• Login/Register
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
FacebookLinkedInTwitterRSS Feeds

This Week in Print

View the E-Edition

Subscribe FREE Trial Offer

advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • NJBIZ Daily
    • Grapevine
    • This Week's Issue
      • Top News
      • Spotlight
      • Opinion
      • Digital Edition
    • By Industry
      • Banking, Finance & Accounting
      • Energy & Utilities
      • Government
      • Health Care
      • Law
      • Manufacturing
      • Pharma & Life Sciences
      • Real Estate
      • Retail
      • Sports & Entertainment
      • Technology
      • Transportation
    • Regional News
      • North Jersey
      • Central Jersey
      • South Jersey
    • Morning Roundup
    • National / International News
  • Events
    • Event Calendar
    • Post an Event
  • Lists
  • Special Editions
  • Subscribe
Site sponsored by:

advertisement
 
STOCK SUMMARY
Nasdaq 2839.080.00
S&P 500 1316.63+0.64
Automatic 52.96+0.26
Bed Bath & 70.64+0.85
Campbell S 32.67-0.08
Hertz 13.24+0.16
Honeywell 57.28+0.25
Johnson & Johnson 63.52+0.05
Merck & Co "37.46
NRG Energy Inc. "15.84
Public Ser 30.93-0.05
Chubb Corp 71.34+0.10
 
Tuesday
Tuesday
High 78 °F
Low 60 °F
67 °F
Light Rain

February 10. 2012 1:42PM

Milestone celebrates collaboration between business, government

By Jared Kaltwasser


A range of government officials — from the federal to the local level — came together in North Brunswick this week to make the case that collaboration with industry can translate into tangible job growth.


Jane Oates, assistant U.S. Secretary of Labor for employment and training, spent Thursday attending a town hall at Cooper University Hospital, in Camden, before touring the North Brunswick offices of Chromocell Corp., a biotech firm that this week celebrated the hiring of its 100th employee.

 

Oates, a former executive director of the New Jersey Commission on Higher Education, said Chromocell’s story underscores the value of public colleges.

 

“Businesses, if they want to be as great as they can be, have to partner with education,” she said. “And education has to listen, and not just talk, to business.”

 

Chromocell used funding from the state Department of Labor and Workforce Development’s Customized Training Grant program to work with Middlesex County College to develop classes for Chromocell employees. The classes were taught on-site at the company’s offices.

 

New Jersey Labor Commissioner Harold J. Wirths said his department gave out $17 million in customized training grants last year, which benefited 367 businesses and helped train 48,600 workers. The grant program also leveraged a total of $26.7 million in matching private-sector funds.

 

Christian Kopfli, Chromocell’s CEO, said the training programs are particularly beneficial for small companies like his, which are under pressure to meet the demands of clients at a fast pace.

 

“It’s incredibly helpful to get the workforce to the point where you can quickly deliver,” he said.

 

Joann La Perla-Morales, president of Middlesex County College, said Chromocell’s story demonstrates the widening scope of community colleges.

 

“You usually associate community colleges with working in lower-level skill programs,” she said. “But here, we’re working in biostatistics, for example.”

 

Middlesex is one of 19 member colleges in New Jersey’s College Consortium for Workforce and Economic Development, which coordinate to provide training services to a range of industries.

 

Oates called the consortium a unique asset.

 

“When I was here in New Jersey, I didn’t really appreciate that it was the only one of its kind,” she said. “In every other state, colleges are competing against each other.”

 

Chromocell’s offices are another example of government easing the way for startups. It’s housed at a technology incubator operated by the state Economic Development Authority.

 

Debbie Hart, who heads the state’s biotechnology trade group, BioNJ, said government can play a critical role in meeting the needs of companies like Chromocell.

 

“It’s a large community, and obviously there are many, many needs, but we’re very fortunate in New Jersey,” she said. “All of these partners — the federal government, state government and industry — are very important.”

Latest News

Panelists tout positives as survey shows corporate concerns on regulations

Newark insurer launches new critical illness plan

In wake of key auction, BPU chief says more work to be done

J.H. Cohn merger will create nation's 11th-largest accounting firm

Deals and Moves: May 22

New projects still hard to come by for N.J.’s builders

N.J.'s tracks expect kingly returns from possible Triple Crown bid


Advanced search
advanced search sponsored by:

Sign up for the NJBIZ Daily.

e-mail alert
A free summary of the day's top business stories from New Jersey delivered straight to your inbox.   Click Here
advertisement
  • Popular
  • Blogs
  • Most Commented

    1. J.H. Cohn merger will create nation's 11th-largest accounting firm

    2. Rolling out his vision for professional racquetball

    3. N.J.'s tracks expect kingly returns from possible Triple Crown bid

    4. Deals and Moves: May 22

    5. New projects still hard to come by for N.J.’s builders

Burn the Boats View more...

Dollars and senseless on Rutgers-Rowan merger

In Focus  View more...

Celebrating small business

Intersection  View more...

Rutgers University Re-Organization: How the Camden Campus Merger with Rowan Became an Issue

Off Label View more...

G8 takes up counterfeit drugs

Waters Log View more...

Where is Grapevine?

  1. Rutgers University Re-Organization: How the Camden Campus Merger with Rowan Became an Issue (3)
  2. Concern over fracking regulations jumps in industry survey (2)
  3. At symposium, solar experts stress need for streamlined permitting (1)
  4. N.J. effort to reduce regulations hobbled by lack of construction (1)
  5. State revenue drops in April, missing expectations, as tax cut talk looms large (1)
advertisement
advertisement
sponsored by:

NJBIZ Poll

Tell us why:vote

advertisement

NJBIZ.com

Latest News

NJBIZ in Print

Subscribe to Print

Subscribe to E-news

Special Editions

Lists

Events

Blogs

Advertising with NJBIZ

Media Kit

Advertise in Print

Advertise in Online

Event Sponsorships

Production Info

Customer Service

Contact NJBIZ

Help & FAQ

About NJBIZ

NJBIZ Staff

Directions

Terms and Conditions

Privacy Policy

Resources

Buy Photos

Archive Search

Business Lists

Facebook

Twitter

LinkedIn



















       Email Marketing Solutions & Shopping Cart Abandonment PageTurnPro

© 2012 Journal Publications Inc. All information on this site are copyright of Journal Publications Inc. All images are the sole property of Journal Publications Inc. and no rights are granted for any use without the express written consent of Journal Publications Inc.