Epic, VC Totals, Shine, & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist

Keep up with the latest news from Wisconsin’s innovation community with these recent headlines:

—The United States Supreme Court will hear a case involving Verona-based Epic Systems and whether organizations can make it mandatory for employees to sign arbitration agreements that keep them from pursuing group claims in court, the Associated Press reported. Groups of current and former employees at Epic, which develops software that hospitals and clinics use to manage patient records, had previously filed multiple lawsuits claiming they were denied overtime pay. Epic settled one of the lawsuits in 2014 by agreeing to pay a set of employees who test the company’s software a combined $5.4 million, as the Wisconsin State Journal reported at the time.

—Investors poured $240.6 million into Wisconsin-based companies last year, across 68 deals tracked by Seattle-based PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association. That total was up by about 8 percent from 2015, when businesses in the Badger State raised more than $222.7 million across 87 deals, according to data from the two groups. Some of the largest funding rounds went to six Madison-based companies: EatStreet, Ionic, Midwestern BioAg, Propeller Health, Silatronix, and Understory.

Wisconsin’s increase in funding during the final six months of 2016 as compared with the first half of the year—$154 million versus $86.6 million—bucked the broader national trend.

—Madison-based Exact Sciences (NASDAQ: [[ticker:EXAS]]) released preliminary numbers from the fourth quarter of 2016—and the year as a whole—to which investors reacted favorably. Exact is developing tools to screen for cancer, including a stool-based DNA test for colorectal cancer known as Cologuard. Exact’s 2016 revenues and the number of Cologuard tests it reported completing last year were both higher than most observers had anticipated. Meanwhile, some analysts project that the company could “reach initial profitability” in 2019.

—The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel published a lengthy article on Access HealthNet, a company based in that paper’s eponymous city, which gives employees of business clients the ability to purchase and schedule common medical procedures from local providers. Access HealthNet’s service, which is reportedly meant to be used by organizations that self-insure, incentivizes employees to seek care from healthcare providers that are able to control costs effectively.

—Milwaukee-based Microbe Detectives, which uses DNA sequencing to analyze samples of wastewater, well water, and drinking water to identify different types of bacteria, announced a multiyear partnership with Mandeville, LA-based Environmental Business Specialists. EBS provides wastewater consulting services, and the goal of the partnership is to “advance performance of wastewater systems across North America in food processing, chemical processing, pulp and paper mills, and petroleum refineries,” according to a news release.

—Wisbusiness.com profiled Pro-Boards, which has created a computer keyboard designed with words and phrases frequently used by lawyers. The keyboard, which the company calls LegalBoard, was reportedly the brainchild of Brian Potts, a Madison-based attorney at the firm Perkins Coie.

—Milwaukee-based Mortara Instrument, a manufacturer of electrocardiograph

Author: Jeff Buchanan

Jeff formerly led Xconomy’s Seattle coverage since. Before that, he spent three years as editor of Xconomy Wisconsin, primarily covering software and biotech companies based in the Badger State. A graduate of Vanderbilt, he worked in health IT prior to being bit by the journalism bug.