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Kennedy to Columbia Regional Business Report: “It’s a Chamber of Commerce Day!”

With promising news about a COVID-19 vaccine making headlines, Lou Kennedy had reason for optimism during Tuesday’s beam-raising ceremony marking a milestone for a $215.8 million expansion at Nephron Pharmaceutical Corp.’s Saxe-Gotha Industrial Park campus.

Part of the expansion is a 110,000-square-foot vaccine production, chemotherapy and antibiotic wing that Kennedy, Nephron owner and CEO, expects to be operational around March 2021. She said Nephron is actively looking for a vaccine production partner to provide the ammunition for the pre-filled sterile syringes that make up the booming 503B Outsourcing Facility arm of the company.

“It’s a Chamber of Commerce day,” Kennedy said after signing the final beam of the 240,000-square-foot Kennedy Innovation Center’s steel skeleton on a crisp, clear morning. “This marks a milestone in 2020. This is good news. This is giving us the space to continue to grow.”

WSPA: SC pharmaceuticals company says they’ll be ready to fill COVID-19 vaccines in 2021

LEXINGTON COUNTY, SC (WSPA) — With a potential COVID-19 vaccine looming, one South Carolina company said they’ll be able to fill vaccines next year.

According to Nephron Pharmaceuticals CEO and Founder Lou Kennedy, the company is in the midst of a $215 million expansion. They are adding new office and new warehouse space. The investment will also create more than 380 jobs the company said.

The expansion also includes vaccine production space. Kennedy said once completed, they’ll be able to fill COVID-19 vaccines at their facility.

“We’re actively looking for the right partner that will produce and we’ll fill the vaccine. We’re speaking with people throughout the federal government and Department of Defense to find the right partner,” Kennedy said.

Tuesday, the company held a beam raising ceremony to celebrate their expansion. Kennedy said she expects to have the vaccine production space completed by March 2021.

As of Tuesday afternoon, the FDA has not approved a COVID-19 vaccine for distribution. However, preliminary reports on vaccines from Moderna Inc. and Pfizer Inc. show their vaccines have at least a 90% effectiveness rate.

Kennedy said they are anticipating a medical grade glass shortage because of the high demand for the vaccine. She said they have the ability to work around that. “Our option will be to put the vaccine in plastic. We have the technology and the capability.”

Under the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control’s (SCDHEC) statewide vaccine plan, front line medical personnel and nursing home residents will be some of the first South Carolinians to get doses of an approved vaccine. They anticipate vaccine supply will be limited to start off, but Kennedy hopes they can help alleviate that.

She said, “We’re right in tandem with the research work and the clinical trials that are going on. We’re trying to time that perfectly for the vaccine filling side of it.”

Watch the entire story and video here.

ICYMI: “This program is so important to us because we are growing our workforce”

Four high school seniors signed up last week for the next step of their educational and workforce careers through Orangeburg-Calhoun Technical College’s Youth Apprenticeship program.

The program, started last year, provides high school students taking courses at OCtech with the opportunity to work with area employers.

Calhoun County High School senior Erika Carter is one of the students ready to embark on this next leg of her life’s journey. She is currently taking mechatronics at OCtech and will be working at Orangeburg’s Husqvarna plant.

“This is a great experience to get some workforce learning, because I don’t have that yet. I am hoping it can do a lot for me,” Carter said.

She would like to go to college for electrical engineering, but is still open to studying mechatronics.

With family support, each student signed up for the apprenticeship program during a Thursday ceremony. Each student was dressed in a shirt and hat with their new employer’s logo.

In addition to Husqvarna, Nephron Pharmaceuticals of Lexington is also participating in the program this year.

As part of the program, the students will be allowed to work and function as if they are employees. …

OCtech President Dr. Walt Tobin called the signing ceremony the beginning of a “successful journey and a lucrative career.”

“This is an incredible feat for our students,” he said.

Tobin thanked the parents and family members for supporting their children. He also thanked the college’s employees and Apprenticeship Carolina for making the signing day possible. Apprenticeship Carolina is a program of the South Carolina Technical College system.

The signing day ceremony “is an opportunity to recognize students who are not necessarily athletes but are doing amazing work,” Tobin said. “Signing day is typically a way to recognize achievements for sports and this is recognition for academic achievement. These students are on the path to successful careers as high school students.”

Tobin said the apprenticeship program fits in well with the college’s mission.

“We are in the business of putting our students and our graduates to work,” Tobin said. …

Calhoun County High School student Konner Whitfield is taking welding at OCtech and working at Nephron Pharmaceuticals.

“I am excited about getting my foot in the door with a company and doing the type of welding I enjoy doing,” Whitfield said. “I enjoy what the company does. I enjoy that type of welding.”

Whitfield says he hopes the program will allow him to improve his skills in different types of welding and fabrication. …

Nephron Director of Training and Development Brooks Backman said the program is a “win-win” for both the employer and students.

“This program is so important to us because we are growing our workforce,” she said. “We need welders and to be able to do it for the youth population is even better because they have already found their passion.”

Click here to read the entire story from the Orangeburg Times and Democrat.

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