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    Einstein's Alley
    Supporting the Growth of New Jersey Business
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    Supporting Vision and Entrepreneurship
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    Promoting Growth in Technology and the Life Sciences
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Welcome to Einstein's Alley

Welcome to Einstein's Alley, the research and technology center of New Jersey. This is the place for smart entrepreneurs to build or grow a technology based business. We're glad you want to do business here.

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Where Are the Einstein's Alley Companies?

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Doing Business in New Jersey

New Jersey has abundant resources to make the tough job of growing a business easier.  There are grants and programs to help you get started. We have gathered pointers to all the great information that you will need right here.

Visit our business directory to find the resources that can help you start or grow your NJ business.

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EA in the News


Katherine Kish, Executive Director, Einstein's Alley, was a panelist at the AJC New Jersey Immigration Program. April 4, 2013 at Fairleigh Dickinson University

Immigration overhaul will boost business, panel says

April 4, 2013
The Record

MADISON - A Washington lobbyist, as well as several union chiefs and business leaders, Thursday said an overhaul of the nation's immigration laws will help boost the nation's economy, keeping needed science and low-skilled workers in states such as New Jersey legally. [more]


AJC forum touts benefits of immigration

Republican strategist, business leaders agree on need for reform

April 8, 2013
NJJN

A leading Republican advocate of immigration reform told an American Jewish Committee New Jersey forum the chances of passing a new law this year are 50-50. [more]



Einstein's Alley Names New Member to Board of Trustees

Plainsboro, NJ (March 25, 2013) Einstein's Alley, the private, non-profit economic development initiative for Central New Jersey, is proud to announce the addition of James C. Bourke, CPA., CITP., CFF to the Board of Trustees. Jim, a Partner, Member of the Board of Directors and a Member of the Management Committee at WithumSmith+Brown, Red Bank, New Jersey and is Director of Firm Technology, will also serve as Treasurer of Einstein’s Alley. [more]


Einstein's Alley Names New Members to Board of Trustees



Plainsboro, NJ (January 07, 2013) Einstein's Alley, the private, non-profit economic development initiative for Central New Jersey, is proud to announce the addition of Darren Hammell, COO and Co-Founder of Princeton Power Systems, Ryan Stark Lilienthal, a Princeton attorney specializing in immigration law, and Michael A. Palladino, Dean of Science Monmouth University as new members of the Board of Trustees. [more]


Bringing Einstein’s Spirit of Innovation Back to Life in Central New Jersey’s Tech Corridor

Commerce Magazine
September 21, 2012
Think of an area with a cluster of high-tech companies with a brilliant workforce and world-class research laboratories and universities nearby. You probably thought of California’s Silicon Valley or Massachusetts’s Route 128 corridor. It’s the objective of Einstein’s Alley (EA), a 501(c)(4) corporation located in Central New Jersey, to put the superlative collection of tech and academia positioned between Princeton and Rutgers on the same footing as those two renowned scientific giants. [more]


New Jersey seeks to regain edge in high technology

The Asbury Park Press NJ | APP.com
July 16, 2012
New Jersey’s formerly booming high-tech sector has a lower profile, battered by a series of corporate contractions over the last 16 years. But there are new efforts by state officials and business leaders to help the state recapture its once-dominant share of jobs in science, engineering and technology.


SciPark Aims to Make New Jersey the New Silicon Valley

Laboratory Equipment Online
April 1, 2012
SciPark, a massive 32.3 acre R&D campus designed for high tech, biomedical and pharmaceutical companies, is offering New Jersey a chance to capitalize on its storied scientific history.


U. licenses professor’s new speaker technology

Daily Princetonian
March 6, 2012
"...[Frick Lab] is a good poster child for the types of successful collaborations that can happen between industry and academia," Taylor said at an Einstein’s Alley event in Frick last November..."


A fight for N.J. biomedical industry

Nj.com
April 4, 2012
The HealthCare Institute of New Jersey recently said the state’s biopharmaceutical and medical technology fields generated $24.2 billion worth of economic impact in 2011. With eye-popping figures like that, there’s no question the life sciences sector is vital to the Garden State’s economy.


Jersey's Man of Science 

New Jersey Monthly
December 19, 2011
As the lone physicist in the U.S. Congress, Rush Holt has become a voice for innovation and education.


Einstein's Alley in the News
Princeton Packet Magazine
December 15, 2011
Einstein's Alley Director Promotes Area as Technology Powerhouse

 

News and Opinion

Stay up to date with our extensive news and blog feeds, updated in real time. View recent headlines below or visit our news and opinion center for the full story.

 




Visit the Einstein Archives Online
The Einstein Archives Online Website provides the first online access to Albert Einstein’s scientific and non-scientific manuscripts held by the Albert Einstein Archives at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, constituting the material record of one of the most influential intellects in the modern era. It also enables access to the Einstein Archive Database, a comprehensive source of information on all items in the Albert Einstein Archives.

Recent Events

Einstein's Alley Hosts Immigration Conference
Start Date/Time: Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Recurring Event: One time event
Importance: Normal Priority
Description:

On June 26, 2012, Einstein's Alley - a regional organization promoting growth and innovation in central New Jersey - teamed up with the Partnership for a New American Economy - a national bipartisan coalition of over 400 mayors and business leaders spearheaded by Mayor Michael Bloomberg - for a conference addressing how smarter immigration policies could spur job growth and strengthen American competitiveness.

From the New Jersey Tech Weekly article by Esther Surden...

Immigration Policy Complicates Hiring for NJ’s Universities, High-Tech Firms

At the June 26, 2012, Einstein’s Alley “Innovation Bridge” conference in Princeton, a panel moderated by Peter Kann, former Dow Jones CEO and Wall Street Journal publisher, was adamant that the immigration system—and how it works for both universities and high-tech companies—must be fixed.

On the panel were Seifi Ghasemi, chairman and CEO ofRockwood Holdings (Princeton), a specialty chemical company; A.J. Stewart Smith, dean for research atPrinceton University; and Darren Hammell, cofounder and executive VP of business development at Princeton Power Systems.

Darrell West, vice president and governance studies director at the Brookings Institution (Washington, D.C.), joined the panel toward the end of the event, which was also sponsored by Partnership for a New American Economy. 


From the New Jersey Tech Weekly article by Esther Surden...

Smart Immigration Policy Can Help NJ Tech Companies Fill High-Level Slots

N.J. tech companies that need to hire highly skilled technical workers with job expertise not found in the U.S. are suffering from outdated, bureaucratic and restrictive immigration policies and procedures, according to speakers at a conference sponsored by Einstein’s Alley, a private, nonprofit economic development initiative located in central New Jersey, and the Partnership for a New American Economy.

The meeting — which took place at the Institute of Advanced Study (Princeton) on June 26, 2012 — couldn’t have come at a more fortuitous time, with immigration policy making headlines in June, said Louis Wagman, who was standing in for Katherine Kish, Einstein’s Alley executive director. However, we don’t tend to talk enough about the effect immigration policy has on America’s competitiveness and job creation, he added.

Entitled "The Innovation Bridge: Enhancing American Competitiveness and Job Creation Through Smart Immigration,” the meeting provided an in-depth look at the immigration crisis facing companies from the viewpoint of the Brookings Institution (Washington, D.C.), New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s office, some N.J. immigration attorneys, Rutgers Eagleton Program on Immigration and Democracy representatives, a N.J. tech company, a N.J. life sciences firm and Princeton University.

The Institute of Advanced Study itself had founding members who were immigrants, many of them refugees from Nazi Germany, participants noted. And, said Peter Goddard, former director of the Institute, 68 percent of the current permanent faculty, made up of 28 permanent professors, are from abroad. Of course, the recruitment of Albert Einstein himself to conduct research at the Institute was an example of smart immigration, Goddard said.

Robert Feldstein, a senior advisor to Mayor Bloomberg who works with the Partnership for a New American Economy, said immigration is fundamentally an economic issue. “There are immigration reforms we could do today that would grow the economy and create American jobs,” he said. He pointed out that 40 percent of Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or children of immigrants.

Speaking about immigration reform, Darrell West, vice president and governance studies director at the Brookings Institution, said he had learned about immigration problems firsthand while helping his wife obtain a green card and become a naturalized citizen.

“I discovered many immigration offices are located in remote suburban areas that are hard to find and inaccessible by mass transit. ... that our application process is paper-based and not electronic. … The digital revolution has not hit the immigration system,” West said.

“I cannot count the number of hours I spent at a photocopy machine copying documents, sending them to the government, waiting weeks and months for a mailed response. It’s a very costly and inefficient system,” West added. He said it is very easy to send in the wrong form and provide incorrect documentation.

The big problem in the immigration conversation: people perceive the costs as being quite high and the benefits quite low, especially during times of high unemployment. The argument is that we don’t need immigrants when Americans can’t find jobs, West noted.

“What people don’t realize is that even in times of high unemployment we actually have worker shortages in many fields, which constrains competitiveness and growth.” This is familiar in information technology, where Microsoft, for example, has reported it has almost 5,000 unfilled positions and has had difficulty hiring scientists and engineers, he said.

The high-tech industry has especially benefited from immigration. “Intel was founded by a Hungarian immigrant, Google was cofounded by a Russian immigrant, Yahoo was established by someone born in Taiwan and eBay was started by someone born in France. ... What would the American economy look like today if Intel were a Hungarian company, Google were based in Russia, Yahoo were a Taiwanese company and eBay were French? Obviously our economy would look much weaker,” West said.

Addressing the issue of reform, West said one idea embraced by Barack Obama, Mitt Romney and Karl Rove is to provide automatic green cards for graduates of American science and technology Ph.D. programs.

Other actions that should be taken, he said, include raising H-1B visa caps, which are now limited to 65,000 people. “Typically companies exhaust those visas within two to three months each year. At the start of the  year they start filing for those visas, which are gone within a very short period of time. There is then a nine- to ten-month period where there are no visas available.”

“We also need to promote entrepreneur visas” allowing foreigners to obtain them if they build businesses that create jobs,West said. “From my standpoint, this is a no-brainer. Foreign residents will have to put money on the table; they have to come here, establish the business and then create the jobs. Then, after they do, they get the green card.” A similar program exists for those willing to risk venture capital, he added.



Created by Elyssa Malakoff On Saturday, July 21, 2012 2:48 PM

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