Zoë O. Ambargis
Program Manager
Regional Economic Analysis Division
Bureau of Economic Analysis
As program manager for the BEA’s Regional
Input-Output Modeling System (RIMS II), Zoë leads
the team that produces RIMS II multipliers. Most recently,
she oversaw the completion of an update of RIMS II that
incorporates data from the 2003 annual national input-output
accounts and 2003 regional economic data. Zoë has
written numerous articles on regional econometric and
input-output modeling. She has served as the BEA’s
representative on the North American Industry Classification
(NAICS) Products Subcommittee developing a product classification
system for the Professional, Scientific, and Technical
Services sector. Zoë has served as a board member
of the Southern Regional Science Association and the Society
of Government Economists.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Don Bagwell
President
Digital Impact Design, Inc.
Don Bagwell is president and creative genius
of Digital Impact Design, Inc., a multimedia company he
founded more than 20 years ago in Cornelia, Georgia. His
hallmark designs are evident in the corporate web sites,
trade show exhibits, and the myriad printed publications
he produces for clients. Among his well-known clients
are the Cumberland Island National Seashore, auto parts
giant NAPA, and the Selig Center for Economic Growth.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Arnold B. Baker
Chief Economist
Sandia National Laboratories
Arnold B. Baker is the Chief Economist of
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
His current responsibilities include serving as the primary
strategic planning resource for the Energy & Infrastructure
Assurance Business Unit, managing the Unit's economic
and public policy analysis and modeling, and serving as
economic and strategic planning advisor to Sandia Corporation.
In addition, he is the President of the International
Association for Energy Economics and former President
of the United States Association (2002). He holds a B.A.
in History and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in economics from
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
Prior to joining SNL in 1996, he served
for 17 years at Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO), holding
a number of challenging positions including Director of
Political Economic Analysis, Director of Public Issues,
Director of Energy Market Analysis, and Manager of Strategic
Planning (ARCO Oil and Gas Company). His assignments included
market analysis and scenario based planning, as well as
chairing internal planning studies on the future of the
oil, natural gas, coal and electricity industries. Prior
to joining ARCO he served at the U.S. Department of the
Treasury as Special Assistant to the Undersecretary for
Monetary Affairs, and as a staff economist at the U.S.
Federal Trade Commission. He has written book chapters
and articles on energy, economic policy and global change.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
John Baldridge
Director of Survey Development
Bureau of Business and Economic Research
The University of Montana
John Baldridge is the bureau’s survey
development director. He develops new quantitative and
qualitative research projects for the bureau and analyzes
data for clients. Mr. Baldridge earned a B.A. in political
science from Simpson College and an A.M. in public policy
studies from the Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public
Policy Studies at the University of Chicago.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Patrick M. Barkey
Director
Economic and Policy Studies
Ball State University
Patrick Barkey is an economist in the Miller
College of Business at Ball State University. In his position
as director of Economic and Policy Studies, he oversees
and participates in a wide variety of projects in labor
market research, and state and regional economic policy
issues. His recent research has been on the educational
attainment of the Indiana labor force, the effect of smoking
on the state economy, and the potential for high-technology
development in central Indiana. His newspaper column appears
in a dozen newspapers throughout the state, and his weekly
statistical publication, the Indiana Business Bulletin,
is relied on by banks, newspapers, and other businesses
who need timely and comprehensive economic information
on the state and its regions.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Jason Blackburn
Technical Director
Digital Impact Design, Inc.
Jason Blackburn is technical director of
Digital Impact Design, Inc., a multimedia company in Cornelia,
Georgia. He handles all final preparations of clients’
jobs to ensure that these are ready for printing, web
presentation, or trade show exhibition. His impressive
knowledge of and technical expertise with the latest software
make him a favorite leader of AUBER’s workshops.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Carl Bonham
Director
University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization
Associate Professor of Economics, University of Hawaii
at Manoa
Dr. Bonham is UHERO's executive director
and associate professor in the economics department at
the University of Hawaii at Manoa. His research interests
include macroeconomics, applied econometrics, tourism
economics, and the Hawaii economy. Bonham produces quarterly
forecasts of the Hawaii economy, for UHERO's Economic
Information System, and conducts research for private
and public sector clients. Research in progress includes
a VECM model of the Hawaii tourism sector, research on
learning and expectations of prices and exchange rates
under heterogeneous information, and a study of the impact
of Hawaii's airline industry. Recent publications include
"Intervention Analysis with Cointegrated Time Series:
the Case of the Hawaii Hotel Room Tax," with Byron
Gangnes, and "To Aggregate Pool or Neither: Testing
the Rational Expectations Hypothesis Using Survey Data"
with Richard Cohen. Dr. Bonham serves on the editorial
board of the Journal of Travel Research, and
is a member of the State of Hawaii Council on Revenues.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Rob Brown
Chief, Regional Economic Measurement Division
Bureau of Economic Analysis
Rob Brown has been Chief of the Bureau of
Economic Analysis’s (BEA) Regional Economic Measurement
Division since 1995. He has spent his 32-year career as
an economist at BEA working on state and county estimates
of personal income and employment, including guiding the
bureau’s research into improving the timeliness
and quality of the state and local area personal income
estimates. He is coauthor of several articles for the
bureau’s publication, Survey of Current Business,
including “Reliability of State Personal Income”
in December 2003 and “Comprehensive Revision of
State Personal Income” in March 2004.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Alberta Charney
Senior Research Economist
Eller College of Management
The University of Arizona
Dr. Charney has been a researcher in the
Economic and Business Center, Eller College of Management,
at the University of Arizona since 1977, where she is
considered an expert on tax policy, model building, econometric
analysis, and impact analysis. Her most recent projects
include a program evaluation for a U.S. Department of
Commerce grant to the City of Tucson, an economic impact
study of the University of Arizona, and, currently, a
major survey and impact analysis of tourism in the Tucson
Metropolitan Area.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Randy Childs
Economist
Bureau of Business and Economic Research
West Virginia University
Randy is an economist at the Bureau of Business
and Economic Research in the College of Business and Economics
at West Virginia University (WVU). Randy has conducted
numerous economic development studies, including economic
impact analyses, target industry studies, and labor market
studies. He has analyzed the economic impact of many industries,
including travel and tourism, steel, and wood products.
In addition, Randy oversees the West Virginia Business
and Industry Census Data Center program. Randy graduated
from WVU with his master's degree in resource economics
and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in economics.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Jerry N. Conover
Director
Indiana Business Research Center
Indiana University
Dr. Jerry Conover directs the Indiana Business
Research Center at Indiana University’s Kelley School
of Business, where he also serves on the marketing faculty.
Conover oversees IBRC’s programs addressing the
needs of businesses, government agencies and nonprofit
organizations for information and analysis concerning
Indiana’s economy and people. An active participant
in strategic planning initiatives for economic and workforce
development as well as a variety of applied research studies,
Conover served AUBER as president-elect in 2004-2005.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Jan Crispin-Little
Senior Economist
Bureau of Economic and Business Research
University of Utah
Jan Crispin-Little is the senior economist
at the Bureau of Economic and Business Research at the
University of Utah. Her work is focused on economic development,
impact analysis, and survey development. Most recently
she has completed impact studies on military base closures
in Utah, estimating the economic impacts of Utah's two
public research universities and a return on investment
analysis of a state-funded research program called USTAR.
She is a special advisor to the Utah Governor's Council
of Economic Advisors and has been a past president of
the Utah Chapter of the National Association of Business
Economists.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Anja Decressin
Economist
Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics Program (LEHD)
U.S. Census Bureau
Dr. Decressin is an economist with the U.S.
Census Bureau, Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics
Program (LEHD). With the bureau since the fall of 2002,
she worked on research projects that use linked employer-employee
data. In addition, Dr. Decressin worked on Form 5500 file
matching to the Census Business Register and the LEHD
employer-employee data, subsequently analyzing characteristics
of employers with respect to employer-provided health
and pension benefits. She created longitudinal weights
for the combined SIPP panels to be released with the SIPP
public use data that is being created by LEHD. Dr. Decressin
is currently a quarterly workforce indicators (QWI) economist,
performing quality assurance analysis for data files in
the QWI process, supporting outside data users, and performing
quality and assurance analysis for other LEHD products.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Steven M. Director
School of Management and Labor Relations
Rutgers University
Dr. Steven Director is principal investigator
for the SHRM/Rutgers Leading Indicator of National Employment
and a professor in the School of Management and Labor
Relations at Rutgers University. He teaches graduate and
executive education courses in labor economics and financial
analysis of human resource issues. Director was also an
assistant professor in the School of Labor and Industrial
Relations at Michigan State University; a staff associate
in employment policy at the Brookings Institution; and
a consultant to U.S. and state government agencies, major
corporations and unions, the National Science Foundation,
and the National Academy of Sciences.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Bengte Evenson
Associate Director
Center for Business and Economic Research
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Dr. Evenson is an assistant professor in
the Economics Department, where she specializes in urban
and regional economics, statistics, and public economics.
She recently completed an analysis of local land use and
regulation that was published with the Brookings-Wharton
Paper on Urban Affairs. Dr. Evenson is a member of
the American Economic Association, the Regional Science
Association, and the American Real Estate and Urban Economics
Association.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
David K. Garman
Under Secretary of Energy
David Garman was nominated by President George W. Bush
to serve as Under Secretary of Energy on March 4, 2005,
and was unanimously confirmed by the Senate on June 15,
2005. As Under Secretary, Mr. Garman is responsible for
Department of Energy activities in energy, science, and
environment, with an annual budget of approximately $14
billion. Under Secretary Garman oversees the Department’s
widely diversified portfolio of energy research, development,
demonstration and deployment activities. Mr. Garman is
also the official designated by law to hold primary responsibility
for the department’s efforts on energy conservation
matters. Prior to being confirmed as Under Secretary,
Mr. Garman served President Bush at the Department of
Energy as the Assistant Secretary for Efficiency and Renewable
Energy. Prior to joining the Department of Energy, he
served on the personal staff of two United States senators
and on the Professional Staff of the Senate Select Committee
on Intelligence and the Senate Committee on Energy and
Natural Resources. Mr. Garman also represented the Senate
leadership at virtually all major negotiations under the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
from 1995-2000.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Rick Harper
Director
Haas Center for Business Research and Economic Development
University of West Florida
Rick Harper’s career as an economist
began in 1979 at the Research Triangle Institute in North
Carolina, where he was involved in all phases of various
funded research projects. Rick received his Ph.D. in economics
from Duke University in 1989 and joined the UWF faculty
that same year. Other academic experience includes visiting
appointments at ESSCA, in Angers, France; the University
of Nottingham, England; and University College, Cork,
Ireland. His published scholarly research is largely in
the area of government policy and its effect on the business
environment. Through UWF’s Haas Center for Business
Research and Economic Development, where he serves as
director, Dr. Harper has worked with Florida businesses
and government leaders on a variety of business research
and economic development issues. He currently represents
Northwest Florida on Governor Jeb Bush’s Council
of Economic Advisors.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Hart Hodges
Director
Center for Economic and Business Research
Western Washington University
Hart Hodges is the director of the Center
for Economic and Business Research and assistant professor
of economics at Western Washington University. Dr. Hodges
prepares a regular economic outlook for the region and
directs a variety of research projects, including impact
and trend analyses, surveys, and other work for public
agencies in the region. In addition, the center publishes
the Northwest Journal of Business and Economics,
and in May hosted the Pacific Northwest Regional Economic
Conference. Hart began his teaching career at the University
of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Timothy D. Hogan
Emeritus Professor of Economics and Research Associate
L. William Seidman Research Institute
Arizona State University
Timothy D. Hogan is Professor Emeritus of
Economics and Research Associate in the L. William Seidman
Research Institute in the W. P. Carey School of Business
at Arizona State University. Dr. Hogan served as Director
of the Seidman Institute and the Center for Business Research
at ASU until he retired in 2004. He served as a member
of the Executive Board and President of AUBER. In October
2004, Hogan was the first recipient of the Thayne Robson
Award, established by AUBER to honor a member of the organization
for outstanding service to the organization and to his
or her university and state.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Michael Hollingsworth
Systems Analyst/Programmer
Indiana Business Research Center
Indiana University
Michael Hollingsworth is the lead web developer
for STATS Indiana and other interactive web sites for
the Indiana Business Research Center. In addition to STATS
Indiana enhancements, his current projects include a GIS-enabled
site-and-building selection site for Indiana and consulting
with the Indiana Department of Workforce Development on
various web sites.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Phyllis W. Isley
Director
Bureau of Business Research and Economic Development
Georgia Southern University
Dr. Isley is the director of the Bureau
of Business Research and Economic Development (BBRED)
at Georgia Southern University. She has held that position
since joining the faculty at Georgia Southern in the fall
of 1998. As the director of BBRED, Isley supervises and
coordinates research in broad areas of interest to southeast
Georgia. Research topics include the economic impact of
Georgia’s deepwater ports, analyses of the workforce
development needs, the potential economic impact of base
re-alignment and closure and, a host of studies on various
aspects of the tourism economy. Most recently, the BBRED
completed a study of the economic impact of high school
noncompletion. Dr. Isley’s other interests include
painting and Taekwondo. She is a third degree black belt
and certified instructor in Songahm Taekwondo.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
David Kane
Geographic Information Systems Coordinator
Haas Center for Business Research and Economic Development
University of West Florida
David Kane is the GIS Coordinator for the
Haas Center. His duties include assisting in the development
of plans for GIS implementation, acquiring geographic
data from various sources, establishing and testing thematic
layers, and integrating related attributes. David has
more than eight years of mapping and GIS experience in
both the public and private sector, including conversion
and maintenance of parcel maps for the Escambia County
Property Appraiser, conversion of nautical and aeronautical
charts into a GIS format for the National Imagery and
Mapping Agency, and production of military base maps for
the USAF’s Explosives Hazard Reduction Program.
David is a graduate of Florida State University with a
BS in Geography and Urban/ Regional Planning.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Julie Klein
Tourism Research Coordinator
Haas Center for Business Research and Economic Development
University of West Florida
Julie Klein is the tourism research coordinator
at the Haas Center for Business Research and Economic
Development at the University of West Florida in Pensacola.
Klein tracks tourism trends in the 5 coastal county region,
participates in economic impact studies, conducts research
in business and economics, performs statistical analysis,
and writes articles for the Haas Center’s quarterly
newsletter Northwest Florida Economy. Before coming to
the Haas Center, Klein’s experience was working
in economic development and community redevelopment with
local government agencies.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
James A. Kurre
Director
Economic Research Institute of Erie
Penn State Erie
As director of ERIE, Dr. Kurre organizes
an annual conference focusing on the state of the local
and national economies, along with an annual topic of
local interest. He makes frequent appearances in the local
media, as well as the local rubber-chicken circuit. His
current research interests include productivity variation
across space, spatial cost of living differentials, and
local leading indicators. He has 13 publications in refereed
journals, and has presented approximately 50 papers at
professional conferences. Kurre regularly works with undergraduates
on funded research projects, and he serves on the advisory
board for the ACCRA Cost of Living Index, as well as the
AUBER Board of Directors. He was named University Alumni
Teaching Fellow in 2005. In his spare time, he is a member
of the comedy troupe In All Seriousness.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Kevin Lansing
Senior Economist
Economic Research Department
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Kevin Lansing is a senior economist in the Economic Research
Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
He is currently assigned to the Domestic Macroeconomic
Studies Section. Kevin joined FRBSF in 1998 after spending
two years at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University,
as a national fellow and a visiting scholar. Prior to
that, he served as an economist in the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. He has published
articles in a wide range of academic journals and taught
economics as a visiting professor at the Naval Postgraduate
School and at Pepperdine University. His recent research
has focused on behavioral models of agents’ expectations
and the implications for asset pricing and inflation.
Kevin is also a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) and
a Licensed Professional Engineer.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Douglas A. Lonnstrom
Director, Siena College Research Institute
Professor of Finance and Statistics
Siena College
Dr. Lonnstrom developed and conducts a monthly
Consumer Confidence Index for New York State based on
the national index produced by the University of Michigan.
This index is used by the Federal Reserve Board, NYS Department
of Labor and other business government leaders. In addition,
each quarter he creates a Confidence Index for the six
major cities in the state. For the past 18 years Lonnstrom
has produced a business/government survey for the Capital
Region of New York. He has presented several papers at
national and international conferences, as well as authored
several publications. He also serves on the Business Roundtable
for the Capital Region and was a member of the Economic
Forecast Committee for the Center for Economic Growth.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Duncan H. Meldrum
Chief Economist
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.
Duncan Meldrum, Ph.D., is the chief economist
for Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., a
$6 billion industrial gas and chemicals company serving
customers in more than 30 countries. As chief economist,
he assesses the impact of the economic environment on
the company’s performance for the executive management
team and develops global economic assumptions for the
company’s operating plans. He provides operating
groups with pricing assistance, contract support and market
analyses. He also serves as the company’s economics
spokesperson. Meldrum is a past president of the National
Association for Business Economics (NABE) and has been
a NABE board member since 1999. His other professional
associations include the Philadelphia Council for Business
Economics, the Conference of Business Economists, the
National Business Economic Issues Council, and the American
Economics Association. Meldrum serves on the U.S. Census
Bureau Advisory Committee of Professional Associations,
and on the boards of the APCI Federal Credit Union and
the nonprofit Parkette National Gymnastics Center.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Paul Polzin
Director
Bureau of Business and Economic Research
The University of Montana
Paul Polzin is director of the bureau and
a professor in the School of Business Administration's
Management Department. Professor Polzin has studied the
Montana economy extensively during the past 35 years.
In addition to developing economic projections for the
future, he conducts research on various long- and short-term
economic trends in Montana and specific areas of the state.
Each year, he is a featured speaker at the bureau's Montana
Economic Outlook Seminasrs, which are presented in nine
locations throughout the state.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Kenneth E. Poole
Chief Executive Officer
Center for Regional Economic Competitiveness
George Mason University
In January 2000, Dr. Poole formed an independent
nonprofit affiliated with George Mason University and
ACCRA that is focused on developing a stronger understanding
of how regional economies can compete effectively in the
knowledge-based economy. As part of those efforts, Poole
directs a national nonprofit membership organization (ACCRA)
serving economic and community development researchers
in communities, states, academia, and the private sector.
As CEO of the Center for Regional Economic Competitiveness,
Poole is undertaking organizational development, strategic
planning, network building, and technical assistance efforts
to foster knowledge-based economic development.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Robert D. Potts
Assistant Director
Center for Business and Economic Research
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Robert Potts is an assistant director in
Center for Business and Economic Research University of
Nevada, Las Vegas, specializing in data collection and
dissemination, economic impact analysis, statistical modeling,
and survey research. He has become recognized as an authority
on the business and economic environment of Las Vegas,
the state of Nevada, and the region. Pott’s work
has appeared in the Las Vegas Perspective, the
Nevada Business Journal, the Southern Nevada
Business Directory, the Las Vegas Housing Market
Statistical Summary, the Las Vegas Housing Market
Conditions, and the Southern Nevada Factbook.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Anita Remesch
Geographic Information Systems Programmer
Haas Center for Business Research and Economic Development
University of West Florida
As a geographic information systems (GIS)
Programmer at the University of West Florida Haas Center
for Business Research and Economic Development, Anita
Remesch is responsible for coordinating, integrating,
and using resource data in a variety of applications to
meet the Haas Center’s GIS objectives. In addition
to managing resource data for the GIS systems, she also
performs system and network administration functions on
web, data, and SQL servers. Prior to her position at UWF,
Anita was a computer specialist for the Housing and Household
Economic Statistics Division at the Bureau of the Census
in Suitland, Maryland. At the Bureau, Anita managed the
division’s UNIX and office automation servers and
performed tasks that included life cycle planning, forecasting,
budgetary planning, system analysis and design and procurement.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Lee A. Reynis
Director
Institute for Applied Research Services and
the Bureau of Business and Economic Research
University of New Mexico
Dr. Lee A. Reynis is currently the director
of both the Institute for Applied Research Services and
the Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University
of New Mexico. Reynis has been a close observer of the
New Mexico economy for some 20 years. Before joining the
BBER staff, she was the city economist for the City of
Albuquerque for 12 years. Prior to that, she worked as
an economic analyst and then as the chief economist for
the New Mexico Department of Finance and Administration
in Santa Fe. Dr. Reynis has taught a number of courses
over the years at the University of New Mexico and was
formerly on the faculty at the University of Utah.
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Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Jeremiah Riethmiller
Research Assistant
Economic Research Institute of Erie
Penn State Erie
Mr. Riethmiller has worked on numerous projects
for the Economic Research Institute of Erie, but has focused
most of his attention on creating an index of leading
economic indicators for the Erie MSA. In the summer of
2005 he interned with the Bureau of Economic Analysis
in Washington D.C., where he researched the possibility
of using state personal income data to forecast state
revenues generated from taxes on production and imports.
Riethmiller plans to graduate with honors from Penn State
with a bachelor’s degree in both business economics
and finance in spring 2006. In addition to academics,
he is also involved with Omicron Delta Kappa, a national
leadership honor society; the Society of Undergraduate
Economists; and Beta Gamma Sigma, an international business
honor society. During his free time, he enjoys outdoor
activities, such as backpacking, baseball, volleyball,
and canoeing.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
R. Keith Schwer
Director
Center for Business and Economic Research
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Dr. Schwer is a member of the UNLV Economics
Department. Specializing in economic-impact analysis,
econometric modeling, feasibility analysis, and survey
research, he is an authority on the business and economic
environment of Las Vegas, the region, and Nevada. Keith
is a former president of AUBER and is currently a member
of several professional organizations. He is executive
director of Nevada KIDS COUNT and serves on the KIDS COUNT
steering committee for The Annie E. Casey Foundation.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Martin Shields
Director
Center for Economic and Community Development
Associate Professor of Agricultural and Regional Economics
Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology
The Pennsylvania State University
Dr. Martin Shields works in the area of
regional economic development, emphasizing economic growth.
He created a system of economic models that are used to
examine the causes and consequences of economic change
in Pennsylvania counties. These models examine how national
and state economic trends work in concert with local economic
and demographic characteristics to influence local employment,
population, and income growth. This work is used to help
decision makers identify and target potential industries
for expansion and growth in their local economy. Dr. Shields
also studies regional labor markets. This includes analyzing
the causes and effects of local unemployment and economic
restructuring. His new areas of interest include the effects
of natural and cultural amenities on migration patterns
and enhancing the availability of health care services
in rural areas.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Gary W. Smith
Regional Economics and Development Policy
School of Economic Sciences
Washington State University
Author of the Northwest Income Indicators
Project web site (http://niip.wsu.edu)
, Smith has been on the faculty of WSU’s School
of Economic Sciences 1983. He holds a statewide outreach
appointment with WSU Extension with specialties in regional
economics and development policy. Smith present talks,
organizes workshops and conferences, and conducts applied
research in support of his programs across Washington.
On his docket for this fall of 2005, Smith will be joining
with economists from Bureau of Economic Analysis regional
program to develop and deliver an outreach the program
to strengthen and further the infrastructure of economic
information in the Washington and the Pacific Northwest.
Over his career smith has been highly involve and active
in the economic organizations within the region. He is
currently serving a third two-year term as president of
the Pacific Northwest Regional Economic Conference
and is president of the Seattle Economist Club,
the regional chapter of NABE.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Sean Snaith
Director
Business Forecasting Center
Associate Professor of Business Economics Eberhardt School
of Business
University of the Pacific
Dr. Sean Snaith is director of the Business
Forecasting Center and Associate Professor of Business
Economics at the Eberhardt School of Business. He has
taught at Penn State, the American University in Cairo
and was an economics professor at the University of North
Dakota. While at the University of North Dakota also served
as the director of the Bureau of Business and Economic
Research. In addition, Snaith worked with International
Planning and Research, a Boston area consulting firm,
where his projects included forecasting, market sizing,
economic analyses and econometric modeling for a variety
of clients, including IBM, Dell, Compaq, and Hewlett-Packard.
He has published articles on exchange rate modeling, predicting
educational outcomes, the economics of information technology,
and telemedicine.
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Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Jim Sylvester
Director of Survey Operations and Economist
Bureau of Business and Economic Research
The University of Montana
Jim Sylvester is director of survey operations
and an economist at the Bureau of Business and Economic
Research at The University of Montana. His primary responsibilities
are demographic analysis, forecasting, and survey research.
Born in Montana, he went to school in Montana, Idaho,
and Nevada. He returned to Montana after college. He has
a B.A. in economics from The University of Utah and a
M.A. in economics from The University of Montana. He has
researched the Montana economy for the bureau since 1980.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
David Talan
Branch Chief for Business
Business Employment Dynamics
Mr. Talan completed his bachelor's and master's
in economics at Bowling Green State University. After
graduation in 1993, he joined the Bureau of Labor Statistics
and worked in the Current Employment Statistics (CES)
program where he was responsible for seasonal adjustment
of state employment estimates. In 2000, Mr. Talan joined
the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) program
and is currently a branch chief responsible for the quarterly
publication of Busines Employment Dynamics data.
Back to Fall Conference Program
Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Ellis Tallman
Vice President Macropolicy
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Dr. Ellis Tallman is a vice president and
team leader for the macropolicy group of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Atlanta. His current research interests include
economic forecasting, growth and economic development,
and banking history. Dr. Tallman joined the staff of the
Atlanta Fed in 1987. Previously, he was a research associate
with Wharton Econometrics from 1980 to 1982 and an instructor
in the graduate school of management at the University
of Rochester in 1986. From January 1996 to December 1997,
he was a visiting senior research economist at the Reserve
Bank of Australia, where he engaged in policy support
and economic research for the Australian central bank.
He also spent time in June 1998 visiting the Reserve Bank
of New Zealand, the central bank of New Zealand, consulting
with their forecasting and modeling group. He was promoted
to his current position in August 1999.
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Saturday & Sunday
| Monday | Tuesday
Tom Tanner
Project Coordinator
Carl Vinson Institute of Government
University of Georgia
Dr. Tom Tanner has worked extensively in the field of
economic impact analysis and model building for organizations
across the country, including the Center for Agriculture
are Rural Development at Iowa State University, the Center
for Economic Development at University of Wisconsin–Superior,
and Regional Economic Models, Inc. in Massachusetts. Currently,
Dr. Tanner works at the Carl Vinson Institute of Government
at the University of Georgia. For the past four years,
he has been developing the largest regional economic model
in the country, a 3,110-region (county level), 703-industry
general equilibrium model of the United States built on
a simple but powerful set of “new economic geography”
inspired behavioral equations. The result is the regional
dynamics economic model (www.redyn.com),
a modeling tool used to conduct local impact analysis
across the country.
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Saturday & Sunday
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Eric C. Thompson
Director
Bureau of Business Research
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Formerly the director of the Center for
Business and Economic Research and a research associate
professor of economics at the University of Kentucky,
Dr. Thompson is currently the director of the Bureau of
Business Research and an associate professor of economics
at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. His research fields
include regional economics, economic forecasting, and
state and local economic development, and his research
has been published in Regional Science and Urban Economics,
the Journal of Regional Science, Regional
Studies, the Journal of Cultural Economics,
and the Economic Review of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Cleveland.