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Immediate Release: June 30, 2006
Contact: Kathryn Reed, 919-807-6975, reedk@nccommunitycolleges.edu


Fayetteville Tech Brings Military Business to North Carolina

By Kathryn Reed, Summer Intern

     North Carolina Community College System Office, Public Affairs

RALEIGH: In 2005, North Carolina businesses earned $740 million more from the Department of Defense (DOD) than they did in 2004. This notable increase was due in no small part to the creation of the North Carolina Military Business Center (NCMBC), the first and only one of its kind in the nation, under the supervision of Fayetteville Technical Community College.

Established by a grant from the North Carolina General Assembly in 2004, the NCMBC works to utilize the state’s considerable military presence to promote economic development by linking military demand with state supply. The center’s aims include increasing military business for in-state companies, integrating military personnel and their families into the North Carolina workforce and supporting the development in the state of defense-related business.

The center has satellite locations at Craven Community College, Coastal Carolina Community College and Wayne Community College that target opportunities at local military bases, and it operates regional development centers at Catawba Valley Community College, Guilford Technical Community College, Durham Technical Community College and Sandhills Community College to help local companies compete for nationwide government business opportunities. The NCMBC also utilizes the Small Business Centers of community colleges across the state to link with companies.

“It’s great to be part of the community college system. It gives us immediate legitimacy,” said Scott Dorney, executive director of NCMBC. “They give us an immediate connection to the business community. Our real partners are the Small Business Centers.”

With five military bases and more than 107,000 military personnel, North Carolina boasts the fourth largest military presence in the country. At the time of the creation of the NCMBC, however, the state ranked only 23rd for amount of money spent by the DOD on procurement from in-state companies with less than one percent of the department’s $230 billion procurement budget going to North Carolina businesses.

Since that time the center’s efforts have connected more than 50,000 North Carolina businesses to about 1,500 federal business opportunities and have helped businesses win about 70 contract awards for more than $45,000,000 -- raising the amount of money earned by North Carolina businesses from the DOD by 33 percent.

The state did slip to 25th in the DOD procurement ranking because Mississippi moved ahead, but Dorney said the shift represents potential.

“It demonstrates that with effort it is possible to move up,” he said. “Our goal is to be in the top ten.”

Dorney cited military construction as well as contracting and subcontracting opportunities as future areas of focus for the NCMBC. He said the center will study the results of an independent analysis to anticipate the future needs of DOD.

“We’re not just focused on ‘The government wants to buy X today. Who makes it?’” he said. “The other 20 percent is positioning North Carolina firms to meet future DOD demand.”

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