PTO, SBA Falling Short on IP Training at Local Level, Reports GAO
Though the Small Business Administration coordinates with the Patent and Trademark Office to provide intellectual property training to small enterprises and inventors, “it has not fully implemented some statutory requirements that can further enhance this coordination,” and the work is “inconsistent,” reported GAO Monday. The 2017 Small Business Innovation Protection Act requires Small Business Development Centers to work with PTO on IP training programs at the local level, but only two of the 12 centers that GAO interviewed had done so, said the report. SBA officials told GAO they're in the process of implementing the statute’s requirements. “Incorporating selected leading practices for collaboration, such as documenting the partnership agreement and clarifying roles and responsibilities,” could help SBA and PTO “fully and consistently communicate their existing resources to their partners and programs, enabling them to refer these resources to small businesses and inventors,” it said. SBA didn't respond to questions. "As the report points out," PTO offers "multiple programs that help small businesses and inventors with acquiring intellectual property protections, which can help protect creative works or ideas,” emailed spokesperson Paul Fucito. “These programs, such as the Inventors Assistance Center, are aimed at assisting the public, especially small businesses and inventors, with intellectual property protections. We continue to seek out new ways to improve our reach into the small business.”