Since my time in Elizabethton I have heard many talk about the need
for new industry and especially high paying industry. While I certainly
can see the need and desire for new industry, we must first take a step
back and evaluate our economy and determine the feasibility of
recruiting new industry.
Recently, Site Selection
Magazine (a premier professional magazine read by professional site
selectors and economic developers) listed the top criteria that
industries look for when determining a location. In order they are: (1) state and
local tax schemes, (2) transportation infrastructure, (3) utility
infrastructure, (4) land/building prices & supply, (5) ease of
permitting & regulatory procedures, (6) existing workforce skills,
(7) local economic development strategy, (8) legal climate, (9)
availability of incentives, and (10) state economic development
strategy.
We must reflect on these criteria and ask
ourselves can we provide these criteria better than anyone else in the
region can? For some, the answer is yes, but when we get to number
land/building prices & supply we have a problem -- we have very
little to offer.
On a scale of one consulting firm, many
sites in our community rank as tier 1 on a scale of tiers 0 to 5. We
have some land and some sellers who may be willing to sell the property,
but neither Elizabethton, Carter County, Watauga, or Carter County
Tomorrow have control of the property which is key to ensure the price
of the property for an industry.
Industries typically
will give priority to a site which is a tier 4 or tier 5. This requires
the property to have environmental studies completed, all infrastructure
including roads, water, sewer, gas, fiber optics, and electricity be
brought directly to the site, any required permits acquired, and the
site ready for immediate construction any day.
To get
from where we are currently to a tier 4 or tier 5 site could take four
or more years and, yes, it will take hundreds of thousands or even
millions of public and private dollars, but the payoff new industries
and hundreds of new jobs is well worth the expense. Positive economic
growth very rarely happens by chance. It take time, money, endurance and
a community with a vision to drive the local economy in the direction
they desire.
Some people are for a county-wide economic
development agency, some are for a regional, Tri-Cities-wide economic
development agency, and still others are for doing little or no economic
development. Whatever side you take, we must understand that we compete
for capital, jobs, and businesses with every other city, every other
county not only in the State of Tennessee, but in the nation and even
the world. Regardless of which choice we make for the future of economic
development in this county, our local economy will continue to develop
in some direction with or without government assistance. The question
is, will it develop into the economy we desire to have? The choice is
ours. Let’s talk about it!
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