GREENVILLE – The technology involved in East Carolina University’s proposed Life Sciences and Biotechnology Building is far from simple. But the goal isn’t.
“We can make a major difference on Eastern North Carolina,” ECU Chancellor Steve Ballard says in the accompanying video.
The Connect NC bonds on the ballot March 15 include $90 million for the 150,000 square-foot structure, which would encompass pharmaceutical development and manufacturing, bioprocessing, biomedical engineering and biology.
For Ballard, the big words boil down to one thing: Student success.
“That’s our number-one goal – it’s the first promise we make for 28,000 students,” he says.
Officials at ECU project that the Life Sciences/Biotechnology effort would boost R&D funding in Eastern North Carolina and produce a whole new cadre of researchers and scientists.
It would help ECU grads land higher-than-average starting salaries, stay in the East and eventually add their own entrepreneurial and industrial investments to the region.
“This bond package will be huge for the East – and the East needs more economic engines,” Ballard says. “This bond will be critical for our ability to move forward in economic development for Eastern North Carolina.”
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