increasing research and development dollars for our businesses and university, boosting manufacturing capacity and creating good-paying jobs across Montana,” Tester told the Missoula Current.
“They’ll be focused on smart optical sensors, which is something the military can use, self-driving cars can use, and something security can use,” he added. “They’ll use that money to bring in more partners to make this a more robust partnership.”
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The designation marks the first phase of the Tech Hub program, which was authorized by the CHIPS and Science Act, which Tester helped craft. The program will invest directly into “high-potential regions,” like Montana, and work to transform them into globally competitive innovation centers.
The first round of designations is an endorsement of Montana’s technological industry, Tester said. Along with the 29 other Tech Hubs, the Headwaters group is now eligible to apply for the next phase of the program, which would invest between $50 million and $75 million into five to 10 regional hubs.
“It means we’re going to be on the cutting edge of innovation globally,” Tester said. “Montana will be directly open to compete with China, and we’ll be creating technology that strengthens our national defense capabilities with laser and photonics technology.”
Tester expressed confidence that the University of Montana and Montana State University will collaborate to capitalize off the new opportunities that come with the Tech Hub designation.
“MSU and UM know they both can benefit from this in a big way. Working together is the only way to get this done,” Tester said. “The two presidents of the universities are good people and they understand it, and they’ll lead those universities down the proper path.”
The Northwestern Wildcats (3-1) will host the Montana State Bobcats (1-3) after winning three straight home games. The matchup tips at 9:00 PM ET on Tuesday, November 19, 2024. In the article below, we investigate the Northwestern vs. Montana State odds and lines around this matchup.
No line is set yet for the Wildcats vs. Bobcats game.
Northwestern compiled an 18-15-1 record against the spread last season. Montana State compiled a 16-16-0 record against the spread last season.
Ahead of this matchup, here’s what you need to get ready for Tuesday’s college basketball action.
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Check out: USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll
How to watch Northwestern vs. Montana State
Game day: Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Game time: 9:00 PM ET
TV Channel: Big Ten Network
Watch NCAA basketball on Fubo!
Northwestern vs. Montana State prediction
Northwestern 82, Montana State 64
Against the spread
Northwestern compiled an 18-15-1 record against the spread last season.
Montana State went 16-16-0 ATS last year.
Last year, the Wildcats scored just 1.2 fewer points per game (73.3) than the Bobcats gave up (74.5).
Northwestern went 12-1 against the spread and 11-2 overall last season when scoring more than 74.5 points.
Montana State had an 11-3 record against the spread and an 11-5 record overall last season when allowing fewer than 73.3 points.
The Bobcats put up 6.2 more points per game last year (75.3) than the Wildcats gave up to opponents (69.1).
Montana State put together an 11-6 ATS record and an 11-8 overall record last season in games it scored more than 69.1 points.
Northwestern had an ATS record of 14-11-1 and a 19-7 record overall last season when its opponents scored fewer than 75.3 points.
The Wildcats scored a total of 145 more points than their opponents last year (an average of 4.2 per game), and the Bobcats outscored opponents by 29 points on the season (0.8 more per game).
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BILLINGS — Last season’s football clash between Montana and Montana State was perhaps the highest-stakes Brawl of them all, with the winner taking home the outright Big Sky Conference title and the league’s automatic bid to the playoffs.
The Grizzlies’ 37-7 blowout victory set them on a course to the FCS national championship game, while the Bobcats dropped their postseason opener at home to North Dakota State.
This year’s matchup doesn’t have quite the same surrounding drama. But it matters. Every year. Always. Regardless of the windfall.
The Cats and Griz — ranked No. 2 and No. 10 respectively entering last week — will kick off the 123rd Brawl of the Wild on Saturday at 12 p.m. at Bobcat Stadium in Bozeman.
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Coming in, Montana State (11-0, 7-0 Big Sky) has already wrapped up the league’s automatic bid to the playoffs and clinched at least a share of the conference title thanks to a 30-28 road win at UC Davis. A victory over the Griz this week and MSU will be outright Big Sky champs.
The Bobcats want to stay in position to have the best chance to go where the Grizzlies went last year — Frisco, Texas.
Meanwhile, Montana (8-3, 5-2) has surely played its way into an at-large playoff berth, but a victory in Bozeman would enhance its credentials for positioning within the 24-team bracket, which will be released by the FCS selection committee on Sunday.
When last year’s game ended, Griz coach Bobby Hauck called it an “a** kicking” on live television. He wasn’t wrong. But that’s been the trend in this rivalry for the past five years on both sides.
Montana State dismantled the Griz at home in 2019 (48-14) and 2022 (55-21), an average margin of victory of 34 points in those wins. Montana, meanwhile, blew past the Cats 29-10 in 2021 in Missoula, a game that didn’t seem as close as the score indicated, then dominated last year’s game in Missoula, as Hauck not-so-subtly alluded to.
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The Bobcats’ Brent Vigen has put together a glowing resume in four years as MSU’s coach. He’s 43-9 overall (.827) and 28-3 in the Big Sky with two league titles. He has yet to lose a home game to a conference opponent, and has not lost a regular-season home game period.
Vigen is looking to even his record against the Grizzlies at 2-2 on Saturday.
Hauck obviously has a much longer history against the Bobcats — “the neighbors,” as he calls them — in his two separate tenures at Montana.
Hauck is 7-5 all-time versus MSU. Overall, he is 137-39 (.778), 82-21 in Big Sky games and has taken the Grizzlies to four national championship game appearances, including last year’s.
But he doesn’t want to fall to 2-4 against the Bobcats since returning as coach prior to the 2018 season.
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From a historical standpoint, Montana has the upper hand in the rivalry with a 74-42-5 series lead, a fact that’s not lost on the Grizzlies or their fans. The primary reasons for that were UM’s 36-3-4 record over the Bobcats from 1909-1955 and a 16-game Griz winning streak from 1986-2001.
But from a more modern perspective, the series sits at 34-32 in favor of UM since 1956. If you drill it down even further, it’s all square at 10-10 since the Bobcats finally got back on the winning side after 16 long seasons in 2002.
That’s what has made this conflict even better in recent years — the fact that both teams are keeping pace with each other head-to-head. That only enhances what is one of the best college football rivalries in the country.
Now it’s a matter of whether the recent trend of home-field advantage rings true again this year. And we’re about to find out.
It was a busy weekend for Montana-based sports teams.
The Montana State Bobcats played at UC Davis for the Big Sky Conference football championship, while the Montana Grizzlies played their final home game of the regular season. In Frontier Conference action, Montana Tech hosted Carroll College in a pivotal game.
High school football teams competed in playoff semifinal matchups, and the state volleyball tournaments were in Bozeman, where four champions were crowned Saturday night.
Watch Sports Extra in the video above for highlights from around Montana.