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Coalition recognizes stem cell potential
by John Buchel, State Editor
April 25, 2003

A number of economic and commercial groups have banded together to
support stem cell research in the state of Wisconsin. Gov. Jim Doyle
announced the formation of the coalition at a press conference
Wednesday in Fitchburg.

Doyle asked the Republican-led state legislature to refrain from
passing bills that restrict or criminalize such research at state
institutions, specifically the University of Wisconsin.

Members of the Wisconsin Coalition to Support Stem Cell Research, as
it will be called, were brought together by the Wisconsin Alumni
Research Foundation. The Foundation is a non-profit organization,
which is the exclusive patent brokering group for the UW and holds
the patent on human embryonic stem cells.

"We've sent stem cells to more than 120 researchers around the world,
and there is another corporation that is licensed under us to send
stem cells out," said Andrew Cohn, a spokesman for the Wisconsin
Alumni Research Association. "All of these organizations have joined
together to say that the legislature should not pass any laws to
prevent this kind of research."

Cohn said that the most important and prestigious economic and
commercial groups joined the Coalition because they recognized the
fantastic economic potential that stem cell research represents to
Wisconsin.

Cohn also said that Wisconsin had the right infrastructure in place
to become a bastion for groundbreaking stem cell experimentation,
with high concentrations of UW scientists who are experts in the
field. Dr. James Thomson, who discovered human embryonic stem cells
and has been on the cover of Science and Time magazines, is currently
working in UW labs.

Thomson was on hand to reinforce the possibility of Wisconsin
becoming a stem cell frontier.

"It's important for the scientists working in laboratories to know
that political leaders understand and support their efforts to find
treatments and cures for the world's most devastating diseases,"
Thomson said. "Wisconsin has a real opportunity to be a world leader
in this research. Legislation that restricts stem cell research sends
a message to scientists and biotech companies that they are not
welcome in Wisconsin."

Doyle said that by taking such actions the Legislature could create
and impression of a hostile environment for biotechnology
researchers, investors and entrepreneurs looking to set up shop in
Wisconsin.

Cohn said current bills, Assembly bill 104 and Senate bill 45, would
ban stem cell research and that this was not the first time such
legislation has been introduced. "Last session a bill was on the
floor that would've essentially made dozens of scientists felons,"
Cohn said.

Republican legislators say current bills have been misconstrued as
banning UW research when only banning human cloning in the state.
Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives
squabbled over whether or not a similar bill, passed in March, would
ban only cloning or extend to stem cell research.

Cohn said the most important member of the Coalition could prove to
be the Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce, which has a powerful
lobby in state legislature.

"Research and scientific advances will help broaden our economic base
to create high- paying, technology-based jobs," said Mike Shoys, vice
president of the Manufacturers and Commerce.

Doyle indicated that he would veto any bill he felt would limit stem
cell research in the state were it to be passed.

SOURCE: The Badger-Herald
http://www.badgerherald.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2003/04/25/3ea89ea9a07
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