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Industry leaders celebrate Baltimore's ‘bold moves' in biotech, sports and higher ed

Industry leaders celebrate Baltimore's ‘bold moves' in biotech, sports and higher ed

Technical.ly27-05-2025

A few months ago, one of the region's premier economic development organizations envisioned a dynamic future for Baltimore by announcing a new regional brand: ' Bold Moves.'
That nonprofit, the Greater Baltimore Committee (GBC), leaned in further last week, when it convened the region's political, corporate and academic circles for the 2025 Baltimore Region Investment Summit.
Designed to provide a snapshot of funding, growth and related opportunities within the city and surrounding counties, the event at Baltimore Center Stage offered leaders in various prominent sectors — including biotechnology, higher education, sports, defense and local government — the chance to celebrate regional wins. It also served as a spinoff event from the federal SelectUSA investment summit.
Several of these speakers, including the city's chief executive, took that opportunity to embrace the GBC's messaging while praising its industry assets.
'Baltimore is the place to be for companies looking to make bold moves,' said Mayor Brandon Scott before naming several high-profile local firms (T. Rowe Price, Under Armour, CFG Bank) that built new headquarters in the city over the past few years.
The GBC's chief economic officer Lakey Boyd explained that 'Bold Moves' captures Baltimore's identity as a place that drives change, even as it draws from its traditional strengths. It's all part of the GBC's overall goals of building bridges between industries and making the region attractive to outside investors.
'We're partnering public, private, big and small across our region, and we're winning — and those wins are about economic growth and shared prosperity,' Boyd said. 'So the concept of 'bold moves' positions the Baltimore region as a place that not only adapts to change, but drives it.'
To that end, people like Deborah Hemingway, managing partner of medical technology-focused VC firm Ecphora Capital; Bob Storey, leader of biotech manufacturing accelerator The Launchport; CEO Ellington West of stethoscope and medical monitoring startup Sonavi Labs; and Tom Osha, executive vice president of research facility real estate firm Wexford Science and Technology all highlighted successes within the region's vibrant and university-driven life sciences sector. Goucher College President Kent Devereaux discussed plans for construction management giant Whiting-Turner to relocate its headquarters to the Towson school's campus.
The event ended with a fireside conversation between Orioles owner David Rubenstein, whose private equity connections prompted a protest when he spoke at another event last year, and President Mohan Suntha of the University of Maryland Medical System.
The GBC also held this event just a few days after it and UpSurge Baltimore, the startup ecosystem-building entity with whom the GBC pursued a federal Tech Hub bid before the two orgs combined, celebrated UpSurge's 200th Equitech Tuesday. That commemoration also marked the release of UpSurge's 2025 Baltimore Tech Ecosystem Report, which features such data points as $664.7 million in regional venture funding, 10 startup exits and 486 tech startups across the area.

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Baltimore will keep CIAA tournament through 2029, officials announce
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Baltimore will keep CIAA tournament through 2029, officials announce

An annual basketball tournament held during Black History Month and bringing a wide economic footprint will stay in Baltimore through the end of the decade, local officials announced. Public and private sector leaders on Wednesday gathered at the Baltimore Visitor Center in the Inner Harbor to announce the city won the bid to host the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) competition from 2027 to 2029. Baltimore has hosted the popular HBCU tournament since 2022, a start date that was delayed a year by the pandemic. Competition is intense to host the event, which features games between historically Black colleges and universities throughout the mid-Atlantic and Southern United States. With this latest win, Baltimore notably beat out Charlotte, North Carolina, which hosted the CIAA between 2006 and 2020. At the announcement, many speakers — including leaders from CIAA members Bowie State University and Lincoln University, Baltimore-based sports apparel giant Under Armour, Maryland's Department of Commerce, tourism arm Visit Baltimore and insurance company CareFirst — highlighted the tournament's impact and significance beyond the court. 'My favorite part of this relationship is the deep investment into community,' said Mayor Brandon Scott. 'The CIAA goes all out: financial literacy, health summits, skills camps … so that we're growing the generation of CIAA graduates to come back to Baltimore and go into communities to help make us the best version of ourselves.' This impact extends to the city's business and startup communities, which each earned a major spotlight during prior tournaments. In 2024, the city saw a total economic impact of $32.5 million, including $23.6 million in direct spending, according to Visit Baltimore. Al Hutchinson, the tourism agency's outgoing CEO (whom Mayor Scott recognized at the end of the Wednesday press conference), previously said that the tournament generated $81.7 million in total economic impact and funded an average of 1,326 jobs each year between 2022 and 2024. The 2025 financial figures dropped a little, with this year's tournament boasting $19.8 million in direct spending and $27.4 million in total economic impact. That said, the number of jobs created, by Visit Baltimore's tally, grew to 1,487. For the innovation community, the tournament offered the chance to showcase Baltimore's Black technologists, entrepreneurs and other sector players during the annual Tech Summit House program. The series of talks and pitch contests revolving around topics like AI, Africa's startup world and how to navigate an industry filled with racist disparities dovetailed with local boosters' broader goal of highlighting this predominantly Black city's unique assets. 'The tournament particularly uplifts Black-owned businesses, highlights our HBCU legacy,' Hutchinson previously told 'and adds to the vibrant mix of music, arts and culture that define Baltimore's Black community.' Although he didn't speak during Wednesday's presser, Mark Anthony Thomas, CEO and president of the Greater Baltimore Committee (GBC), said he took part in a pitch to host the tournament last week. He and others only found out about the acceptance this week. For Thomas, the fact that none of Baltimore's HBCUs are in the CIAA (the closest being Bowie State in Prince George's County, near DC) was actually an asset. 'The most successful ends are when you don't have the natural advantages of other markets,' Thomas told before the press conference. 'We don't have any of the CIAA schools, we're not central to where they're located. And it means that Baltimore overperforms on charm, our ability to be collaborative and a great partner with the CIAA — and we actually put on a good show.' Just a day earlier, Thomas held a fireside chat at the GBC's Inner Harbor offices with Jonathan Bowles, executive director of the New York City-based Center for an Urban Future. For nearly an hour, the pair spoke before GBC members about topics including the growth of New York's tech economy, the Great Recession's lessons in economic diversification and what Baltimore can learn from the country's biggest city. One theme Bowles hit on was the importance of the cultural sector to a city's development. Thomas connected this to the current bid, and the way Baltimore's economy can build upon the prior tournaments. 'In our 10-year plan, creative and culture is one of the three opportunity areas, so this is central to that type of potential we see for the region,' he said. 'Obviously, it's a risk. Visit Baltimore initially pursued this, and so you think about the risk they took — to even believe that Baltimore had a chance at competing for this — and for it to have been successful, now twice, is a huge endorsement of the infrastructure they built.' community Slack and visiting the #baltimore channel.

Equitech Tuesday ended after 200 meetups. Now, organizers want Baltimore's input on what's next.
Equitech Tuesday ended after 200 meetups. Now, organizers want Baltimore's input on what's next.

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Equitech Tuesday ended after 200 meetups. Now, organizers want Baltimore's input on what's next.

A long-standing gathering for Baltimore's startup founders and supporters, Equitech Tuesday, ended yesterday, but its organizers say there will be something new to replace it come autumn. 'It's more of a graduation than a sun-setting,' said Kory Bailey, the meetup's creator, as the literal sun set over the high-rise outdoor space where several dozen entrepreneurs, meetup organizers and other innovation scene players celebrated the last Equitech Tuesday meetup. Bailey, his colleagues and various attendees spent a chunk of the evening sharing stories about what the meetup had done for them, both professionally and personally. One, founder Dexter Carr Jr. of Game4Good, even noted how he met his fiancée, Fem Equity leader Adeola Ajani, through Equitech Tuesday. While this meetup will end, some kind of programming will return in the fall, according to Bailey, chief ecosystem officer at the Greater Baltimore Committee (GBC). To that end, he encouraged Baltimore ecosystem members to fill out a short survey that will help the organizers determine what people want going forward. The patio, which offered sweeping views of Baltimore's Inner Harbor and downtown skyline, sits adjacent to the offices of the GBC, an economic development organization and private sector booster whose footprint includes the city and six surrounding counties. The space and circumstances of being there underscored the meetup's tremendous evolution since Bailey first developed it over four years ago. From Zoom rooms to the innovation economy's front door In the spring of 2021, Bailey was still in his early tenure as the relationship development director for the then-new ecosystem-building organization UpSurge Baltimore. He and his team organized roughly two months of 'speed dating' Zoom meetings to link founders, funders and program leaders. 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The meetup grew, moved to Guilford Hall Brewery on Greenmount Avenue (among other one-off locales), partnered with local events and organizations and drew attendees from throughout the broader region. It even celebrated the 200th meetup a few weeks ago. UpSurge evolved during that time, too. The organization's staff increased, with Bailey becoming its CEO in late 2023, and extended its equitech vision to an accelerator with Techstars, a Maryland-backed entrepreneurship fund and recurring studies of the sector. It also played a key role in the successful bid to designate Baltimore a federal Tech Hub, as well as the ongoing GBC-led process to solicit millions of dollars from the Economic Development Administration. This year, it completed its merger with the GBC, which put UpSurge's team and work under the other organization's umbrella. Bailey said that this integration with an organization undergoing its own rebrand, as well as the broader evolution of an ecosystem with meetups and offerings that weren't there in 2021, offered a chance to assess what the community wants going forward while bringing different stakeholders into the fold. To that end, a new steering committee with various private sector and local civic players will explore how to best transition UpSurge's work. 'Now that we have the opportunity with GBC to maximize the partnerships that have been built over the last 70 years with the corporate community, and really bring startup voices and leaders into that activity and in closer proximity with them,' Bailey said, 'we believe that we can create some more event series and convenings for impact. And we just want to have the summer to be able to reorient the strategy towards that.' 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Industry leaders celebrate Baltimore's ‘bold moves' in biotech, sports and higher ed
Industry leaders celebrate Baltimore's ‘bold moves' in biotech, sports and higher ed

Technical.ly

time27-05-2025

  • Technical.ly

Industry leaders celebrate Baltimore's ‘bold moves' in biotech, sports and higher ed

A few months ago, one of the region's premier economic development organizations envisioned a dynamic future for Baltimore by announcing a new regional brand: ' Bold Moves.' That nonprofit, the Greater Baltimore Committee (GBC), leaned in further last week, when it convened the region's political, corporate and academic circles for the 2025 Baltimore Region Investment Summit. Designed to provide a snapshot of funding, growth and related opportunities within the city and surrounding counties, the event at Baltimore Center Stage offered leaders in various prominent sectors — including biotechnology, higher education, sports, defense and local government — the chance to celebrate regional wins. It also served as a spinoff event from the federal SelectUSA investment summit. Several of these speakers, including the city's chief executive, took that opportunity to embrace the GBC's messaging while praising its industry assets. 'Baltimore is the place to be for companies looking to make bold moves,' said Mayor Brandon Scott before naming several high-profile local firms (T. Rowe Price, Under Armour, CFG Bank) that built new headquarters in the city over the past few years. The GBC's chief economic officer Lakey Boyd explained that 'Bold Moves' captures Baltimore's identity as a place that drives change, even as it draws from its traditional strengths. It's all part of the GBC's overall goals of building bridges between industries and making the region attractive to outside investors. 'We're partnering public, private, big and small across our region, and we're winning — and those wins are about economic growth and shared prosperity,' Boyd said. 'So the concept of 'bold moves' positions the Baltimore region as a place that not only adapts to change, but drives it.' To that end, people like Deborah Hemingway, managing partner of medical technology-focused VC firm Ecphora Capital; Bob Storey, leader of biotech manufacturing accelerator The Launchport; CEO Ellington West of stethoscope and medical monitoring startup Sonavi Labs; and Tom Osha, executive vice president of research facility real estate firm Wexford Science and Technology all highlighted successes within the region's vibrant and university-driven life sciences sector. Goucher College President Kent Devereaux discussed plans for construction management giant Whiting-Turner to relocate its headquarters to the Towson school's campus. The event ended with a fireside conversation between Orioles owner David Rubenstein, whose private equity connections prompted a protest when he spoke at another event last year, and President Mohan Suntha of the University of Maryland Medical System. The GBC also held this event just a few days after it and UpSurge Baltimore, the startup ecosystem-building entity with whom the GBC pursued a federal Tech Hub bid before the two orgs combined, celebrated UpSurge's 200th Equitech Tuesday. That commemoration also marked the release of UpSurge's 2025 Baltimore Tech Ecosystem Report, which features such data points as $664.7 million in regional venture funding, 10 startup exits and 486 tech startups across the area.

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