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Saving the space talent: NASA signs agreement to help keep its laid-off workersin Houston
Having lost 4,000 jobs with the shuttering of its space shuttle program, NASA has been working with the Houston Technology Center (HTC) to forge a new partnership to keep its scientists and engineers within the greater Houston area.
In a public ceremony at the Johnson Space Center Tuesday, the two organizations formalized a legally-binding arrangement known in NASA parlance as a Space Act Agreement. Mayor Annise Parker, who spent considerable time in Washington last year fighting for NASA dollars, was in attendance to mark the occasion with words of support.
"We absolutely believe that while a significant program ended, progress did not," Annise Parker told the crowd.
Named by Forbes' as one of "Ten Technology Incubators Changing the World," HTC is known as one of the city's greatest catalysts for development within the business community, assisting more than 250 companies raise a billion dollars in capital to date. The nonprofit group, with its headquarters in Midtown, offers education and insight for entrepreneurs in science, energy, and information technology.
In its first phase, the official partnership with NASA will place at least four HTC employees at Johnson Space Center to help create ties between Houston's tech entrepreneurs and NASA's outgoing talent.
"This initiative will capitalize upon Houston Technology Center's expertise in working closely with entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and startup companies," said Johnson Space Center director Michael Coates. "It will provide them with in-depth strategic and tactical business guidance to further the development of emerging technologies in support of NASA's mission."
"We absolutely believe that while a significant program ended, progress did not," Parker told the crowd of nearly 50 officials and reporters. "As administrations change and priorities change, Johnson Space Center will continue to be at the forefront of space exploration.
"As we go through these ups and downs, we have to make sure that the assets assembled here in Houston over the decades of the space program remain vital and fully connected to the larger community."