U.S. Secretary of Commerce Raimondo tours ARMI

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From left, Mayor Joyce Craig, Sen. Maggie Hassan, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo talk to Dean Kamen. Photo/Andrew Sylvia

MANCHESTER, N.H. – U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo led a roundtable of New Hampshire business and political leaders discussing the importance of federal funding and local infrastructure in Millyard’s nascent biofabrication industry.

Following a tour of the adjacent Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing Institute (ARMI) in Manchester, Raimundo praised the efforts of U.S. Senators Maggie Hassan (D-NH) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) in their advocacy for Manchester in obtaining a $44 million Build Back Better Regional Grant last year.

“I hope you realize how extraordinary your two senators are,” she said. “Small states can often be overlooked, but you have two people in the ring fighting for you every day.”

That funding came after ARMI received funding from the Department of Defense to help develop new technologies to help wounded soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, but Shaheen and Raimondo said the technologies being developed at ARMI are part of a larger effort to keep America technologically ahead of global adversaries.

It was not certain that the $44 million grant would come to Manchester after the Department of Defense funding, but Hassan noted that the Millyard was once the largest textile manufacturing site in the world and through that legacy of hard work as well as through collaboration from local, educational, federal and non-profit organizations, the transition into making the Millyard into a place where human organs can be manufactured is underway.

“(New Hampshire) is not a place where we wait for other people to solve problems,” said Hassan. “We roll up our sleeves and work together, that is the secret sauce for New Hampshire.”

Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig built on those statements, saying that the various forces built upon the efforts of ARMI founder Dean Kamen, working together to win the grant which she said will eventually bring 7,000 new high-paying jobs to New Hampshire as well as significant secondary economic development through the need for additional housing and services for those new employees.


 

About this Author

Andrew Sylvia

Assistant EditorManchester Ink Link

Born and raised in the Granite State, Andrew Sylvia has written approximately 10,000 pieces over his career for outlets across Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont. On top of that, he's a licensed notary and licensed to sell property, casualty and life insurance, he's been a USSF trained youth soccer and futsal referee for the past six years and he can name over 60 national flags in under 60 seconds according to that flag game app he has on his phone, which makes sense because he also has a bachelor's degree in geography (like Michael Jordan). He can also type over 100 words a minute on a good day.