Economic Development Futures Journal

Saturday, August 12, 2006

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More Americans Working for Themselves

A recent study by the U.S. Census Bureau showed the nation added nearly 1 million businesses with no paid staff between 2003 and 2004 to reach 19.5 million, a growth rate of 4.7% over a one-year period.

Businesses without a payroll make up more than 70% of the country's 27 million-plus firms, and produce receipts close to $900 billion annually. Many are small, part-time operations.
The nonemployee businesses include both sole proprietorships and partnerships.

Read more here.

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Optics Conference Headed to Albuquerque

The sixth annual Mirror Tech Days conference will be held in Albuquerque for the first time on Sept. 18-20 at the Kirtland Air Force Base Conference Center.

The conference, which is open to the public, brings together federal contractors with industry representatives and developers to discuss cutting-edge optics and mirror technologies emerging around the country.

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Wyoming County Aims to Pilfer Michigan Workers

Read the story.

Tells you the depths of the economic development competition out there.

Friday, August 11, 2006

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Brookings Releases Metro Land Use Study

Here is a good one if you are working on land use issues in a regional context.

Local land use regulations help define the character of cities, towns, counties, and entire regions. Zoning, comprehensive plans, infrastructure control, urban containment, building moratoriums, and permit caps can drive development outward, promote density, or something in between. They can also directly affect the composition of inhabitants by facilitating rental properties and low-income residents, especially when these regulations are coupled with programs to promote housing affordability.

This comprehensive survey of local land use regulations finds a wide variety of regulatory regimes in the nation's 50 largest metropolitan areas. They range from exclusionary and restrictive to innovative and accommodating. These produce a variety of effects on metropolitan growth and density, and on the opportunities afforded to the residents that live there.

Download the Brookings study here.

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Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership's New Safety Ambassador Program

As more than $1 billion inresidential and commercial investment changes the face of Downtown Pittsburgh, the Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership (PDP) officially launched its Safety Ambassador program, a significant new service for the Downtown neighborhood.

Read more here.

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University of Arizona Trying to Preserve Integrity of Area Surrounding Bioscience Park

Which do you want: a bioscience park, industrial park, of Wal-Mart type big box development? That is a question facing Tucson and UA officials.

For more than a year, commercial and residential developers have worked with the University of Arizona and area residents to create a 350-acre mixed-use project that they say will draw world-class biotechnology companies to Tucson.

But if a variance, or waiver, to the big-box ordinance isn't granted, the commercial developer for the project at 36th Street and Kino Parkway will sell the land for industrial use.

That would mean neighborhood residents who want to see less crime and more shopping will end up with a truck stop in the place of a planned multiplex theater, according to developers.

Read more here.

PS: My firm just started work on a regional economic strategy for the Tucson region with KMK Consulting of Cincinnati. I expect we will hear a lot more on this issue.

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New TVA Target Industry Initiative

The Tennessee Valley Authority is launching a new program to help communities identify key target industries and learn how to recruit those industries.

The new initiative is being called The Valley Targeted and Prepared Community Program -- or TaP program -- and is initially being made available to three or four communities though an application process.

Read more here.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

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New Brookings Midwestern Manufacturing Study

Here is a summary of Brookings new midwestern manufacturing study. Good one!

"Analysis of manufacturing employment and production in seven Great Lakes states and their metropolitan areas from 1995 through 2005 finds that:

More than one-third of the nation's loss of manufacturing jobs between 2000 and 2005 occurred in seven Great Lakes states: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Between 1995 and 2005, the United States lost more than 3 million manufacturing jobs. Nearly all of this job loss occurred during the last five years, and 37.5 percentof the loss occurred in the seven Great Lakes states. Michigan lost the most manufacturing jobs between 2000 and 2005 (nearly 218,000), followed by Ohio, Illinois, and Pennsylvania.

Despite these job losses, manufacturing remains a major driver of the nation's economy and the economy of the Great Lakes region. Because productivity was higher in manufacturing than in other sectors of the economy, in 2004, manufacturing accounted for a higher share of gross state product than its share of employment, both nationwide and in six of the seven states in the Great Lakes manufacturing belt. In addition, productivity in the manufacturing sector increased by 38 percent between 1997 and 2004, a much higher increase than the 24.4 percent growth in productivity for all non-farm businesses during that same time period.

Manufacturing job losses were pervasive in Great Lakes metropolitan areas. All but one of the 25 largest manufacturing-dependent metropolitan areas in the Great Lakes region lost manufacturing jobs during the last decade (1995-2005), often at a faster rate than the United States as a whole. Chicago and Detroit lost the most manufacturing jobs in the last five years (over 100,000 jobs each), while Canton, OH, and Flint, MI, lost the greatest shares of manufacturing employment.

The metropolitan areas in which manufacturing employment peaked between 1995 and 1997 tended to experience more severe manufacturing job losses between 1995 and 2005 than those in which manufacturing peaked later. The 13 metropolitan areas where manufacturing employment peaked between 1995 and 1997 saw an average 26.8 percent decline in manufacturing employment between 1995 and 2005. In the other 11 metropolitan areas where manufacturing employment peaked later, between 1998 and 2000, the average metropolitan area lost 18.9 percentof its manufacturing jobs during the decade.

Manufacturing job losses were a major reason for slow overall job growth, and sometimes overall job losses, in Great Lakes metropolitan areas. Furthermore, employment gains in high-wage advanced service industries, which occurred in all but one of the 25 metropolitan areas studied, were not large enough to offset the loss of manufacturing jobs in most areas."

Source: Brookings Institute (Download report here)

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Science of the Web

Researchers need a clear agenda to harness the rapidly evolving potential of the World Wide Web, according to an article in the Aug. 11 issue of the journal Science. Calling for the creation of an interdisciplinary “science of the Web,” a group of computer scientists suggests the need for new approaches to tap the full richness of this powerful tool, while ensuring that it develops in a way that benefits society as a whole.

Read more here.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

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Norman, Oklahoma ED Looks at Sales Tax Funding

The executive director of the Norman Economic Development Coalition hears it all the time, things like, “economic development programs just pay companies to come here.” But as he shares his vision and ideas for how he would grow Norman’s economy with a $5 million portion of the temporary, five-year half-cent sales tax if renewed by voters Aug. 22, he emphasizes one thing — paying for business is not what Norman’s economic development program is about. Not even close. Read more.

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Wisconsin ED Audit

Wisconsin's economic development programs need to be streamlined to avoid duplication, enhance efficiency and increase accountability, an audit released recently.

The Legislative Audit Bureau report recommended that duplicative and outdated state programs be identified, procedures for tracking and reporting project results be improved and tax credits claimed by businesses be monitored more closely.

The report also recommends that the Legislature consider specifying criteria for designating future areas for economic development, establish clear and measurable goals to ensure programs are coordinated effectively, and consolidate the number of programs and reporting requirements.

Read more here.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

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LA County's Most Business-Friendly Communities

The Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp. selected five finalists for its new award category -- "Most Business-Friendly City." El Segundo shares the spotlight with Burbank, Lancaster, Long Beach and Santa Clarita. A panel of judges selected them from among the 88 cities in the county.

In addition, the economic development agency honored Torrance-based Toyota for its corporate leadership in helping to improve the quality of life in the region by supporting primary and secondary education.

El Segundo, the LAEDC pointed out, now has one business for every three residents. And the city is able to process business licenses in less than 24 hours. The agency also lauded El Segundo for having more Fortune 500 companies per capita than any other city in the county and for its low utility and transient occupancy taxes.

Read more here.

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Georgia Getting the Job Done!

Some 254 economic development projects that will create more than 24,000 new jobs and add more than $5.7 billion in new investments either located or expanded in Georgia during fiscal 2006, according to Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue's office.

The number of projects, quantity of jobs and the amount of new investments are the most ever for the state, Perdue's office said.

Major projects announced in fiscal 2006 include: Kia Motors' new automotive assembly plant in West Point; Aflac Inc.'s expansion of Paul S. Amos Corporate Ridge campus in Columbus; and Hewlett-Packard Co.'s two new data centers in Suwanee and Alpharetta.

Slightly more than half (131 out of 253) of the fiscal 2006 projects were expansions, which accounted for 12,556 new jobs (56.2 percent of the total). The 24,660 jobs announced during the past year marked a 140 percent increase over the 10,270 jobs reported for fiscal 2005. The total investment of $5.76 billion is 303 percent more than the $1.43 billion last year, Perdue's office said.

Read more here.

Monday, August 07, 2006

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Tennessee Rated #1 by Business Facilities

Business Facilities magazine says Tennessee leads the nation in economic development achievement. Tennessee was ranked first with 196 out of 300 possible points with $687.58 in new business capital invested per resident, followed by Virginia with a ranking of 166 points.

The rankings were created by measuring jobs created, jobs retained and capital investment and adjusting the figures based on the Census Bureau's 2005 state population estimates. The point values for all three categories were combined to determine overall economic development.
In a reader ranking of business locations, Tennessee ranked fourth. North Carolina and Texas tied for the top spot and South Carolina preceded Tennessee.

Business Facilities magazine focuses on the site selection marketplace, targeting growing companies seeking the best location for their business.

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Evansville, Indiana: On Why Economic Development

The Evansville area is home to thriving businesses, major corporate headquarters, two universities and an enviable quality of life on the banks of a scenic yet productive waterway. It has garnered accolades from Newsweek, Kiplinger's, National Civic League and others for its livability and nurturing family atmosphere. Recently, several area companies announced their intent to expand operations locally and commit for the long haul.

With all the community has going for it, why bother to support economic development initiatives, fund new organizations or, for that matter, change anything? Click here to read the answer to this key question.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

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ED Futures Newsletter

Dear ED Futures Readers:

Welcome to this week's issue of ED Futures.

Several articles posted to the website in the past week about:

  • Muskogee, Ok.
  • NE Oklahoma.
  • Tulsa.
  • Arizona.
  • North Carolina.
  • Research Triangle.
  • Charlotte.
  • East Texas.
  • Wisconsin.
  • CEO Perspective of the Economy.
  • Senior Entrepreneurs.
  • Business Investment Trends.
  • Industrial Manufacturing.
  • Pharmacogenomics.

Hope you find something in this issue that interests you.

Best wishes,

Don Iannone, Publisher

Tel: 440-449-0753

Email: dtia@don-iannone.com