Daily Archives: 11/26/2008

UT PAC – Performing Arts & Academic Collaborative)

(Community Matters) Another fun part of my day was the ACF grants site visit at UT PAC, with Bertha Arellano & Sharon Chruchin from Del Valle & Judith Rhedin, Gail Giebink, Brenda Simms and Cathryn Seymour Dorsey from UT. Plus my ACF colleagues Mandy Dealey, Beverly Silas and Meagan Anderson.

Reviewed this very cool program which brings music, theatre and dance to over 1,800 economically-disadvantaged students. They partner with UT’s Language Arts curriculum so that the kids really learn as well as have fun – and experience UT and performing arts, which most never would or have. The Del Valle teachers gave testimonials of life changing results for their students. Super program, never enough funding. Congrats to all.

Clean Air

(Community Matters) Rats, not enough time to make the detailed posting I’d planned. Perhaps back to this one on Friday. Jack McDonald and I had breakfast with Dr. BJ Stanberry, the CEO/founder of HelioVolt. BJ’s got degrees in mathematics, physics and chemical engineering. He’s passionate and visionary about alternative energy. HelioVot manufactures a solar thin-film which can be layered on construction materials such as glass, steel, metal and composites.

Jack and I both trying to get our heads around various clean energy intiatives underway and begging attention from Austin’s business and political communities – Jack as chair of the technology council of the Chamber; me as CEO of Entrepreneurs Foundation.

BJ’s vision and knowledge is impressive and includes a smart grid (electrical power delivery system) as well as a clean energy park. The former is the Pecan Street Project which Brewster McCracken spoke about a couple of weeks ago.

In the late afternoon, again Jack and I met with two other really smart guys who have been thinking about this for a long time and who are significantly engaged in public policy. I won’t say who because I forgot to ask their permission to blog about our meeting. Interesting complimentary and opposing thoughts. Interesting questions including whether clean (alternative) energy is even feasible now that we’re at $50ish/barrel oil. Which reminds me of an earlier conversation where a very smart and knowledgeable friend forecasted $30 to $60/barrel oil and reminded me that the currently sustainable price is relative to coal. I failed to ask if this forecast was dependent on the economic downturn.

There are other initiatives out there, including a state laboratory. More homework to be done. Is this a huge economic development opportunity for Central Texas, even Texas? If so, which path, who to back, how much can we raise & invest, probabilities of success?