In The News

KULR8: Sen. Steve Daines on Attracting High-Paying Montana Jobs

It wasn’t that long ago that Steve Daines was known as an entrepreneur from Bozeman, starting his own business after working for years as a chemical engineer. He then realized his political aspirations, being elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and most recently being sworn in as a United States Senator. Senator Daines recently hosted the High-Tech Job Summit in Bozeman and discusses why Montana should want to attract high-tech jobs.

Fox Montana: Senator Daines Looks to Expand Access to Public Lands

Senator Steve Daines spoke during an Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on the re-authorization of the Federal Land Recreation Enhancement Act. He emphasized the importance of reforming federal forest management with regards to the recent fires in Montana and other surrounding states. “I have heard some concerns regarding some challenges surrounding permit renewals on federal lands in Montana. In fact, in your testimony before the House Natural Resources Committee, you said permit renewals sometimes face ‘runaway analysis’ from the National Environmental Policy Act, and unfortunately, permittees are required to recover those costs from the agency like a ‘blank check,’

KBZK: High Tech Jobs Summit Kicks Off in Bozeman

BOZEMAN –            This weekend marked the start of the first biannual High Tech Jobs Summit in Bozeman and close to 300 people showed up for the event. The kickoff welcome reception took place at Jabs Hall on the Montana State University campus. Monday will feature over 40 guest speakers, including U.S. Sen. Steve Daines, who will talk about ways Montana can advance in technology. The summit is expected to bring in some of the greatest tech leaders in the nation to discuss ways to create more tech jobs in Montana. “These high tech jobs are so important for Montana. They

KBZK: High Tech Job Summit at MSU Highlights Growth

BOZEMAN –            Montana Senator Steve Daines started the Montana High Tech Summit at Montana State University this morning by introducing some of the 40 people who will speak. Keynote speakers include Dr. Craig Barrett, former CEO of Intel, Doug Burgum, former CEO of Great Plains Software, which was purchased by Microsoft, Michael Goguen, Managing Partner of venture capital firm Sequoia Capital, Will Lansing, CEO of FICO and former Right Now Technologies Board member, Dr. Dava Newman, Deputy Administrator for NASA, and Matt Rose, Chairman, BNSF Railway Company. Daines promised a full agenda including lessons on how to turn a technology

NBC Montana: High-Tech Leaders Discuss Montana’s Business Future

BOZEMAN, Mont.  – Montana State University hosted its first bi-annual Montana High-Tech Jobs Summit Monday. High-tech leaders and innovators met to discuss the future of business and technology. Montana’s high-tech jobs are growing faster than the statewide job growth rate, and 40 percent of the state’s job growth occurred in Gallatin County. Speakers from the Federal Communications Commission spoke about the government’s role in encouraging innovation. They say it’s important to encourage new technology even it  replaces existing technology. FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai said, “Consumers will be better off, entrepreneurs will be better off, business will be better off, more

Billings Gazette: Winifred Teen Filmmaker Honored in U.S. Senate

Winifred teen Riley Slivka has been receiving accolades for his documentaries  about rural Montana life for years, but Friday’s praise on the U.S. Senate floor  was a first. Slivka, a 17-year-old student at Winifred School, was entered into the  Congressional Record as Republican Sen. Steve Daines’ Montanan of the week. Every time Slivka gets a little recognition, his following grows. In the past  two weeks, Slivka’s latest short video posted on YouTube has been viewed more  than 21,000 times. The film tells the story of the 2015 wheat harvest on the  Slivka family’s Central Montana farm high above the Missouri

Montana Standard: Area Businessmen Panelists at Daines’ Tech Summit at MSU

Businessmen from Butte and Dillon will serve as panelists at the first biannual Montana High Tech Jobs Summit Monday, Sept. 14, at Montana State University-Bozeman. They are: Larry Farrar of Butte, who founded Resodyn Corporation in 1994, Resodyn Acoustic Mixers in 2007, Resodyn Engineered Polymeric in 2011, and Resodyn Europe (a French company) in 2015. He will be part of a discussion called “Investing in Future Technology and Entrepreneurship.” Travis Cottom of Dillon, vice president of business development and solutions at Helix Business Solutions. The panel discussion is titled “Big Sky Innovation: How Technology Removes Geography as a Constraint.” Greg

Daily Inter Lake: Investment Boosts Tech Firm Goal With Flathead Investor

With major help from a Northwest Montana investment fund, IgniteFeedback of Bozeman has raised more than $300,000 toward its startup goal. “We’re a pretty new company. We incorporated in February and we’ve been fundraising the last couple of months,” Chief Executive Officer Ben Werner said. “The money is in the bank and we’re moving into execution mode.”   Already a Print Subscriber?                None of these apply to you?Back IgniteFeedback is a cloud software company that provides short surveys and scorecards of online customer experience. Its customers are online companies that could benefit from understanding their consumers or if there’s anything

Newsmax: GOP Sen. Daines: Iran Deal Fight Similar to Obamacare

The battle over the Iran nuclear deal in Congress is much like the fight over  Obamacare in 2010, Sen. Steve Daines told Newsmax TV on  Tuesday. “This has become only partisan in the support for the  agreement,” the first-term Montana Republican told “Newsmax Prime” host J.D.  Hayworth. “There’s no bipartisan support for this agreement.“This is a  little like Obamacare, where it became only the Democrats on one side — but  there were Democrats and Republicans opposed to Obamacare.” Daines noted that many top Democrats, including  influential New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, opposed the deal that would release as  much as