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Morris named Director of Northwest Energy Technology
Collaborative
Seattle, WA Jeff Morris has been named Director
of the Northwest Energy Technology Collaborative (NWETC).
NWETC is a joint effort of business, government, nonprofit,
and educational institutions to make the Northwest a world
leader in innovative research and product development for
energy technology.
Morris was selected by the NWETC board of directors after
an extensive selection process. “We would be hard pressed
to find anyone as well known across the Pacific Northwest
region as Jeff Morris,” said Kim Pearman-Gillman, senior
vice president of Avista Development Inc. and NWETC Director.
“His extensive energy background and large network of
contacts will be invaluable.”
The Collaborative is working to capitalize on our region’s
long history and current base of companies providing products
and innovations in electric generation, transmission, distribution,
control, and use of energy. The goal is to create a major
Northwest industry that employs 2,000 people working who design,
manufacture and market energy products.
The NWETC is organized under the Washington Technology Center.
“We believe this collaborative model will be an economic
development template for growing and maturing other key industries,”
said Lee Cheatham, executive director of the Washington Technology
Center.
Morris currently is chairman of the Technology, Telecommunications
and Energy Committee of the Washington State House of Representatives.
“My personal passion is in the energy area. We have
rich tradition in northwest of working together for regional
benefit. I am anxious to get started bringing our best people
together and creating economic growth,” said Morris.
In his legislative work, Morris has been known for pushing
the Olympia scene well ahead of its comfort level in the technology
area. Morris was rated the top “Jobmaker” in the
House this past session by the Association of Washington Business.
House Speaker Frank Chopp named him to head the Five Corner
Alliance, which assembled the recent legislative package to
keep Boeing manufacturing of the 7E7 in Washington. Morris
also gained recognition as president of the Pacific Northwest
Economic Region, where he put the little known group on the
map with their activity and accomplishments supporting economic
growth.
Prior to joining the legislature Morris worked with APCO
Associates, a public affairs firm out of Washington D.C.,
with a variety of clients and served six years on the staff
of Congressman Al Swift, then the Northwest dean on the U.S.
House Energy and Commerce Committee.
The NWETC board was looking for an impact person to grow
the group over the next year. “Jeff Morris is the type
of marquee individual we were looking for to get the collaborative
off the ground and make it a truly regional effort,”
said Mike Weedall, Vice President for Energy Efficiency at
Bonneville Power Administration and NWETC Director. “I
have confidence that this concept will prove itself out in
how to get great research to lead to great jobs that benefit
everyone,” Weedall stated further.
About the Northwest Energy Technology
Collaborative
NWETC’s mission is to accelerate the emergence and growth
of the energy technology industry in the Pacific Northwest
region. NWETC was created one year ago by founding board members:
Avista Corp., Bonneville Power Administration, Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory, Spokane Intercollegiate Research and
Technology Institute, and the Washington Technology Center.
Puget Sound Energy, INTEC and Washington State Trade and Economic
Development Energy Office joined later in the year.
About the Washington Technology Center
The Washington Technology Center is Washington’s statewide
science and technology organization committed to accelerating
the innovation-based economy. WTC stimulates job growth in
Washington’s companies by helping develop commercially
viable technology. Since 1995, over 200 Washington companies
working with WTC have secured over $280 million in outside
financing or federal contracts. More than half the companies
receiving WTC funding have had fewer than 100 employees. WTC
also manages a Microfabrication
Laboratory, which is a premier R&D facility for research,
technology development and prototype manufacturing.
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