SSTI Digest

Geography: New York

Restructuring State Economic Development Organizations in Oregon, New York

Earlier this month, the governors of Oregon and New York both outlined changes to the structure of their states’ lead economic development organizations.
 
Before Gov. Ted Kulongoski signed Executive Order 08-11 to reorganize the Oregon Economic and Community Development Department (OECDD), it consisted of three components:

People & TBED Organizations

Dr. Michel Bitritto was named director of the new business incubator being run by the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission.

$700M for New York Upstate Economic Plan in Budget Agreement

Legislators passed the fiscal year 2008-09 budget last week, increasing spending by 4.9 percent over last year and investing in New York’s Upstate economy despite projected shortfalls for several years to come.
 
Lawmakers approved $700 million for the Upstate Revitalization Fund, an initiative that Gov. David Patterson continued to push forward following the resignation of Gov. Eliot Spitzer last month. In January, former Gov. Spitzer unveiled the Upstate proposal, asking lawmakers for $1 billion to encourage economic growth through targeted investments in high-technology development, agriculture, housing, transportation, and state parks (see the Jan. 23, 2008 issue of the Digest). Many of Gov. Spitzer’s initial requests for funding were fulfilled, including $120 million for the Regional Blueprint Fund - $200 million less than Gov. Spitzer’s recommendation - and $180 million for City-by-City investments, which was $65 million above the governor’s original recommendation. Additional components of the approved fund include:

People & TBED Organizations

Helene Schember became the first executive director of the Cornell Center for a Sustainable Future Dec. 3, joining the center as its first full-time staff member.

New York Unveils $1B Upstate Revitalization Fund

Last week, Gov. Eliot Spitzer gave New York’s first ever “State of the Upstate” address in Buffalo, outlining his administration’s $1 billion Upstate Revitalization Fund. Among the components intended to encourage economic growth in the northern part of the state are:

People

Dr. James Weyhenmeyer will become senior vice president for the State University of New York (SUNY) Research Foundation and SUNY senior vice provost for research, effective March 3, 2008.

New TBED Ideas Surfacing: Will They Endure?

Policymakers and practitioners continually seek new ideas to integrate into their overall TBED strategies in order to capitalize on innovative approaches and remain a competitive force in the global marketplace. Over the last few months, two new concepts in TBED aimed at supporting higher education have surfaced in New York and Wisconsin with two distinct goals: achieving the status of a world-renowned research capital and increasing college graduates to raise per capita income.

 

NY Considers $3B for Research, Star Faculty, Education Zones

In New York, Gov. Eliot Spitzer will consider a multi-billion investment in the State University of New York (SUNY) and the City University of New York (CUNY) intended to boost the state’s higher education system and enhance university research centers.

 

The New York State Commission on Higher Education – created by the governor earlier this year – released this week a preliminary report that calls for establishing a $3 billion research fund and hiring additional full-time faculty and eminent scholars. Additionally, the report endorses a compact for public higher education to address revenue constraints and the creation of “education partnership zones.”

 

Operating on the notion that outstanding research universities are crucial to New York’s future, the report urges significant investments in SUNY and CUNY to raise their status as world-class institutions. To that end, the commission recommends creating an Empire State Innovation Fund, providing $3 billion over 10 years to support research in physical sciences, biosciences, engineering and medicine. To lead the research efforts, commissioners call for the recruitment of 250 eminent scholars.

 

Because SUNY and CUNY have endured several years of under-funding, they have fallen far behind peer institutions in the amount of operating revenue per student, resulting in hiring less expensive adjunct and part-time faculty, the report states. Over the next five years, the commission recommends hiring 2,000 additional full-time faculty members.

 

In terms of financing higher education, the commission supports a Compact for Public Higher Education that would set differential tuition pricing. Under the compact, the state would commit to provide tax-levy funding that covers 100 percent of the systems’ mandatory costs and at least 20 percent of the costs associated with the master plan investment program. Other funding sources would come from private funds, restructuring existing base budgets, enrollment growth and “modest” tuition increases.

 

The education partnership zones proposal would target high-need districts to increase the number of college graduates and focus on math and science preparation through partnerships between higher education and middle and high schools.

 

While the total cost of implementing the plan has yet to be released, the price tag is likely to pose a problem for the state financially. The New York State Budget Office recently released a report projecting a $4.3 billion budget gap in fiscal year 2008-09 and a $6.2 billion deficit in FY 2009-10 (see the Dec. 5, 2007 issue of the Digest). Gov. Spitzer is expected to unveil his budget recommendations to the legislature in January.

 

TIFS for Human Capital Proposed in Wisconsin

Last month, Competitive Wisconsin (CWI), a non-partisan consortium of agricultural, business, education and labor leaders that promotes public policy in the state, released a strategic plan that calls for the creation of a funding mechanism to increase the number of college graduates. The “human TIF” method is similar to the concept of real estate tax incremental financing and would link higher education investment to income growth benefiting individuals and Wisconsin, according to CWI.

 

In the human TIF model, described by CWI Vice President John Torinus, the state would issue bonds for grants and student loans, which would be paid off by collecting sales and income tax when the graduate enters the workforce. The graduate would benefit in a reduction of student loans with every Wisconsin income tax return filed, providing further incentive to remain in the state after graduation, according to Torinus.

 

The report, A Competitive Mandate for Wisconsin, proposes growing the economy through strategic investment budgeting with a greater focus on recruiting high-wage earners to the state and increasing the number of college graduates, effectively moving away from traditional economic development strategies. Specifically, the mandate calls for an additional 170,000 college graduates by 2012.

 

Torinus endorses the human TIF model to help the state meet this goal and calls on lawmakers to draft legislation supporting the funding plan. In an editorial for the Milwaukee Sentinel Journal, Torinus said the human TIF plan could also propel Gov. Jim Doyle’s Wisconsin Covenant into action. The covenant provides loans and subsidies for high school graduates who have maintained a B grade average. However, the plan has met resistance in the legislature because financing for the plan is unclear, Torinus said.

 

The human TIF model could also target disciplines most needed in the state’s economy, such as engineering, science, math and entrepreneurship studies, Torinus added. He proposes that students within these majors be given priority through larger grants or accelerated grant reduction.

People & TBED Organizations

Jeffrey Boyce was named the assistant vice president of the Research Foundation of the State University of New York. Boyce had been the deputy commissioner for manufacturing services at Empire State Development.

People

Linda Hartsock was hired by Empire State Development to serve as regional director for Central New York.

People

Marilyn Higgins joined Syracuse University as vice president for community engagement and economic impact.

New York Announces Rural Cluster Development Initiative

Implementing successful technology-based development initiatives in rural areas is an ongoing challenge for many parts of the country. Earlier this month, New York Gov. Elliot Spitzer signed legislation establishing a new program to stimulate employment and income growth by promoting cluster-based strategies in rural regions of the state. Sponsored by Sen. George H. Winner Jr., chairman of New York’s Legislative Commission on Rural Resources, Senate Bill 3234 outlines the Cluster Based Industry and Agribusiness Development Grant Program, which will provide seed grants of up to $25,000 on a competitive basis to community-based economic development corporations.

 

The initiative will be administered by New York’s Rural Revitalization Program while the funds will be dispersed by the Empire State Development (ESD) Corporation, the state’s lead economic development agency as part of its comprehensive rural revitalization program. Clusters are expected to be organized around the existing strengths in certain regions, as well as the emerging technologies and research under development at the universities and colleges dotting the landscape of rural New York.

 

New York’s Legislative Commission on Rural Resources produces Rural Features, a collection of articles reviewing legislation and news from New York, the U.S. and around the world, which may be of interest to many rural communities. The most recent edition, dated July/August 2007, can be found at:

http://www.senate.state.ny.us/SenateReports.nsf/Public_ViewReports?OpenForm

 

The text of S.B. 3234 can be accessed at: http://assembly.state.ny.us/leg/?bn=S03234

 

Learn More About Rural TBED Initiatives…

New Strategies for Rural TBED will be one of the 19 breakout sessions at SSTI’s 11th Annual Conference in Baltimore, Oct. 18-19. During this session, we’ll investigate several tech-based initiatives producing employment growth within rural communities across the country, including the concept of “farmshoring.”

 

The discussion will include presentations by:

Monica Babine, Rural Bridges Co-director, Washington State University Extension

Keith Boswell, Team Leader, Security & Services Team, Virginia Economic Development Partnership

Heike Mayer, Assistant Professor in Urban Affairs and Planning, Virginia Tech – Alexandria Center

 

More information is available at: http://www.ssticonference.org/

People & TBED Organizations

Jerome Mahone is the new director of Venture Creations, a business incubator at Rochester Institute of Technology.

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