Wednesday, December 11, 2019
ASME Presents Congressional Briefing on Advanced Manufacturing Communities
ASME Presents Congressional Briefing on Advanced Manufacturing Communities ASME Presents Congressional Briefing on Advanced Manufacturing Communities ASME Presents Congressional Briefing on Advanced Manufacturing CommunitiesAug. 19, 2016  (Left to right) IBM Fellow Emeritus Nicholas Donofrio, Nam Suh of MIT, ASME Past President J. Robert Sims and Tom Kurfess, former assistant director for Advanced Manufacturing at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, at the ASME Congressional briefing, Advanced Manufacturing Communities Encouraging Innovation and Building the Advanced Manufacturing Economy of the Future.  ASME recently  sponsored a Congressional briefing, Advanced Manufacturing Communities  Encouraging Innovation and Building the Advanced Manufacturing Economy of the Future,  which attracted an audience of more than 100 members of Congress, congressional  staff, agency officials, and thought leaders. The packed briefing was convened  in conjunction with the House    Manufacturing Caucus as part of a series of  manufacturing briefings being held throughout the year.J. Robert Sims,  past president of ASME, welcomed the audience and introduced the co-chairs of  the Manufacturing Caucus, Congressmen Tim Ryan (D-OH) and Tom Reed (R-NY). The  co-chairs provided opening remarks focusing on the key role that advanced  manufacturing plays in maintaining and improving the strength of the U.S.  economy and highlighted the role of Congress in ensuring proper investments in  this field. The briefing  consisted of an impressive panel of experts on advanced manufacturing, which  included Nicholas M. Donofrio, IBM Fellow Emeritus, former IBM executive vice  president for Innovation and Technology, and recent chair of the National  Academy of Engineerings Study Committee on Making Value for America Nam P.  Suh, former president of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and  Technology, head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at MIT, and  recipient of    the ASME Medal for Distinguished Mechanical Engineering  Achievements and Deborah Wince-Smith, president and CEO of the United States  Council on Competitiveness and former assistant secretary for technology policy  in the United States Department of Commerce.  Deborah Wince-Smith (left) from the United States Council on Competitiveness and Steve Schmid of the University of Notre Dame were also among the panelists at the briefing in Washington, D.C.Panelists also  included Tom Kurfess, professor and HUSCO/Ramirez Distinguished Chair in Fluid  Power and Motion Control at Georgia Tech and former assistant director for  Advanced Manufacturing at the White House Office of Science and Technology  Policy and Steve Schmid, professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering at  the University of Notre Dame and former assistant director for Research  Partnerships in the Advanced Manufacturing National Program Office at the  National Institute of Standards and Technology. Kurfess and Schmid al   so serve  as co-chairs of the ASME Manufacturing Public Policy Task Force. The purpose of the  briefing was to bring to light the exciting future these experts see for  advanced manufacturing in the United States. The discussion focused on  innovative solutions that can only be realized with the support of  public-private partnerships that encourage the formation of manufacturing  communities places where universities, companies, and local governments work  together to promote manufacturing education and innovation. Manufacturing  communities work to drive education and training, which can then create a  comprehensive innovation ecosystem and skills-pipeline that can only exist in  these areas where modern manufacturing is being touted and pursued.A video of the Advanced Manufacturing Congressional briefing is now available online in three segments. To view parts one and two, visit www.youtube.com/watch?v=WCZbJ64Kels and www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5N_4uDnBM0. To watch part three, visi   t www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nm1IDOWtrUk.   
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