The Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program

March 27, 2018 (R44308)
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Summary

The Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) program is a national network of centers established by the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act (P.L. 100-418). MEP centers provide custom services to small and medium-sized manufacturers (SMMs) to improve production processes, upgrade technological capabilities, and facilitate product innovation. Operating under the auspices of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the MEP system includes centers in all 50 states and Puerto Rico.

NIST provides funding to support MEP center operations, with matching funds provided by nonfederal sources (e.g., state governments, fees for services). Initially established with a goal of transferring technology developed in federal laboratories to SMMs, MEP shifted its focus in the early 1990s to responding to needs identified by SMMs, including off-the-shelf technologies and business advice. As MEP evolved, its focus shifted to reducing manufacturing costs through lean production, quality, and other programs targeting plant efficiencies and to increasing profitability through growth. Current MEP efforts focus on innovation strategies, commercialization, lean production, process improvements, workforce training, supply chain optimization, and exporting.

In 2017, NIST completed a system-wide revamp of MEP to better align center funding levels with the national distribution of manufacturing activity and to result in a single center in each state and Puerto Rico. Other objectives included aligning center activities to the NIST MEP strategic plan; aligning center activities with state and local strategies; providing opportunities for new partnering arrangements; and restructuring and reinvigorating the boards of local centers.

As conceived, the centers were intended to become self-supporting after six years. The original legislation provided for a 50% federal cost-share for the first three years of operation, followed by declining levels of federal support for the final three years; federal funding after a center's sixth year of operation was prohibited. In 1998, Congress eliminated the prohibition on federal funding after year six. In 2017, Congress authorized NIST to provide up to 50% of the capital and annual operating and maintenance funds required to establish and support a center. Previously, the federal cost-share was limited to 50% for a center's first three years of operation, 40% in year four, and one-third in fifth and subsequent years.

The MEP program has, at times, been included in discussions surrounding termination of federal programs that provide direct support for industry. Invoking the intent of the original legislation, President George W. Bush proposed in his FY2009 budget to eliminate federal funding for MEP and to provide for "the orderly change of MEP centers to a self-supporting basis." Nevertheless, Congress appropriated $110 million for the program. Proponents assert that SMMs play a central role in the U.S. economy and that the MEP system provides assistance not otherwise available to SMMs. Some opponents have asserted that such services are available from other sources and that MEP inappropriately shifts a portion of the costs of these services to taxpayers.

Continued federal support for MEP centers remains a point of contention. In his FY2018 budget, President Trump sought to eliminate federal support for MEP centers, requesting $6.0 million in funding for the program's "orderly wind down." In contrast, the House committee-reported appropriations bill included $100 million for MEP, while the Senate committee-reported bill included $130.0 million. On March 23, 2018, Congress enacted the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141), providing $140.0 million for MEP. President Trump has again proposed the elimination of MEP in his FY2019 budget.

As Congress makes appropriation decisions, it may continue to discuss support for MEP in the context of the federal government's role in bolstering innovation and competitiveness, and in the context of the appropriate federal role in such activities.


The Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program

Overview

The Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP), a program of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST),1 is a national network of centers that provide custom services to small and medium-sized manufacturers (SMMs)2 to improve production processes, upgrade technological capabilities, and facilitate product innovation.

The MEP mission is "to enhance the productivity and technological performance of U.S. manufacturing." The MEP program executes this mission through "state and regional centers [that] facilitate and accelerate the transfer of manufacturing technology in partnership with industry, universities and educational institutions, state governments, and NIST and other federal research laboratories and agencies."3 Funding for the MEP centers is provided on a cost-shared basis between the federal government and nonfederal sources, including state and local governments and fees charged to SMMs for center services.4

The MEP program received $130.0 million in appropriations for FY2017, equal to its FY2016 level. In his FY2018 budget, President Trump seeks to eliminate the MEP program, requesting $6.0 million in funding for the program's "orderly wind down." In contrast, the House committee-reported appropriations bill would provide $100 million for MEP in FY2018, while the Senate committee-reported bill would provide $130.0 million.

The MEP has a staff of 47 employees at NIST in FY2017, and the centers have approximately 1,300 field staff with technical and business expertise.5 MEP recently completed a system-wide competition that awarded one center to each state and Puerto Rico; previously some states had more than one MEP center.

NIST served more than 25,445 SMMs in FY2016. In a survey of clients, NIST found that companies reported $9.3 billion in new and retained sales, $1.4 billion in cost savings, $3.4 billion in new client investment, and the creation and retention of 86,602 jobs in FY2016.6

Background

In the mid-1980s, congressional debates on trade focused attention on the critical role of technological advance in the competitiveness of individual firms and long-term national economic growth and productivity. Reflecting these ideas, the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act (P.L. 100-418) established a public-private program, now known as the Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership, to assist U.S.-based SMMs in identifying and adopting new technologies. The focus on SMMs derived from their perceived contribution to job creation, innovation, and manufacturing. Research at that time indicated that SMMs produce 2.5 times more innovations per employee than large firms.7 Program advocates noted the efforts of other nations to provide technical and business assistance to their manufacturing communities through the establishment of manufacturing extension centers (see text box, "MEP-Like Programs of Other Countries").

MEP-Like Programs of Other Countries

Several other countries also have national networks of centers that provide technical and business support to small and medium-sized manufacturers. For example:

  • Japan's Kohsetsushi network received $2.140 billion in 2012 and has 182 centers and 6,000 technical staff.
  • Germany's Fraunhofer Institutes received $653 million in 2015 and has 69 centers and 24,500 staff.
  • Canada's Industrial Research Assistance Program (IRAP) received $258 million in government funding and has more than 100 centers and more than 200 technical staff.

Like the MEP, the Fraunhofer Institutes and at least some of the Kohsetsushi centers charge clients fees for their services; IRAP does not charge clients.

Sources: U.S. Government Accountability Office, Global Manufacturing: Foreign Government Programs Differ in Some Key Respects From Those in the United States, GAO-13-265, July 2013; Fraunhofer, website, https://www.fraunhofer.de/en/about-fraunhofer/profile-structure/facts-and-figures/finances/contract-research-revenue.html.

In 2014, there were 248,000 SMMs in the United States. These firms accounted for nearly 99% of the nation's manufacturing enterprises and employed approximately 5.1 million people in 2014, approximately 45% of total U.S. manufacturing employment.8

The improved use of technology by SMMs is seen by policymakers and business analysts as important to the competitiveness of American manufacturing firms. How a product is designed and produced often determines costs, quality, and reliability. Lack of attention to process technologies and techniques may be the result of various factors, including company finances, insufficient information, equipment shortages, and undervaluation of the benefits of technology. A key purpose of the MEP program is to address these issues through outreach and the application of expertise, technologies, and knowledge.

NIST requires regular reporting by the centers, including the number and types of projects undertaken. Centers also are mandated to collect information from client companies that may provide indicators of longer-term results, including changes in sales, financial investments, inventory reduction, savings in labor and materials, and jobs created or saved. According to NIST, from MEP's inception through FY2014, the program has worked with nearly 80,000 manufacturers, leading to $88 billion in sales and $14 billion in cost savings, and has helped create more than 729,000 jobs.9

According to NIST, for every dollar of federal investment, the MEP generates nearly $27.0 in new client investment and $17.9 in new sales growth for SMMs. NIST also asserts that MEP creates or retains one manufacturing job for every $1,501 in federal investment.10

A 2017 study performed by the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research using a constrained model (which assumes competition or displacement between firms), estimated that the services and activities of the MEP center added more than 142,000 jobs to the U.S. economy and $15.4 billion to GDP, producing a return of 8.7:1 to the U.S. Treasury, based on data provided by MEP centers for the fourth quarter of 2015 through the third quarter of 2016.11

Evolution of the Program

The MEP program was originally established in 1988 as the "Regional Centers for the Transfer of Manufacturing Technology."12 Over time, the program was referred to by a number of different names, including the Manufacturing Technology Centers program and the Manufacturing Extension Partnership program. The America COMPETES Reauthorization of 2010 codified the name of the program as the "Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership" and the centers as the "Hollings Manufacturing Extension Centers."13

From its inception through the mid-1990s, the MEP's principal emphasis was on

establishing the national network—making sure there was a center within reach of all the nation's manufacturers and linking those centers to one another so they could learn from and teach each other about how best to work with manufacturers.14

The first three centers were established in 1989. Four more were added in 1991 and 1992. In 1994, the number of MEP centers expanded substantially when NIST took over support of extension centers originally funded by the Department of Defense's Technology Reinvestment Project. This brought the number of centers to 44. NIST awarded additional centers in 1995-1996, increasing the total to 70 centers.15 Subsequent consolidation of centers in New York and Ohio brought the number of centers down to 60, including centers in each state and Puerto Rico.

While the focus on helping SMMs has remained constant, the methods and tools used by MEP have evolved since its creation. An intent of the legislation that created the manufacturing extension effort was to provide cutting-edge technology developed by NIST and other federal laboratories to SMMs. Royalties and licensing fees paid to the centers by the SMMs for the use of these technologies were expected to make the centers self-sufficient after the initial six years of operation. Advanced, federally funded technology, however, did not prove to be what most SMMs needed. Rather, their needs proved to be much more basic, including off-the-shelf technologies and business advice on topics such as management information technology, financial management systems, and business processes. A 1991 assessment of the program by the General Accounting Office (GAO, now the Government Accountability Office) concluded that

While legislation establishing the Manufacturing Technology Centers Program emphasized the transfer of advanced technologies being developed at federal laboratories, the centers have found that their clients primarily need proven technologies. Thus, a key mandate of this program is not realistically aligned with the basic needs of most small manufacturers [emphasis added]... [A]ccording to officials from professional and trade associations representing small manufacturers and the results of key studies on U.S. manufacturing competitiveness, such advanced, laboratory-based technologies are not practical for most small manufacturers because these technologies generally are expensive, untested, and too complex.16

In recognition of this situation, the program was reoriented to offer more basic technologies that helped SMMs to improve their productivity and competitive position. By the mid-1990s, MEP was providing "a wide range of business services, including helping companies (1) solve individual manufacturing problems, (2) obtain training for their workers, (3) create marketing plans, and (4) upgrade their equipment and computers."17 As articulated in the NIST Manufacturing Innovation blog,

The initial services were focused on solving immediate and short-term problems—point solutions. The philosophy was an engineering one: 'You have a problem. We can fix it.'18

Over time, the MEP's focus moved from point solutions to more strategic, integrated services. In 2010, the "overarching strategy" for the MEP program was to reduce manufacturing costs through "lean, quality, and other programs targeting plant efficiencies" and to increase profitability "through business growth services resulting in new sales, new markets, and new products."19

Current MEP efforts focus on innovation strategies, commercialization, lean production, process improvements, workforce training, supply chain optimization, and exporting. One of the key areas of the MEP strategy is technology acceleration.20 MEP defines technology acceleration as

integrating technology into the products, processes, services and business models of manufacturers to solve manufacturing problems or pursue opportunities and facilitate competitiveness and enhance manufacturing growth. Technology Acceleration spans the innovation continuum and can include aspects of technology transfer, technology transition, technology diffusion, technology deployment and manufacturing implementation.21

Technology acceleration encompasses MEP efforts to assist SMMs in the improvement of existing products, the development of new products, and the development and improvement of manufacturing processes. MEP assists SMMs in this regard through a variety of approaches including technology scouting and transfer; supplier scouting; business-to-business network pilots; lean product development; technology-driven market intelligence; access to capital; cooperative research and development activities with NIST laboratories; and use of other federal programs such as the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program,22 the Advanced Manufacturing Technology (AmTech) Consortia program, and the National Network for Manufacturing Innovation (NNMI, also known as Manufacturing USA).23

While continuing to offer its services to all SMMs, MEP is emphasizing targeted outreach toward growth-oriented SMMs and small entrepreneurial startups.24

Statutory Mission and Activities

The statutory objective of the MEP centers is to enhance productivity and technological performance in U.S. manufacturing through the following:

No direct financial support is available for companies through the centers. The program offers only technical and managerial assistance, and the cost of that assistance is generally reimbursable on a sliding scale.26

The statutorily authorized activities of centers include the following:

MEP Organization and Structure

The MEP program includes an MEP program office located at NIST (NIST MEP), an MEP Advisory Board, and the 51 MEP centers and their Oversight Boards. In FY2017, NIST MEP had 47 employees and received appropriations to support 80 FTE.28 The NIST FY2018 budget justification requested authorization for zero FTE for MEP.29

NIST MEP

According to NIST, the MEP program office was reorganized in FY2017 "to streamline its activities for better efficiency and to allow for better cross communication and collaboration as well as to align with the NIST structure."30

The NIST MEP program office is led by a Director and a Deputy Director, and has four Divisions with Groups and/or Teams:

MEP Advisory Board

Congress established an MEP Advisory Board to provide the NIST Director with advice on MEP activities, plans, and policies; assessments of the soundness of MEP plans and strategies; and assessments of current performance against MEP program plans.32 By statute, the MEP Advisory Board is to consist of 10 members broadly representative of stakeholders appointed by the NIST Director. The board is to include at least two members employed by or on an advisory board for a center, and at least five members from U.S. small businesses in the manufacturing sector. In addition, in 2017 Congress added a requirement that at least one member of the board be a representative of a community college.33 Federal employees may not serve as advisory board members. Members serve staggered terms of three years. A member may serve two consecutive terms. One year from the end of the second term, a member may be reappointed to the board.

The MEP Advisory Board is to act solely in an advisory capacity in accordance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act.34 The board is required to meet at least twice a year and to report annually to Congress, through the Secretary of Commerce, on the status of the MEP program and programmatic planning. Copies of the MEP Advisory Board annual reports are available online at https://www.nist.gov/mep/about-mep/advisory-board/annual-advisory-board-reports.

MEP Centers

The MEP program is administered by NIST through partnerships with centers in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, including approximately 400 service locations35 and nearly 1,300 field staff with technical and business expertise.36 MEP seeks to have a center or other service location not more than two hours away from any potential client. A complete list of current MEP centers is provided in Appendix A.

Each center is operated by a state government, university, or other nonprofit organization. Center staff are employees of the center and its partners, not the federal government.

Center Selection

The following sections provide an overview of the criteria used by NIST MEP in awarding centers and the ongoing system-wide center competition.

Criteria

MEP centers are selected in response to open and competitive solicitations issued by NIST. Federal statute requires that center selections be based on merit using, at a minimum, the following criteria:

Following the first MEP center awards in 1989, the number of centers grew to 70, including at least one center in each state and Puerto Rico, and two or more centers in a few states. Later consolidation reduced the number to 60.

System-Wide Center Recompetition

In 2017, NIST completed a recompetition of all its centers. At the time the recompetition began in 2014, many of the existing centers had not been competed for more than 20 years. According to NIST, the system-wide competition was intended to result in center funding levels more closely reflecting the national distribution of manufacturing activity and result in a single center in each state and Puerto Rico. Other objectives included aligning center activities to the NIST MEP strategic plan; aligning center activities with state and local strategies; providing opportunities for new partnering arrangements; and restructuring and reinvigorating local center boards.38

Review Prior to Continued Center Funding

Center awards are made as cooperative agreements with an initial performance period of five years. NIST may extend an award for an additional five years following an overall assessment of the center, including "programmatic, policy, financial, administrative, and responsibility assessments."39 According to NIST, when an application for a multiyear award is approved, funding is usually provided for only the first year of the project; for subsequent years, recipients are required to submit detailed budgets and budget narratives prior to the award of any continued funding. The amount of funds awarded after the first year is provided on a noncompetitive basis and may be adjusted upward or downward. Center funding after the first year is contingent upon satisfactory performance, continued relevance to the mission and priorities of the program, and the availability of funds. Continuation of an award to extend the period of performance or to increase or decrease funding is at the sole discretion of NIST.40

Center Cost-Share and Term of Eligibility

The following sections provide current and historical information on center cost-sharing and term of eligibility for funding.

Current Status of Cost-Sharing and Term of Eligibility

Funding for the MEP centers is provided on a cost-share basis by the federal government and nonfederal sources. The federal government may provide up to 50% of the funds required to establish and support a center regardless of the year of operation of the center. A center must meet the required nonfederal cost-share to be eligible to receive federal funding.

Institutions eligible to compete for a center include nonprofit institutions, or consortia thereof; institutions of higher education; or states, United States territories, local governments, or tribal governments. There is no limit to the number of years a center may receive federal funding.

As discussed above, the recompetition sought to better align center funding levels with the number of SMMs and the cost of providing services to these firms in each center's service area. In this regard, NIST MEP set federal funding levels for each state center. These amounts are the maximum available for the federal cost-share, and a center must meet the required nonfederal cost-share to be eligible to receive full funding. (Appendix B provides annual funding awarded centers in each state in the recompetition.)

Historical Background on Cost-Sharing and Term of Eligibility

Cost-Sharing

The financial support system created for MEP by Congress in the original legislation was based on matching financing between the federal government and state, local, and/or private nonprofit entities. The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation report to accompany the Technology Competitiveness Act of 1987 (S. 907, 100th Congress) directed that "the percentage of funding offered by particular applicants be considered in deciding which applications be selected."41 Cost-sharing strengthens the ties between the organizations involved in the cooperative arrangement and as such, the committee stated that "special attention will be given to innovative ways in which Federal laboratories, State agencies, and business and professional groups can work together."42 The matching provisions were seen as a means to ensure that the centers reflect the actual needs of the manufacturing companies in the area they serve.

The act establishing the Regional Centers for the Transfer of Manufacturing Technology (later the Manufacturing Extension Partnership program) required applicants to provide more than 50% of the capital and annual operating and maintenance costs in years three through six, but did not specify the share to be paid. Instead, the act directed the Secretary of Commerce to determine the maximum cost share and to publish it in the Federal Register.

Prior to enactment of the American Competitiveness and Innovation Act (P.L. 114-329) in January 2017, NIST was authorized to provide no more than 50% of center costs during the first three years of an award, no more than 40% in the fourth year, and no more than one-third in year five and beyond.43

Following the economic downturn of 2007-2009, there were calls for Congress to raise the federal cost-share to 50% from one-third for centers in their fourth or subsequent year of operation. At that time, some commentators argued that during the difficult economic situation, state and local financial support for the program may be curtailed. At the same time, client fees for service decreased 13.4% between FY2008 and FY2009, the first significant decline since FY1996.44 Advocates of increasing the federal share noted that such action would not release state and local partners of their responsibility to support the centers, but would permit continued outreach to small manufacturers without pricing the services out of reach. Opponents of this approach argued that the one-third federal contribution was sufficient and that the successful operation of the program was dependent on the financial participation of state and local government as well as the companies utilizing the centers.

The America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-358) mandated that the GAO explore and report on the cost-share provisions of the MEP program. In response, GAO issued a report on April 4, 2011, that noted the following:

We were unable to provide recommendations on how best to structure the cost-share requirement to provide for the long-term sustainability of the program because we could not identify criteria or a basis for determining the optimal cost-share structure for this program. Instead, we have identified a number of factors that could be taken into account in considering modifications to the current cost-share structure. Among other things, past GAO work has found that cost-share structures should promote equity by assigning costs to those who both use and benefit from the services. As it applies to the MEP program, manufacturers, state and local governments, and the nation may all benefit from the program to varying degrees, requiring an evaluation of the relative benefits and aligning cost-shares to reflect who receives the benefits.45

In this regard, GAO noted that NIST's study of the cost-share provision of the MEP program

recommended that the cost-share requirements should be consistent with those of other economic development programs—which it noted, in Commerce, had 1:1 or lower cost-sharing—and should provide flexibility to alter the cost-share requirement in response to economic conditions.46

However, GAO also noted that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) had identified the MEP program for potential elimination from discretionary spending, stating that the program's enhancement of U.S. productivity is questionable. According to CBO, the legislative agency "regularly issues a compendium of budget options to help inform federal lawmakers about the implications of possible policy choices."47 Elimination of MEP was one more than 100 options CBO proposed in 2011 for changes to federal spending and revenues.

In 2014, two bills were introduced with provisions that would have allowed federal support for MEP centers of up to 50% of annual costs incurred, without regard to how long the cooperative agreement has been in effect.48 The NIST Reauthorization Act of 2014 (H.R. 5035, 113th Congress) passed the House but did not advance in the Senate. The America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2014 (S. 2757, 113th Congress) was introduced in the Senate but did not advance out of committee.

Also in 2014, the MEP Advisory Board recommended that MEP readjust the cost-share structure in order to optimize the federal investment and provide for the long-term sustainability of the program. Specifically, the board recommended requiring to a 1:1 match (50% federal cost share) and allowing the nonfederal cost-share to include in-kind contributions of up to one-half of the center's portion of the cost-share.49

In 2015, the Senate Committee on Appropriations expressed concerns about the federal cost-share structure (as it existed prior to the recent system-wide competition) and directed NIST to provide a report to the committee and to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation "detailing quantifiable metrics on total MEP center funding, including a breakdown of the type of contribution source across centers that have transitioned from the 50 percent Federal, 50 percent non-Federal cost-share to a lower cost-share held by the Federal Government."50

Term of Eligibility for Funding

The legislation that established the MEP program initially prohibited centers from receiving federal financing beyond their sixth year of operation.51 However, federal support beyond the sixth year later became considered necessary in lieu of increasing service charges paid by SMMs. While analysts considered service charges to the SMMs to be important to the effectiveness of the MEP program,52 some also expressed concerns that an increase in charges commensurate with making the centers self-supporting might make the services too expensive for many SMMs. This perspective was articulated in a 1998 NIST-sponsored study:

Analysis indicates that to offset lost public revenue centers would need to take on much larger projects at much higher billing rates and focus on repeat business. As a result, many small manufacturers would not be able to afford these services. Given this conclusion, the best way to ensure high-caliber nationwide assistance to smaller manufacturers is to commit to a stable amount of renewable federal funding for those centers which receive successful evaluations.53

The prohibition on funding after the sixth year was temporarily suspended by provisions in the FY1997 and FY1998 appropriations acts,54 then eliminated by the Technology Administration Act of 1998 (Section 2, P.L. 105-309). Under the provisions of the act, centers were eligible to receive federal funding of up to one-third of center costs after their sixth year of operation, subject to positive, independent evaluations to be conducted at least every two years.

Other MEP-Related Activities

The MEP program has provided additional funding opportunities for a number of activities that support the program's overarching mission. Some of these activities were supported solely by NIST, while others were supported by multiple federal agencies. Current activities of this type include business-to-business networks and additional cooperative agreements. A number of other efforts have been completed, including Make it in America Challenge, Advanced Manufacturing Jobs and Innovation Accelerator Challenge, and Manufacturing Technology Acceleration Centers.

Business-to-Business Networks

In December 2014, NIST MEP awarded $2.5 million to 10 MEP centers for the establishment of pilot projects to develop, deploy, and maintain business-to-business (B2B) networks.55 These networks were intended to help match buyers and sellers of technologies or products and services in support of SMMs. The two-year projects were designed to be scalable and interoperable to help determine whether they could be expanded into a national network or a series of regional ones.56 The 10 pilot projects have been completed with an evaluation study due in 2017.

Competitive Awards Program

According to NIST, additional work on the B2B networks will be conducted under MEP's Competitive Awards Program, which was established in 2017 by the American Innovation and Competitiveness Act.57 The statutory purpose of the program is "development of projects to solve new or emerging manufacturing problems." Awards are to be made on a peer-reviewed and competitive basis for a period of up to three years; no matching funds are required. Proposals are to be evaluated based on likelihood to improve the competitiveness of industries in the region in which the center or centers are located; create jobs or train newly hired employees; promote the transfer and commercialization of research and technology from institutions of higher education, national laboratories or other federally funded research programs, and nonprofit research institutes; and recruit a diverse manufacturing workforce, including through outreach to underrepresented populations. In addition, the statute encourages the director to seek "broad geographic diversity among selected proposals" and to consider "significant potential for enhancing the competitiveness of small and medium-sized United States manufacturers in the global marketplace."58

Additional Cooperative Agreements Awarded Competitively

Embedding MEP Center Staff in Manufacturing USA Institutes

NIST made 14 two-year awards of approximately $1.2 million in three rounds of competitions to place MEP staff in Manufacturing USA (also known as the National Network for Manufacturing Innovation or NNMI) institutes.59 The purpose of these awards, according to NIST, is to further transition of technologies developed at the NNMI institutes to small and medium-size manufacturers.60 Specifically, embedded staff will

develop innovate approaches for transferring technology from the Manufacturing USA institutes to small U.S. manufacturers; create approaches for engaging small manufacturers in the work of the institutes through hands-on assistance and services; develop and test business models by which MEP centers and institutes may effectively serve the needs of small U.S. manufacturers in the technology areas of the institutes, and facilitate knowledge and best practice sharing; and cultivate an enhanced nationwide network of partnerships among the institutes and MEP centers.61

The awards were made to the following centers:

Other Competitive Awards

In September 2017, NIST announced seven awards to add capabilities to the MEP national network.

Make it in America Challenge

In December 2013, NIST MEP awarded grants to 10 winners in nine states as part of the multiagency Make it in America (MiiA) Challenge, an Obama Administration initiative to accelerate job creation and encourage business investment in the United States. Nine awards were to MEP centers. Two were to affiliates of the Ohio MEP center. Each received $125,000 per year for three years.64 All projects have been completed.

According to NIST, MiiA was intended to support the efforts of U.S. companies to keep, expand, or reshore manufacturing operations and jobs in the United States, and to encourage foreign companies to build facilities in the United States and make products domestically. The MEP's MiiA Challenge grants were intended to support greater connectivity in regional supply chains and to assist SMMs.

Advanced Manufacturing Jobs and Innovation Accelerator Challenge

NIST MEP centers participated in the Advanced Manufacturing Jobs and Innovation Accelerator Challenge (AMJIAC), a multiagency effort seeking to strengthen U.S. manufacturing.65 A 2012 solicitation led to 10 three-year awards totaling $20 million. All projects have been completed.

According to NIST:

These grants support the creation and strengthening of regional partnerships capable of accelerating innovation and growing a region's capacity for advanced manufacturing. This funding has been used for activities such as worker training programs or connecting manufacturers to resources like national labs or universities. Ultimately, these grants present regions with an opportunity not only to expand their current activities, but also to fundamentally transform the way that the region supports its manufacturers.66

The role of the MEP center participation varied in the awards. In some cases, an MEP center had the primary management role. In other cases, an MEP center was engaged in a partnership with another organization to lead different project elements. In still other cases, an MEP center was part of a broad-based partnership with different organizations leading one or two project elements.

Manufacturing Technology Acceleration Centers

In July 2013, NIST announced a pilot program under MEP, the Manufacturing Technology Acceleration Centers (M-TACs). M-TACs were designed

to explore different approaches to providing manufacturers with the technology transition and commercialization assistance they need to compete successfully and grow their market share within manufacturing supply chains.67

All projects have been completed.

Additional Grants

In October 2010, NIST announced $9.1 million in cooperative agreements for 22 projects "designed to enhance the productivity, technological performance and global competitiveness of U.S. manufacturers."68 The funding was provided by MEP on a competitive basis to nonprofit organizations to work with the MEP centers and address one or more of these areas identified by NIST as critical to U.S. manufacturing:

According to NIST, "The funding will help encourage the creation and adoption of improved technologies and provide resources to develop new products that respond to changing market needs." In this regard, the awards differed from other MEP center activities which do not support research activities.

MEP Strategic Plan

In 2014, NIST MEP began the process of developing a new strategic plan and produced a draft in November 2014.70 Among other things, the plan identified the strategic goals and objectives. The four goals of the plan are to enhance the economic competitiveness of U.S. manufacturers; serve as a voice to and voice for manufacturers; support national, state, and regional manufacturing ecosystems and partnerships; and develop MEP's capabilities as a learning organization and high performance system. More information can be found at http://www.nist.gov/mep/about/strategic-plan.cfm.

According to NIST, a strategic plan for 2017-2022 is currently in development and expected to be a topic of discussion with the MEP National Advisory Board at its September 2017 meeting.71

Annual Report to Congress

NIST is required to annually produce and submit to Congress a three-year programmatic planning document, concurrent with the President's annual budget request. This report is to include an assessment of the NIST Director's governance of the MEP program. The latest version of the plan, NIST Three-Year Programmatic Plan: 2017-2019, can be accessed at https://www.nist.gov/sites/default/files/documents/director/planning/3_year_plan_2017-19_web_ready2.pdf.

External Reviews and Recommendations

A number of organizations have reviewed and commented on the program's management and effectiveness, and some have offered recommendations for improving the program. The following sections discuss some of the findings and recommendations of these organizations.72

MEP Advisory Board

In its FY2016 annual report, the MEP Advisory Board reviewed NIST's efforts to respond to the board's earlier recommendations.73

The board reported on progress made on its 2015 recommendations, including technology acceleration; strengthening MEP center board governance; strategic planning; promoting, managing, and tracking connections between small and medium-sized manufacturers (SMM) and NIST labs; establishment of an MEP "learning organization" for the development of center staff's skills and competencies to support center business models; the MEP system-wide recompetition; and readjustment of the MEP federal cost share.

Government Accountability Office

The Government Accountability Office has reviewed aspects of the MEP program on several occasions since the early 1990s.

In an April 2017 report on advanced manufacturing, GAO recommended that the Department of Commerce strengthen its collaboration with the other agencies participating in Manufacturing USA.74 The Revitalize American Manufacturing and Innovation Act of 2014 (RAMI Act), which established a statutory basis for a Network of Manufacturing Innovation (now branded as "Manufacturing USA"), directed the Secretary of Commerce to ensure that MEP is incorporated in the Manufacturing USA institutes to ensure the research results reach SMMs. NIST has sought to accomplish this by placing MEP staff in the institutes through competitive grants to MEP centers. (See "Embedding MEP Center Staff in Manufacturing USA Institutes.")

In a March 2014 report, GAO reported on its investigation into the extent to which the MEP program achieves administrative efficiencies. GAO found that 81.4% of MEP funding supported center awards with the balance devoted to contracts, staff, agency-wide overhead charges, and other items, some of which NIST considered direct support and some of which NIST considered administrative spending. In total, NIST estimated that more than 88.5% of federal MEP program spending in FY2013 was for direct support, and the remainder supported MEP administration.75

In 2010 Congress directed the GAO to report on the cost-share structure of the MEP program and provide recommendations for how best to structure the cost-share requirement to provide for the long-term sustainability of the program.76 GAO concluded that it was unable to provide such recommendations as it could not identify criteria or a basis for determining the optimal cost-share structure for this program.77 However, GAO cited a number of factors that could be taken into account in modifying the existing cost-share structure including promoting equity by assigning costs to those who both use and benefit from the services. In this regard, GAO identified potential beneficiaries as manufacturers, state and local governments, and the nation and recommended an evaluation of the relative benefits and aligning cost-shares to reflect who receives the benefits.78 (See "Cost-Sharing" for a further discussion of GAO's findings.)

In an August 1995 briefing paper, the GAO explored how small and medium-sized firms were served by various manufacturing extension efforts, including the MEP program.79 GAO received 551 responses to 766 questionnaires distributed. Approximately 73% of responding firms stated that their relationships with an extension activity had a positive effect on the company's business performance. Fifteen percent indicated that there was no effect at all. Among the impacts identified were improved use of technology (63%), better product quality (61%), and expanded productivity (56%). According to GAO, this suggested that manufacturing extension activities "had some success in achieving their primary goal of helping manufacturers improve their operations through the use of appropriate technologies and through increases in product quality and worker productivity." The study also found that companies which used internal funding to implement recommendations offered by extension programs were the most likely to find an overall positive impact. "Significantly, approximately 97 percent of [these respondents] ... said that they believed that this investment had been worthwhile." Those who utilized these organizations noted that practical experience in the field contributed to the success of staff activities, as did the affordability of the assistance. Companies that did not utilize the resources provided by the MEP tended to be those that were unaware of the program and the opportunities associated with it.

Further refining this information in a March 1996 report, GAO also noted that company size and age were significant factors in business perceptions of the extension program. Smaller (under $1 million gross sales) and newer (established after 1985) firms "were most likely to report that their overall business performance was boosted by MEP assistance."80 While there were no real differences in perception between extension services offered by NIST and those funded by other institutions, there was a difference in assessments of effectiveness based on whether or not payment was required. According to GAO, those firms that paid fees "were half as likely as those that paid no fees to credit the assistance for having an extremely positive impact, as opposed to a generally positive impact, on their business performance."

Congressional Budget Office

As discussed earlier, the CBO regularly issues a compendium of budget options to help inform federal lawmakers about the implications of possible policy choices. In 2009 and 2011, one of the options CBO proposed was elimination of the MEP program.

In its 2009 narrative, CBO asserted that proponents of elimination question the appropriateness and necessity of the type of technical assistance offered by MEP, stating that "many university professors of business, science, and engineering consult with private industry, and other ties between universities and business promote knowledge transfer," that many centers in the MEP system existed before the establishment of the MEP program, and that surveys indicated that about half of MEP's clients reported that the same services were available to them through other channels but at a higher price. Supporters of the MEP program, according to CBO, point to the importance of SMMs to the economy in terms of output and employment, and in providing supplies and intermediate goods for large companies. Proponents also argue that many SMMs "face barriers that can prevent them from obtaining the sort of information" that MEP provides.81

CBO also asserted that

The program's enhancement of U.S. productivity also is questionable. It can be argued that federal spending for [MEP] allows some inefficient companies to remain in business, tying up capital, labor, and other resources that could be used more productively elsewhere.82

National Academy of Public Administration

The National Academy of Public Administration also studied the MEP program and in a 2004 report stated that while "on balance ... the MEP Program performs capably and effectively and that the core premise ... remains viable as it is fulfilling its mission by leveraging both public and private resources to assist the nation's small manufacturers," there should be consideration of a "fundamental change in the mix of the types of services it provides as well as the structures for delivering them."83 As such, a Next Generation Strategic Plan was developed by the MEP in 2006 to concentrate on not just the shop floor but on "the entire enterprise and its position in the marketplace." In addition to individual manufacturing firms, NIST concluded that MEP "must focus on industry/supply chain requirements as well as overall economic development trends."84 Current MEP efforts include a focus on helping companies to participate in supply chains (e.g., by helping them become compliant with quality standards) and on supply chain optimization.

Appropriations and Related Issues

The following sections provide information on the status of FY2016 appropriations for MEP and a longer term perspective on MEP budget requests and appropriations from FY2003-FY2016.

FY2018 Appropriations Status and FY2019 Request

In his FY2018 budget, President Trump sought to eliminate the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, requesting $6.0 million "for the orderly wind down" of the program. The House committee-reported Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2018 (H.R. 3267) would provide $100.0 million for the MEP program, down $30.0 million (23.1%) from the FY2017 enacted level and up $94.0 million from the request. The Senate committee-reported Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2018 (S. 1662) rejected the Trump Administration's proposed elimination of the MEP program and proposed funding at the FY2017 level of $130.0 million, $30.0 million more than the House committee-reported bill.

On March 23, 2018, Congress enacted the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, providing $140.0 million for MEP. President Trump has again proposed to eliminate federal funding for the MEP centers in his FY2019 budget.

Table 1. Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program Appropriations, FY2018-FY2019

(budget authority, in millions of dollars)

 

FY2018
Enacted

FY2019
Request

FY2019
H. Cmte.

FY2019
S. Cmte.

FY2019
Enacted

Manufacturing Extension Partnership program

$140.0

$0.0

 

 

 

Source: Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141); National Institute of Standards and Technology Fiscal Year 2019 Budget Submission to Congress, February 2018, http://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY19CBJ/NIST_and_NTIS_FY2019_President's_Budget_for_508_comp.pdf.

Appropriations and Requests FY2003-FY2019

The MEP program has at times enjoyed presidential and congressional support; at other times, it has been targeted for reductions or elimination. These changes are visible in the history of presidential budget requests and congressional actions on MEP appropriations. Figure 1 illustrates funding levels for the NIST MEP program, both requested and enacted appropriations, for FY2003-FY2019; Table 2 provides the requested and enacted appropriations amounts.

While President George W. Bush's annual budget requests generally called for substantial reductions in support for MEP, Congress appropriated generally steady funding except for FY2004 and FY2008. In FY2004, MEP funding was cut to $38.6 million, down 62.6% from its FY2003 level of $105.9 million. However, Congress restored MEP funding in FY2005, appropriating somewhat more than it had in FY2003.

In FY2008, MEP funding was cut to $89.6 million, down 14.4% from its FY2007 level of $104.7 million. For FY2009, President Bush's final budget proposed to end federal funding for MEP, requesting $4 million to allow for "the orderly change of MEP centers to a self-supporting basis."85 Congress opted instead to provide $110.0 million for MEP, an increase of 22.8% above the FY2008 enacted level.

Under President Obama, MEP budget requests equaled or exceeded actual appropriations. In FY2010, President Obama requested and received $124.7 million for MEP. For the rest of the Obama Administration, MEP budget requests proposed higher funding for MEP than was enacted.

President Trump proposed the elimination of federal support for the MEP centers in FY2018, requesting $6.0 million "for the orderly wind down" of the program. Congress appropriated $140.0 million for MEP for FY2018.

In his FY2019 budget, President Trump proposed again to eliminate federal support for the MEP centers, requesting no funding for the program.

Between FY2005 and FY2015, MEP enacted appropriations grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 1.6% per year, slightly below inflation.86

Figure 1. Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program Funding

Requested Appropriations, FY2003-2018; Enacted Appropriations, FY2003-FY2017

(in millions of current dollars)

Source: Department of Commerce and NIST budget documents, FY2003-FY2016; P.L. 113-235; P.L. 114-113.

Table 2. Requested and Enacted Appropriations for the MEP Program

(FY2003-FY2017, in millions of current dollars)

Fiscal Year

Request

Enacted

2003a

$ 12.9

$ 105.9

2004b

12.6

38.6

2005c

39.2

107.5

2006d

46.8

104.6

2007

46.3

104.7

2008

46.3

89.6

2009

4.0

110.0

2010

124.7

124.7

2011e

129.7

128.4

2012

142.6

128.4

2013f

128.0

123.0

2014

153.1

128.0

2015

141.0

130.0

2016

141.0

130.0

2017

142.0

130.0

2018

6.0

140.0

2019

0.0

 

Source: Department of Commerce and NIST budget documents, FY2003-FY2018.

Notes:

a. Enacted levels reflect an across-the-board rescission enacted in P.L. 108-7.

b. Enacted levels reflect across-the-board rescissions enacted in the FY2004 Consolidated Appropriations Act, P.L. 108-199, and NIST's share of the Department of Commerce's unobligated balances rescission.

c. Enacted levels reflect across-the-board rescissions enacted in P.L. 108-447, FY2005 Consolidated Appropriations Act ($9.5 million). Does not reflect unobligated balances rescission of $3.9 million.

d. Enacted levels reflect across-the-board rescissions enacted in P.L. 109-108, FY2006 Science, State, Justice, and Commerce Appropriations Act and in P.L. 109-148, FY2006 Defense Appropriations Act.

e. Enacted levels include 0.2% across-the-board rescission.

f. Enacted levels reflect the 1.877% rescission, 0.2% rescission, and the 5% sequester applied to 2013 annualized CR level.

Use of MEP Appropriations for Center Awards

In response to direction from Congress,87 GAO investigated the extent to which the MEP program achieves administrative efficiencies. In its March 2014 report, GAO found that of the $608 million spent on the MEP program from FY2009 to FY2013, about $495 million (81.4%) went to center awards. The balance was spent on contracts, staff, agency-wide overhead charges, and other items, some of which NIST considered direct support and some of which NIST considered administrative spending. According to GAO, NIST estimated that more than 88.5% of federal MEP program spending in FY2013 was for direct support, and the remainder (11.5%) was for administration.88

Appropriate Role of the Federal Government

Continuing financial support for the MEP program is part of a larger ongoing debate among federal policymakers about the appropriate role of the federal government in providing assistance to U.S. industry. The MEP program has, at times as it is now, been included in discussions surrounding termination of federal programs that provide direct support for industry. Proponents assert that SMMs play a central role in the U.S. economy and that the MEP system provides information and assistance not otherwise available to SMMs. Some opponents have asserted that such services are available from other sources and that MEP inappropriately shifts a portion of the costs of these services to taxpayers. Proponents of the program stress that no direct funding is available to companies. Some opponents assert that activities such as those performed by the MEP centers are a state responsibility and that the federal role should have ended as the original legislation envisioned.

In addition, some have questioned whether federal support for the MEP centers should continue to be provided indefinitely. As originally expressed in statute, MEP centers were to receive no federal funding after their fifth year of operation, instead deriving necessary revenues from state and local governments as well as from the companies utilizing the centers' services. In 1998, Congress lifted the prohibition on funding after the fifth year and allowed NIST MEP to provide up to one-third of center costs after their sixth year of operation indefinitely. More recently, Congress has enacted legislation that allows for federal MEP funding to support up to 50% of a center's costs indefinitely. The debate over whether the federal government should continue to provide financial support to the centers indefinitely and, if so, at what level, may be revisited by Congress, especially in light of the Trump Administration's proposal in the FY2018 budget to provide funding only to enable the orderly wind down of the program.

These and other issues may be debated as Congress continues to make appropriation decisions relating to manufacturing extension as it pertains to the role of the federal government in facilitating research and technological advancement.

Appendix A. Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership Centers

Table A-1. Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership Centers

State

Center Name, Address, and Website

Alabama

Alabama Technology Network

135 South Union Street, Suite 441, Montgomery, AL 36130

http://www.atn.org/

Alaska

MAKE Partnership

3300 Arctic Boulevard, #203, Anchorage, AK 99503

http://www.makealaska.org

Arizona

RevAZ

333 N. Central Avenue, Suite 1900, Phoenix, AZ 85004

http://www.revaz.org

Arkansas

Arkansas Manufacturing Solutions (AEDC Manufacturing Solutions)

900 West Capitol Avenue, Suite 400, Little Rock, AR 72201

http://www.mfgsolutions.org

California

California Manufacturing Technology Consulting

690 Knox Street, Suite 200, Torrance, CA 90502

http://www.cmtc.com/

Colorado

Manufacturer's Edge

Manufacturer's Edge C/O REO, 5505 Airport Boulevard, Boulder, CO 80301

http://www.manufacturersedge.com

Connecticut

Connecticut State Technology Extension Program

1090 Elm Street, Suite 202, Rocky Hill, CT 06067

http://www.connstep.org/

Delaware

Delaware Manufacturing Extension Partnership

400 Stanton-Christiana Road, Suite A-158, Newark, DE 19713

http://www.demep.org/

Florida

FloridaMakes

800 N. Magnolia Avenue, Suite 1850, Orlando, 32803

http://www.floridamakes.com

Georgia

Georgia Manufacturing Extension Partnership

Georgia Tech, 75 Fifth Street, NW Suite 300, Atlanta, GA 30308

http://www.gamep.org/

Hawaii

INNOVATE Hawaii

2800 Woodlawn Drive, Suite 100, Honolulu, HI 96822

http://www.innovatehawaii.org

Idaho:

TechHelp

Boise State University, 1910 University Drive, Boise, ID 83725

http://www.techhelp.org

Illinois

Illinois Manufacturing Excellence Center

428 Jobst Hall, 1501 W. Bradley Avenue, Bradley University, Peoria, IL 61625

http://www.imec.org

Indiana

Purdue Manufacturing Extension Partnership

8628 E. 116th Street, Suite 200, Fishers, IN 46038

http://www.mep.purdue.edu

Iowa

Iowa Center for Industrial Research and Service

Economic Development Core Facility, 1805 Collaboration Space, Suite 2300, Ames, IA 50010

http://www.ciras.iastate.edu

Kansas

Mid-America Manufacturing Technology Center

10550 Barkley Street, Suite 116, Overland Park, KS 66212

http://www.mamtc.com

Kentucky

Advantage Kentucky Alliance

2413 Nashville Road, B8, Suite 310, WKU Center for Research and Development, Bowling Green, KY 42101

http://www.advantageky.org

Louisiana

Manufacturing Extension Partnership of Louisiana

537 Cajundome Boulevard, Suite 132, Lafayette, LA 70506

http://www.mepol.org

Maine

Maine Manufacturing Extension Partnership

87 Winthrop Street, Augusta, ME 04330

http://www.mainemep.org/

Maryland

Maryland MEP

8894 Stanford Boulevard, Suite 304, Columbia, MD 21045

http://www.mdmep.org

Massachusetts

Massachusetts Manufacturing Extension Partnership

100 Grove Street, Suite 108, Worcester, MA 01605

http://www.massmep.org/

Michigan

Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center

45501 Helm Street, Plymouth, MI 48170

http://www.the-center.org

Minnesota

Enterprise Minnesota

310 4th Avenue S., Suite 7050, Minneapolis, MN 55415

http://www.enterpriseminnesota.org

Mississippi

Mississippi Manufacturers Association-Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MMA-MEP)

720 North President Street, Jackson, MS 39202

http://www.mma-web.org/mep

Missouri

Missouri Enterprise

900 Innovation Drive, Suite 300, Rolla, MO 65401

http://www.missourienterprise.org

Montana

Montana Manufacturing Extension Center

PO Box 174255, Montana State University, 2310 University Way Building 2, Suite 1, Bozeman, MT 59717.

http://www.montana.edu/mmec  

Nebraska

Nebraska Manufacturing Extension Partnership

University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 301 Agricultural Hall

3550 East Campus Loop South, Lincoln, NE 68583

http://nemep.unl.edu

Nevada

Nevada Industry Excellence

UNR 1644 N. Virginia Street, 204 Ross Hall Mailstop 325, Reno, NV 89557

http://www.nevadaie.com

New Hampshire

New Hampshire Manufacturing Extension Partnership

172 Pembroke Road, Concord, NH 03301

http://www.nhmep.org/

New Jersey

New Jersey Manufacturing Extension Program

2 Ridgedale Avenue, Suite 305, Cedar Knolls, NJ 07927

http://www.njmep.org

New Mexico

New Mexico Manufacturing Extension Partnership

4501 Indian School Road, NE, Suite 202, Albuquerque, NM 87110

http://www.newmexicomep.org

New York

New York Manufacturing Extension Partnership

625 Broadway, ESD, Division of Science, Technology & Innovation (NYSTAR), Albany, NY 12245

http://www.esd.ny.gov/nystar/nymep.asp

North Carolina

North Carolina Manufacturing Extension Partnership

1005 Capability Drive, Research II Building., Suite 200, Raleigh, NC 27695

http://www.ncmep.org

North Dakota

Impact Dakota

1929 North Washington Street, Suite M, Bismarck, ND 58501

http://www.impactdakota.com

Ohio

Ohio Manufacturing Extension Partnership

77 South High Street, 28th Floor, Columbus, OH 43215

http://www.development.ohio.gov/bs/bs_mep.htm

Oklahoma

Oklahoma Manufacturing Alliance

525 South Main Street, Suite 210, Tulsa, OK 74103

http://www.okalliance.com/

Oregon

Oregon Manufacturing Extension Partnership

7650 SW Beveland Street, Suite 170, Portland, OR 97223

http://www.omep.org

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania Manufacturing Extension Partnership One College Avenue, DIF 32, Williamsport, PA 17701

http://www.pamade.org/network

Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico Manufacturing Extension Inc.

#268 Muñoz Rivera Avenue, World Plaza Building, Suite 1002, Hato Rey, PR 00918

http://www.primexpr.org

Rhode Island

Polaris MEP

75 Lower College Road, Carlotti Administration Building, Room 212, Kingston, RI 02881

http://www.polarismep.org

South Carolina

South Carolina Manufacturing Extension Partnership

250 Berryhill Road, Suite 512, Columbia, SC 29210

http://www.scmep.org

South Dakota

South Dakota Manufacturing and Technology Solutions

2329 N. Career Avenue, Suite 106, Sioux Falls, SD 57107

http://www.sdmanufacturing.com

Tennessee

Tennessee Manufacturing Extension Partnership

193 Polk Avenue, Ste. C, Univ. of Tennessee Center for Industrial Services, Nashville, TN 37210

http://www.cis.tennessee.edu/

Texas

TMAC

9390 Research Boulevard, Austin, TX 78759

http://www.tmac.org/

Utah

University of Utah – MEP Center

100 South 1495 East MEK 1121, Salt Lake, UT 84112

http://www.mep.utah.edu

Vermont

Vermont Manufacturing Extension Center

1540 VT Rt. 66, Suite 103, Randolph, VT 05060

http://www.vmec.org/

Virginia

Genedge Alliance

32 Bridge Street, Suite 200, Martinsville, VA 24112

http://www.genedge.org

Washington

Impact Washington

3303 Monte Villa Parkway, Suite 340, Bothell, WA 98021

http://www.impactwashington.org

West Virginia

West Virginia Manufacturing Extension Partnership

886 Chestnut Ridge Road, 2nd Floor, Morgantown, WV 26506
http://www.wvmep.com

Wisconsin

Wisconsin Center for Manufacturing and Productivity

2601 Crossroads Drive, Suite 145, Madison, WI 53718

http://www.wicmp.org

Wyoming

Manufacturing-Works

Department 3362, 1000 East University Avenue, Laramie, WY 82071

http://www.manufacturing-works.com/

Source: Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

Appendix B. Center Funding After System-Wide Competition

Table B-1. First-Year Center Funding Awarded in Round One

(by state, in current dollars)

State

First Year NIST Funding

Colorado

$1,668,359

Connecticut

1,476,247

Indiana

2,758,688

Michigan

4,299,175

New Hampshire

628,176

North Carolina

3,036,183

Oregon

1,792,029

Tennessee

1,976,348

Texas

6,700,881

Virginia

1,722,571

Source: NIST, "NIST Awards $26 Million to Support Manufacturing in 10 States," press release, February 24, 2015, http://www.nist.gov/mep/awards-support-manufacturing.cfm.

Table B-2. First-Year Center Funding Awarded in Round Two

(by state, in current dollars)

State

First Year NIST Funding

Alaska

$500,000

Idaho

640,236

Illinois

5,029,910

Minnesota

2,653,649

New Jersey

2,814,432

New York

5,985,194

Oklahoma

1,309,080

Washington

2,534,872

West Virginia

500,000

Wisconsin

3,250,792

Source: NIST, "New Funding Brings New Opportunities for Manufacturers in Nine States," press release, September 21, 2015, http://www.nist.gov/mep/new-funding-brings-new-opportunities-for-manufacturers-in-nine-states.cfm; NIST, "New Funding Awarded to Support Wisconsin Manufacturers," press release, November 13, 2015, http://www.nist.gov/mep/new-funding-awarded-to-support-wisconsin-manufacturers.cfm.

Notes: NIST anticipates the awarding of the Utah center, competed in the second round, in early FY2016. No applications were received for the Ohio center which was also part of the second round competition.

Table B-3. First-Year Center Funding Awarded in Round Three

(by state, in current dollars)

State

First Year NIST Funding

Alabama

$1,780,800

Arkansas

971,218

California

14,046,449

Georgia

2,693,482

Louisiana

1,197,546

Massachusetts

2,467,879

Missouri

2,207,873

Montana

512,000

Ohio

5,246,822

Pennsylvania

5,280,586

Puerto Rico

643,133

Utah

1,147,573

Vermont

500,000

Source: Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

Table B-4. First-Year Center Funding Awarded in Round Four

(by state, in current dollars)

State

First Year NIST Funding

Delaware

$500,000

Hawaii

500,000

Iowa

1,859,206

Kansas

1,864,950

Maine

863,522

Mississippi

1,003,782

Nevada

756,001

New Mexico

1,360,802

North Dakota

500,000

South Carolina

2,268,003

Wyoming

500,000

Source: Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

Table B-5. Centers Not Competed in Rounds 1-4

(by state, in current dollars)

State

First Year NIST Funding

Kentucky

$600,000

Rhode Island

750,000

South Dakota

500,000

Arizona

1,000,000

Maryland

1,000,000

Nebraska

600,000

Florida

3,500,000

Source: Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Science and Technology Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

1.

NIST is an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce.

2.

NIST defines SMMs as manufacturers with 500 or fewer employees.

3.

NIST website, Manufacturing Extension Partnership Strategic Plan, http://www.nist.gov/mep/about/strategic-plan.cfm.

4.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, FY2016 Congressional Budget Justification, p. NIST-228, http://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY16CJ/NIST-NTIS_FY_2016_CJ_Final_508_Compliant.pdf.

5.

Email from NIST to CRS, January 12, 2016.

6.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, Making an Impact on U.S. Manufacturing, https://www.nist.gov/file/378976.

7.

John Bulloch, "Accommodating the Future," Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship, vol. 5, no. 2 (Fall 1987), p. 8.

8.

Department of Commerce, Census Bureau, Statistics of U.S. Businesses, 2014 Annual Data Tables by Establishment Industry, Data by Enterprise Employment Size, https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2014/econ/susb/2014-susb-annual.html.

9.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, 2014 Economic Impact Survey: Making an Impact on U.S. Manufacturing, 2015, p. 2, http://www.nist.gov/mep/about/upload/MEP-ECONOMIC-IMPACTS-FY2014.pdf.

10.

MEP Manufacturing Advisory Board, 2016 Annual Report, https://www.nist.gov/file/376456.

11.

Jim Robey, Randall W. Eberts, and Kathleen Bolter, et al., The National-Level Economic Impact of the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP), W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, Kalamazoo,, MI, March 3, 2017, http://research.upjohn.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1229&context=reports.

12.

P.L. 100-418.

13.

P.L. 111-358.

14.

Dave Cranmer, Reflections—Part 2, Manufacturing Innovation blog, http://nistmep.blogs.govdelivery.com/reflections-part-2/.

15.

Dave Cranmer, Reflections—Part 1, Manufacturing Innovation blog, http://nistmep.blogs.govdelivery.com/25-year-reflections/.

16.

General Accounting Office, Technology Transfer, Federal Efforts to Enhance the Competitiveness of Small Manufacturers, GAO/RCED-92-30, November 1991, p. 3.

17.

General Accounting Office, Manufacturing Extension Program, Manufacturers' Views About Delivery and Impact of Services, GAO/GGD-96-75, March 1996, 2.

18.

Dave Cranmer, Reflections—Part 2, Manufacturing Innovation blog, http://nistmep.blogs.govdelivery.com/reflections-part-2/.

19.

Slides provided by Roger D. Kilmer, Director, Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership, NIST, May 19, 2010.

20.

Personal communication with MEP staff, October 8, 2015.

21.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, presentation, "Advisory Board Committee on Technology Acceleration (ABCTA) Report to the MEP Advisory Board," September 24, 2014.

22.

For more information on the SBIR program, see CRS Report R43695, Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer Programs, by [author name scrubbed]

23.

For more information on the NNMI, see CRS Report R43857, The Network for Manufacturing Innovation, by [author name scrubbed]

24.

Personal communication with MEP staff, October 8, 2015.

25.

15 USC 278k(c).

26.

According to NIST, the reimbursement structure for services varies among MEP centers. NIST MEP provides centers with flexibility in programmatic approaches and financial models, while requiring adherence to strict compliance with accounting systems, board governance, and reporting. NIST MEP does not provide MEP centers with guidance on charging clients. Source: email communication between NIST and CRS on November 22, 2015.

27.

15 USC 278k(d).

28.

In OMB Circular A-11 (Preparation, Submission, and Execution of the Budget), the Office of Management and Budget defines full-time equivalent (FTE) employment as "the basic measure of the levels of employment used in the budget. It is the total number of hours worked (or to be worked) divided by the number of compensable hours applicable to each fiscal year." A number of NIST employees who are not on the MEP staff provide support services for the MEP program. The work performed by MEP staff as well as by the NIST support staff are used in calculating the FTEs supported by MEP appropriations. Email from NIST to CRS, September 6, 2017.
Source: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/a11_current_year/a11_2015.pdf.

29.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, FY2016 Congressional Budget Justification, p. NIST-227, http://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY16CJ/NIST-NTIS_FY_2016_CJ_Final_508_Compliant.pdf.

30.

Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

31.

Email communication from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

32.

15 USC 278k(e).

33.

The American Competitiveness and Innovation Act (P.L. 114-329).

34.

The Advisory Board is exempted from the provisions of Section 14 of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, which addresses questions related to termination, renewal, and continuation of advisory committees.

35.

According to NIST, "The definition of a service location is broad in that it encompasses locations for which an MEP practitioner can operate out of in order to provide support for the manufacturing community. Service locations range from one-person offices to fully staffed regional offices with all service locations intended to provide adequate coverage for manufacturers. This includes partner locations that can be used to provide services to the manufacturers across the states." Source: Email communication between NIST and CRS, November 22, 2015.

36.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, FY2016 Congressional Budget Justification, p. NIST-227, http://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY16CJ/NIST-NTIS_FY_2016_CJ_Final_508_Compliant.pdf.

37.

15 U.S.C. 278k(c)(4).

38.

Telephone conversation between NIST MEP and CRS, October 23, 2015.

39.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Award Competitions for Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP)," 79 Federal Register 44746-44752, August 1, 2014, https://federalregister.gov/a/2014-18264.

40.

Email communication between NIST and CRS, slide presentation, October 30, 2015.

41.

S.Rept. 100-80, p. 15.

42.

Ibid., p. 17.

43.

NIST, "Award Competitions for Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP)," 79 Federal Register 44746-44752, August 1, 2014, https://federalregister.gov/a/2014-18264.

44.

Slides provided by Roger D. Kilmer, Director, Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership, NIST, May 19, 2010.

45.

Government Accountability Office, Factors for Evaluating the Cost Share of Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program to Assist Small and Medium-Sized Manufacturers, GAO-11-437R, April 4, 2011, p. 4, http://www.gao.gov/assets/100/97395.pdf.

46.

Ibid., p. 4.

47.

CBO, Reducing the Deficit: Spending and Revenue Options, March 10, 2011, https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/112th-congress-2011-2012/reports/03-10-reducingthedeficit.pdf. This issue is discussed in more detail later in the report. See "Congressional Budget Office," pp. 17-18.

48.

Both H.R. 5035 (113th Congress ) and S. 2757 (113th Congress) defined "costs incurred" as costs incurred in connection with the activities undertaken to improve the competitiveness, management, productivity, and technological performance of small and medium-sized manufacturing companies.

49.

MEP Advisory Board, 2014 Annual Report, http://www.nist.gov/mep/about/upload/Advisory-Board-Annual-Report-2014.pdf.

50.

S.Rept. 114-66.

51.

15 U.S.C. 278k(c)(5), subsequently amended by P.L. 105-309.

52.

In a 1995 study, the U.S. General Accounting Office found that firms that used internal funding to implement recommendations offered by extension programs were the most likely to find an overall positive impact on their manufacturing position. Source: U.S. General Accounting Office, Manufacturing Extension Programs, Manufactures' Views of Service, GAO/GGD-95-216BR, August 1995.

53.

E.S. Oldsman, G.M. Ugiansky, and R. Jamin, Review of Mission and Operations of Regional Centers, National Institute of Standards and Technology, February 1, 1998, available at http://www.nist.gov/cgi-bin/view_pub.cgi?pub_id=200288&divison=260.

54.

P.L. 104-208 and P.L. 105-277, respectively.

55.

Funding for the B2B awards was provided via reprogramming of $2.5 million in FY2014 appropriations from the NIST Technology Innovation Program. Source: Letter from Ellen Herbst, Chief Financial Officer and Assistant Secretary for Administration, Department of Commerce, to Senator Barbara Mikulski, Chairwoman, Senate Committee on Appropriations, March 7, 2014.

56.

National Institute of Standards and Technology, FY2016 Congressional Budget Justification, pp. NIST-229-NIST-230, http://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY16CJ/NIST-NTIS_FY_2016_CJ_Final_508_Compliant.pdf; NIST, press release, "NIST Awards $2.5 Million in Grants to MEP Centers for Pilot Business-to-Business Networks," December 2, 2014, http://www.nist.gov/mep/mep-120214.cfm.

57.

Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

58.

15 U.S.C. 278k-1

59.

For more information on the Manufacturing USA/NNMI institutes, see CRS Report R44371, The National Network for Manufacturing Innovation, by [author name scrubbed]

60.

Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

61.

NIST, "NIST Awards $12 Million to MEP Centers in 11 States," press release, January 13, 2017, https://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2017/01/nist-awards-12-million-mep-centers-11-states.

62.

NIST, "Pilot Projects Will Bring MEP Small-Business Expertise to Manufacturing USA Institutes," September 13, 2016; NIST, "NIST Awards $12 Million to MEP Centers in 11 States," January 13, 2017; and NIST, "Twelve Awards Made for Notices of Funding Opportunities," September 1, 2017.

63.

Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

64.

The award recipients were: Maine MEP; Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center; InnovateMEP Mississippi; Missouri Enterprise; Ohio MEP (State of Ohio, Ohio Development Services Agency: two awards, including the Appalachian Partnership for Economic Growth and the Manufacturing Advocacy and Growth Network); Oregon MEP; Northeastern Pennsylvania Industrial Resource Center; South Carolina MEP; and Impact Washington. Source: Email communication between NIST and CRS, November 5, 2015.

65.

Participating agencies include the NIST, the Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration, the Department of Energy, the Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration, the Small Business Administration, and the National Science Foundation.

66.

NIST, The Advanced Manufacturing Jobs and Innovation Accelerator Challenge (AMJIAC): Mid-Project Review, May 2014, http://www.nist.gov/mep/upload/AMJIAC-Report-final0520.pdf.

67.

NIST, Manufacturing Technology Acceleration Center (M-TAC) Pilot Project): Report on Initial Progress and Learning, February 2015, p. 5, http://www.nist.gov/mep/services/supplychain/upload/MTAC_Report-print.pdf.

68.

NIST, "NIST Manufacturing Extension Partnership Awards $9.1 Million for 22 Projects to Enhance U.S. Manufacturers' Global Competitiveness," press release, October 5, 2010, http://www.nist.gov/mep/mep_100510.cfm.

69.

Ibid.

70.

NIST, System Strategic Plan, Draft 11/07/14, November 7, 2014, http://www.nist.gov/mep/upload/STRATEGIC-plan-booklet-summary.pdf.

71.

Email from NIST to CRS, September 13, 2017.

72.

Other comments and recommendations by these organizations are included elsewhere in this report.

73.

NIST, https://www.nist.gov/file/376456.

74.

GAO, U.S. Government Accountability Office, Advanced Manufacturing: Commerce Could Strengthen Collaboration with Other Agencies on Innovation Institutes, GAO-17-320, April 6, 2017, http://www.gao.gov/assets/690/684343.pdf.

75.

Government Accountability Office, Most Federal Spending Directly Supports Work with Manufacturers, but Distribution Could Be Improved, GAO-14-317, March 2014.

76.

America COMPETES Reauthorization Act (P.L. 111-358).

77.

Government Accountability Office, Factors for Evaluating the Cost Share of Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program to Assist Small and Medium-Sized Manufacturers, GAO-11-437R, April 4, 2011, p. 4, http://www.gao.gov/assets/100/97395.pdf.

78.

Government Accountability Office, Factors for Evaluating the Cost Share of Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program to Assist Small and Medium-Sized Manufacturers, GAO-11-437R, April 4, 2011, p. 4, http://www.gao.gov/assets/100/97395.pdf.

79.

U.S. Government Accountability Office, Manufacturing Extension Programs, Manufacturers' Views of Services, GGD-95-216BR, August 7, 1995, http://gao.gov/products/GGD-95-216BR.

80.

Government Accountability Office, Manufacturing Extension Programs, Manufacturers' Views about Delivery and Impact of Services, GGD-96-75, March 14, 1996, p. 3, http://gao.gov/products/GGD-96-75.

81.

Congressional Budget Office, Budget Options: Volume 2, 370-372, p. 88, August 2009, https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/111th-congress-2009-2010/reports/08-06-budgetoptions.pdf.

82.

Ibid.

83.

National Academy of Public Administration, The Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program, Report 2, Alternative Business Models, May 2004, available at http://www.napawash.org/Pubs/NIST6-2-04.pdf.

84.

Manufacturing Extension Partnership, Next Generation Strategic Plan, 2006, http://www.mep.nist.gov/documents/pdf/about-mep/Next_Gen_MEP_Strategy.pdf.

85.

NIST, Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Submission to Congress, http://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/09CBJ/NISTand%20NTIS%20FY2009%20Congressional%20Justification.pdf.

86.

The GDP (Chained) Price Index, a measure used by the Office of Management and Budget to adjust for inflation in research and development, grew at 1.8% CAGR during this period.

87.

Explanatory Statement, Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013, Congressional Record, March 11, 2013, p. 1301.

88.

Government Accountability Office, Most Federal Spending Directly Supports Work with Manufacturers, but Distribution Could Be Improved, GAO-14-317, March 2014.