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For Immediate Release
June 30, 2003
Contact Information: Sheryl Lichtig Wyan
Office of Communications
University of California, Merced
Phone: (209) 724-4408 or (209) 658-9101
E-mail: sheryl.lichtig@ucop.edu
SBA selects UC Merced
to direct support network for small business in Central California
Merced – UC Merced is taking on a major
new role to stimulate regional economic growth with the award of
a U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) contract to provide leadership
for the Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs) in Central California.
Selected by officials at the SBA’s Fresno
district office, UC Merced was awarded an initial contract for more
than $550,000, with a possible one-year contract extension for $1.1
million, to serve as the district’s lead center. In that capacity,
UC Merced will provide leadership and direct the delivery of services
to business owners and entrepreneurs in 15 counties, including San
Joaquin Valley, Sierra foothills and Central Coast communities.
“As a university for the San Joaquin Valley,
we are dedicated to finding innovative ways to enhance and engage
our communities by expanding economic opportunities,” said
UC Merced Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey. “UC Merced shares
the SBA’s commitment to support the development of small businesses,
and this program meets important economic needs across Central California.”
One of six lead centers in California, the UC
Merced lead center will oversee the Fresno SBA district’s
SBDCs in Bakersfield, Fresno, Modesto, San Luis Obispo and Gilroy
as well as satellite centers in Merced and Visalia. Previously,
all SBDCs in California reported to the state’s Technology,
Trade and Commerce Agency.
“We look forward to partnering with Central
California’s SBDCs, which have distinguished themselves through
strong leadership and successful efforts to stimulate growth,”
said Helen Sullivan, director of the UC Merced Division of Professional
Studies, who also will serve as lead center director. “Small
businesses are the backbone of business, particularly in the San
Joaquin Valley. Forming a plan for regional small business development
with flexibility to address area-specific needs is a primary objective.”
UC Merced will oversee the SBDCs’ provision
of business counseling, training, financial planning, marketing,
research and other services designed to improve the productivity,
management and overall success of small businesses. Catering to
regional issues, UC Merced also plans to work with the SBA and other
community and business organizations to identify key regional growth
industries and to expand small business development opportunities
for women and minorities, with an emphasis on the Spanish-speaking
and Southeast Asian populations.
The new SBDC lead center will be located with
the UC Merced Division of Professional Studies in UC Merced’s
Fresno Center.
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