Texas State joins South Texas Technology Management
Posted by University News Service
June 2, 2011
South Texas Technology Management (STTM), a regional technology transfer office that assists four University of Texas institutions, today announced it will provide services for a new member: Texas State University-San Marcos.
STTM and Texas State signed a contract for STTM to assist with management of Texas State inventions and support Texas State’s Office for Commercialization and Industry Relations (OCIR) to promote and help manage the university’s intellectual property portfolio.
STTM is a University of Texas full-service regional technology transfer office. Prior to adding Texas State, STTM’s membership included the UT Health Science Center San Antonio, UT San Antonio, UT Brownsville and UT-Pan American.
“We are excited about Texas State's endorsement of this regional model for technology management and commercialization of intellectual property from Texas public universities,” said STTM Executive Director Arjun Sanga, J.D., assistant vice president for technology transfer at the UT Health Science Center. “We look forward to a long-standing, productive partnership.
”The mission of the OCIR is to coordinate Texas State’s commercialization and industrial activities, to enhance and promote its applied research and development activities, to assist in the capture of commercial research and development funding, to enhance the university’s entrepreneurial platform, and to provide resources for the support and enhancement of education with relevance. STTM will assist with OCIR’s mission through invention management, invention marketing, faculty education and start-up company support.
STTM brings a wealth of intellectual property and commercialization experience to the technologies that are being developed at Texas State to help move them out of the laboratories and into state-of-the art products and services that benefit both the public and the growing San Marcos region,” said Billy Covington, Ph.D., chief research officer at Texas State University.
Dr. Covington will join Brian Herman, Ph.D., vice president for research at the UT Health Science Center; Robert Gracy, Ph.D., vice president for research at UTSA; Luis Colom, Ph.D., vice president for research at UT Brownsville; Wendy Lawrence-Fowler, Ph.D., vice provost of research and sponsored projects at UT-Pan American; and Sanga on the STTM Governance Council.
STTM is funded by the member institutions and by the return from commercializing inventions. Having Texas State in the fold creates more collaborative opportunities for commercializing university technologies, Sanga said.