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WYFF4: Gamifying middle schoolers to high paying life sciences jobs

“Thanks to investments from Nephron Pharmaceuticals, SCBIO, the Power Team, the S.C. Hospital Association, all those and even more are helping us fund this game to bring it to life,” Ford said.

Ford said the game is specific to South Carolina, and will even be specific to different areas of the state.

Another point in which she takes great pride is the fact that South Carolina is the first state to gamify the life sciences.

The real game “win,” she said, will be keeping South Carolina’s intellectual capital in the state while filling the workforce pipeline.

For more information about SCBIO and South Carolina’s life sciences industry visit here.

Nephron CEO forms partnership to help feed Ukrainian families

Nephron Pharmaceuticals Corp. owner and CEO Lou Kennedy took to social media on Wednesday to ask for help in providing food for families in Ukraine.

On the same day Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed the U.S. Congress, Kennedy announced a partnership with David Beasley, former S.C. governor and executive director of the United Nations World Food Programme. Kennedy appealed for donations of $75 to provide an emergency food box to feed a Ukrainian family for one month.

“Each of us has been heartbroken to see the devastation in Ukraine,” Kennedy said. “Many of us have asked, ‘What can we do to help?’ ”

Donations of more than $75 can also be made, Kennedy noted, and asked Facebook followers to share her video post, which includes the donation link.

“Together, we can make a difference,” she said.

Nephron is headquartered in West Columbia.

Other area businesses have acted to help Ukraine after the Russian invasion of the country on Feb. 24. Silver Spoon Bake Shop, located on Devine Street, offered four-packs of petit fours decorated with blue-and-yellow hearts and sunflowers, Ukraine’s colors and national flower. In two rounds of sales during the past two weeks, the bakery netted $2,200, 100% of which was donated to World Central Kitchen, the nonprofit founded by Jose Andres providing food to Ukrainian citizens and refugees.

Earlier this month, Greenville restaurant Pomegranate on Main disposed of all Russian vodka and liquor from its bar and began serving Ukrainian vodka instead. The move came after Fort Mill-based Southern Spirits’ Feb. 24 boycott of Russian vodka.

Reach Melinda Waldrop at 803-726-7542.

CRBR: New app to help measure effectiveness of community policing

A new community policing app, developed through a partnership between Serve & Connect and Nephron Pharmaceuticals Corp., will help assess how interactions between law enforcement and communities affect public safety and impact public trust, organizers say.

The app, kickstarted by a $10,000 Nephron investment, will be fine-tuned during the next six months by a workgroup made up of S.C. police representatives and community leaders. Its goal is to identify and promote best practices in law enforcement/community relations while providing transparency and measurable data.

“It helps us figure out what we need to do and what’s working and what’s not,” Nephron owner and CEO Lou Kennedy told the Columbia Regional Business Report. “That’s important, and I can’t believe we didn’t already have something like this in place.”

Community policing, defined by the U.S. Department of Justice as a philosophy that promotes the systemic use of partnerships and proactive, problem-solving techniques to address the immediate conditions that give rise to crime, lacks hard data to determine its effectiveness, said Kassy Alia Ray, founder and CEO of Serve & Connect, an S.C. nonprofit focused on bringing police and citizens together to address the root causes of crime and promote community safety.

That’s where the app comes in.

“It’s hard for us to say whether community policing does or doesn’t impact certain outcomes because we aren’t measuring them,” Alia Ray said during Thursday’s announcement of the app’s launch at Nephron’s Saxe Gotha Industrial Park campus in West Columbia. “We measure guns retrieved. We measure crimes. We measure all these sorts of things, but for all the effort that we provide in saying community policing is important, we don’t track it.”

Seth Stoughton, a workgroup member and a professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law, said tracking non-enforcement contacts with the community can provide mutual benefits. Police departments can better allocate resources based on which programs prove effective and which officers connect well with specific communities. Existing literature also shows that improved police/community relations can lead to higher case clearance rates, he said, as people are more likely to share information with law enforcement, while incentivizing officers can promote increased community contact in much the same, if more palatable, way an emphasis on traffic stops might lead to more tickets.

“You can take that same idea and apply it in this context and say, ‘We really want you to be engaged in non-enforcement contacts. We’re going to measure that. It matters to us,’ ” Stoughton said. “There are some measurable improvements that come with improving police/community relationships. I see this data-gathering as kind of a first step in measuring how do we really improve police/community relationships.”

City of Columbia Police Chief Skip Holbrook will chair the 12-member workgroup, which Alia Ray expects to meet for about six months before a pilot is ready for limited testing.

“Perception is reality, and we know that we are very grounded in policing efforts, but we’ve got to be able to measure success, whether it’s front-porch roll calls (or) Coffee with Cops,” Holbrook said. “We have to be able to measure our successes and share those success stories and shape our narrative so that our community understands how we’re policing. … This is an opportunity for us to use technology to our advantage to help tell our story.”

South Carolina, Stoughton believes, is particularly primed to develop that message.

“One of the most interesting things about South Carolina from a research perspective is the range of agencies that we have,” he said. “We don’t have the very largest police agencies in the country. We don’t have an LAPD or an NYPD, but we have some large police agencies. We have 500, 600, 700, 800-officer agencies, which would be in the top 2% or so of largest police agencies. We also have a lot of very small agencies. We have one-person, three-person, 10-person agencies.

“The reason that’s exciting is because it gives us a way to test technology and an approach between agencies. If it can work in South Carolina, what it suggests is that will work anywhere, because we have the entire panoply.”

As well-suited as Stoughton believes South Carolina is to serve as a test case, Alia Ray envisions the app eventually having nationwide implications.

“This is my big vision. If we’re really effective, what if we put all departments throughout the country on this portal?” she said. “Then we’d be able to use that not only in local communities, but we’d have a research base that could help us be able to measure what kinds of community policing outreaches can be effective, where it’s most effective, and what does it impact. … If this is done well, this is a huge opportunity.”

Reach Melinda Waldrop at 803-726-7542.

Post & Courier: Columbia nonprofit developing web app to track SC community policing efforts

Lexington County’s Nephron Pharmaceuticals played host to Serve & Connects announcement and will donate $10,000 to the effort.

“In the Midlands, law enforcement has our back and I want them to know that we have theirs.” Nephron CEO Lou Kennedy said. “One way we can show law enforcement just how much we value their work is to equip them and members of the community with the tools needed to strengthen the relationship between officers and the people they protect.”

If the pilot test is successful, Alia Ray said she would like to deploy it statewide within a couple years and potentially nationwide to create a research database that could eventually demonstrate the impacts of community policing.

Nephron, Serve & Connect announce launch of community policing app for officers

Columbia, SC With funding support from Nephron Pharmaceuticals Corporation, Serve & Connect announces the development of a community policing portal. The technology will be developed under the guidance of a multidisciplinary workgroup led by South Carolina police officers, community leaders and Serve & Connect, a SC-based nonprofit focused on bringing police and citizens together to address the root causes of crime and promote community safety.

“Law enforcement has our back, and I want them to know that we have theirs,” said Nephron CEO Lou Kennedy. “One way we can show law enforcement just how much we value their work is to equip them – and members of the community – with the tools needed to strengthen the relationship between officers, and the people they protect. Nephron is proud to join Serve and Connect in providing critical new resources to law enforcement for community policing, aimed at improving public safety outcomes. We can and will make the Midlands, as well as the entire state, even safer places to live, work and raise a family.”

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, community policing is a philosophy that promotes organizational strategies that support the systemic use of partnerships and problem-solving techniques to proactively address the immediate conditions that give rise to public safety issues such as crime, social disorder and fear of crime.

“Community policing is critical for promoting public trust and safety,” says Dr. Kassy Alia Ray, Serve & Connect’s founder and CEO. “However, there are limited tools available for monitoring use of community policing. We want to be a part of finding resources that support officers when they are in the field so they have modern tools that elevate community policing.”

Alia Ray believes that by investing in technology, law enforcement agencies can have the support needed to monitor their work, as well as support broader understanding of how community policing relates to outcomes related to public safety.

More than a dozen law enforcement leaders and community leaders from across the state will compose a workgroup that will begin developing the initial structure of the community policing monitoring tool. The workgroup will be responsible for providing expertise and guidance to ensure usability, optimal adoption and create value for officers and departments.

The workgroup is chaired by City of Columbia Police Chief William “Skip” Holbrook. “As part of the Columbia Police Department’s 21st Century Policing efforts, we stand on a strong community-oriented policing foundation,” shared Chief Holbrook. “The web-based portal will allow us and partner law enforcement agencies to monitor community connection efforts and gain positive and effective impacts.”  

The plan is for the technology to provide external reporting for transparency and trust-building, as well as support ongoing research and evaluation related to community policing.

In addition to statewide representation, Alia Ray says that national experts will be pulled in as needed. The initial structure of the web-based portal will take place across a 6-month development period with a goal to have a pilot that can be tested at the end of the development period.

 

Lexington Chronicle: Nephron Backs Statewide SC Community Policing Portal With $10K Donation

By Jordan Lawrence | jordan@lexingtonchronicle.com
On Thursday, a group that included local police chiefs, the leaders of various S.C. nonprofits and religious organizations and the CEO of a company that generates nearly $200 million annually gathered to announce what they say is a first-of-its-kind effort in community policing.

Backed by a $10,000 donation from Nephron Pharmaceuticals, Serve & Connect, a Columbia-based nonprofit that works to bridge gaps between law enforcement and the communities they serve, unveiled plans to develop a digital portal that will allow local law enforcement agencies throughout the state to interface on efforts to address community policing issues. 

“Today is the start of a monumentous journey,” Kassy Alia Ray, Serve & Connect’s founder and CEO, said from a podium in the lobby of Nephron’s West Columbia headquarters. “Alongside incredible leaders across our state, we’re launching a development tool that will enable police departments to track non-enforcement interactions related to community policing. Once developed, this platform will be the first of its kind in the nation and will serve as a critical resource for promoting trust, accountability and transparency and police community relations.”

A press release announcing the initiative cites the U.S. Department of Justice in defining community policing as “a philosophy that promotes organizational strategies that support the systemic use of partnerships and problem-solving techniques to proactively address the immediate conditions that give rise to public safety issues such as crime, social disorder and fear of crime.”

The intent of the portal is to allow agencies to share efforts they make in their communities, helping them work with their peers to boost successful practices and weed out those that are ineffective.

“Community policing has been around for decades, but it’s pretty misunderstood,” Ray said. “Some think it’s just about handing out stickers or ice cream cones. But really, it’s so much more than that when it’s done well. 

“It is about partnerships between police and community leaders and residents that help address those causes of crime and promote safety. … The research that we know about it shows that it can be a pivotal tool for helping to build trust and well being and citizen satisfaction but there are some major gaps in our knowledge of what works and what doesn’t work.”

A workgroup of 10 leaders from across the state will gather across the next six months to develop the initial structure for the portal, Ray said.

Town of Lexington Police Chief Terrence Green and Lexington County NAACP President James Gates are both members of the workgroup.

Columbia Police Chief Skip Holbrook will chair the group, which also includes Chester County Sheriff Max Dorsey, Myrtle Beach Police Chief Amy Prock, Orangeburg Public Safety Chief Charles Austin and Williamston Police Chief Tony Taylor.

Besides Gates, community representatives included in the workgroup are Midlands Fatherhood Coalition CEO Angela McDuffie, Cathedral of Praise Ministries’ Pastor Thomas Bell, the state Department of Juvenile Justice’s Felicia Dauway and Seth Stoughton, a professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law that Ray touted as a world-renowned expert in community policing.

Holbrook said the portal will allow law enforcement agencies in South Carolina to tell their story and “lean forward” in their communities.

“Community policing is really what we build our foundation in police agencies around the state. And that has never been more evident than in the last 24 months when we’ve seen nationally some of the social unrest and the issues that have occurred,” he said.

That national unrest erupted in downtown Columbia in the summer of 2020 following the Minnesota murder by cop of George Floyd, as protestors took to the streets, resulting in burned vehicles and damaged storefronts and the use of armored vehicles and riot gear by local authorities.

“We saw [the] importance of relationships, partnership, trust,” Holbrook said.

Lou Kennedy, Nephron’s CEO, who accepted a certificate of gratitude from Serve & Connect, said her company wants to support law enforcement and hopes to show that by funding the development of the portal, which she said should be a great tool.

“We’re proud of the work that we do,” she offered. “And the very best way we can show that is by supporting tools like this, and making sure that our law enforcement leaders are equipped and protected so they can take care of our families, our employees, all of those people important to us in and around this community and across the entire state.”

CEO of SC woman-owned manufacturing company earns national award

By Amanda Shaw
https://www.foxcarolina.com/2022/03/08/ceo-sc-woman-owned-manufacturing-company-earns-national-award/

WEST COLUMBIA, S.C. (FOX Carolina) – A South Carolina manufacturing CEO who has worked to increase women’s representation in the industry earned a national award on Tuesday.

Owner of Nephron Pharmaceuticals Lou Kennedy received a Manufacturing Icon Award at the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) meeting in Arizona.

Nephron Pharmaceuticals manufactures respiratory medication.

“Lou Kennedy embodies the spirit of manufacturing, possessing a fearless commitment to solving some of our nation’s and the world’s most pressing challenges,” said NAM President and CEO Jay Timmons. “With trademark enthusiasm, Lou inspires those around her and brings together people from all sorts of backgrounds around a common purpose. In channeling her drive and dedication toward the NAM and The Manufacturing Institute’s Creators Wanted campaign, she is changing lives not just in South Carolina but across America.”

Kennedy was previously named a STEP Ahead Award Honoree, which recognizes women in science, technology, engineering and production careers. Supporting women in these industries has been a focus during her career.

“I am grateful to Jay and his entire team for this unexpected honor,” said Kennedy. “But, even more than that, I am thankful for the hundreds of young people, who visit Nephron to learn more about the future of manufacturing. We are experiencing another renaissance in the industry. The future is bright. I cannot wait to see how the next group of manufacturing innovators builds on the incredible momentum of companies large and small, and on the leadership of visionaries, such as Jay Timmons, and programs like Creators Wanted.”

Copyright 2022 WHNS. All rights reserved.

NAM Honors Nephron CEO Lou Kennedy for Extraordinary Commitment to Manufacturing in America

Scottsdale, AZ –– The National Association of Manufacturers today honored NAM board member and Nephron Pharmaceuticals CEO and Owner Lou Kennedy with the Manufacturing Icon Award during the NAM’s spring board meeting in Scottsdale, Arizona. The award recognizes leaders who inspire Americans to promote, perpetuate and preserve manufacturing in America.

“Lou Kennedy embodies the spirit of manufacturing, possessing a fearless commitment to solving some of our nation’s and the world’s most pressing challenges,” said NAM President and CEO Jay Timmons. “With trademark enthusiasm, Lou inspires those around her and brings together people from all sorts of backgrounds around a common purpose. In channeling her drive and dedication toward the NAM and The Manufacturing Institute’s Creators Wanted campaign, she is changing lives not just in South Carolina but across America. Her support has been game changing, and her passion for building the manufacturing workforce has helped us see our own vision for Creators Wanted more clearly. We’re honored to present this award to Lou in recognition of her exceptional leadership.”

Kennedy serves as co-chair of Creators Wanted. Last year, Nephron Pharmaceuticals hosted the Creators Wanted Tour Live in West Columbia, South Carolina.

“I am grateful to Jay and his entire team for this unexpected honor,” said Kennedy. “But, even more than that, I am thankful for the hundreds of young people, who visit Nephron to learn more about the future of manufacturing. We are experiencing another renaissance in the industry. The future is bright. I cannot wait to see how the next group of manufacturing innovators builds on the incredible momentum of companies large and small, and on the leadership of visionaries, such as Jay Timmons, and programs like Creators Wanted.”

The NAM and the MI’s “Creators Wanted” campaign is a member-driven initiative to inspire, educate and empower more Americans to pursue careers in modern manufacturing and to shift perceptions about careers in the industry. The campaign supports MI initiatives for students, women, veterans and other underrepresented communities and features a first-of-its-kind mobile experience and tour. It seeks to cut the skills gap by 600,000 workers by 2025 and increase the number of students enrolling in technical schools, vocational schools and apprenticeships by 25%. The campaign also seeks to increase the percentage of parents who would encourage their children to pursue a career in modern manufacturing to 50% from 27%.

In 2019, Kennedy was named a STEP Ahead Award Honoree. The MI’s STEP Ahead Awards honor women in science, technology, engineering and production careers who have demonstrated excellence and leadership across all levels of the manufacturing industry. Kennedy continues to work with the MI to help increase women’s representation in manufacturing and support the next generation of female talent.

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SC Life Sciences Honors MUSC, Three Leaders at Record Conference Gathering

Dr. Ashley Daugherty serves as Chief Scientific Officer for Nephron Pharmaceuticals, a rapidly growing West-Columbia based pharmaceutical organization. Dr. Daugherty joined Nephron in 2014 as a Chemist and has rapidly risen through the ranks, spending time in analytical services and product development before assuming her current role in 2019. She holds a B.Sc. in Chemistry from the University of South Carolina and her Ph.D. from Emory University in Biomolecular Chemistry. She was honored with the inaugural Rising Star Award for her contributions to product development, advancement of intellectual property initiatives, and her strong and steady leadership during the unprecedented times of the pandemic as Nephron ramped up production, added production lines, and debuted new products and services to meet critical demands of the state and country.

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