By TOM HESTER Jr. | Associated Press Writer
May 1, 2008
PISCATAWAY, N.J. - A California-based stem cell research
company will get $589,000 in state grants to open a New Jersey facility and
create 12 new jobs, a plan questioned by those worried about the governor's
proposed budget cuts.
"It does seem questionable to be writing checks to companies that are going to
hire 12 people when you're cutting higher education and can't pay for
transportation," said Jon Shure, president of the liberal-leaning New Jersey
Policy Perspective that has criticized taxpayer-funded business incentives and
tax breaks.
Democratic Gov. Jon S. Corzine, who joined officials from StemCyte and Rutgers
University on Thursday to announce StemCyte's plan to open a facility in Ewing,
defended the incentives.
"The addition of StemCyte to our portfolio of companies represents an important
economic investment that brings with it the promise of discovery and cures for
some of our most devastating diseases and injuries," Corzine said as he toured a
Rutgers stem cell lab. "I am proud to welcome StemCyte to the Garden State."
The Ewing facility will house executive management and therapeutics team
members, and serve as an East Coast base for the company.
StemCyte and Rutgers recently entered into a research agreement for a spinal
cord injury therapy.
The therapy developed by Rutgers professor Wise Young uses umbilical cord blood
stem cells from StemCyte, which boasts one of the world's largest cord blood
stem cell banks.
The Covina, Calif., company also has operations in Taiwan and is developing a
unit in India.
The New Jersey Economic Development Authority said the company was approved for
the grant under a state business employment incentive program.
The program is costing the state $152 million this fiscal year. Corzine has
proposed increasing it 18 percent next fiscal year, making it one of the few
proposed spending increases in his budget plan.
"The proposed state budget cuts funding for higher education and the
transportation trust fund is on verge the bankruptcy," Shure said. "It would
seem that investing in higher education and transportation are better ways to
build the economy than writing checks to businesses."
But Kenneth J. Giacin, the StemCyte chairman, said the state's "collaborative
research environment, their commitment to stem cell therapeutics and their
reputation as a leader in the life science industry were important elements in
our decision to move to the state."
He said the state's "generous" grant was among the considerations that helped it
decide to move to New Jersey.
StemCyte's move to New Jersey comes even though voters in November rejected
borrowing $450 million to provide stem cell research grants for 10 years. The
measure was backed by Corzine but was voted down amid concerns about mounting
state debt and high taxes.
"This confirms that the cures of the future lie in non-embryonic stem cell
research and do not require funding by the overburdened taxpayer in order to
move forward," said Marie Tasy of New Jersey Right-to-Life, which opposes stem
cell research that destroys embryos.
But Corzine said he hopes voters will soon get another chance to approve such
funding.
"I intend to revisit this issue," Corzine said, but he added, "We haven't
crossed that bridge yet."
Before November's vote, lawmakers and Corzine approved $270 million to build
five stem cell research facilities in the state. Corzine said he's still made no
decision on how that money would be spent.
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