What is sustainability? Why does it matter? Panel #1 Don Schjeldahl - Facilitator October 23, 2014 he Business Case for Community Sustainabil
Dec 15, 2015
What is sustainability?Why does it matter?
Panel #1Don Schjeldahl - Facilitator
October 23, 2014
The Business Case for Community Sustainability
It is not uncommon that the mention of “Sustainability" and “Planning“
stir emotions.
Today’s objective:
Find common language for building
a better community.
Business is apolitical. They’re just wanting for a way to prosper.
The evolution of “business-best-practices” is reflected in the places businesses
operate.
Change is constant. No organization that stands still prospers.
With change comes new opportunities for development that have different needs.
1. 2.
ONE Winner
Short ListCities/Sites
Favorable Region
Long List Regions
Location Selection is a Process of Elimination
The New Corporate Paradigm:Manage Risk and Cost, but Mostly
RiskSustainable Communities Follow a Plan:
• Stakeholders understand community strengths, weaknesses
are identified and addressed
• Stakeholders converge on development strategies that are
realistically aligned with community assets and they have the
will to change with time
• Execution of strategy touches all facets of the community: Appropriate workforce skills and education / training resources
Modern / well maintained utility and transportation
infrastructure
Land use reflects best practices for interconnectivity /
resource management / environmental protection
Government effectively and efficiently provides services in
support of community development goals
Corporations are more likely to succeed in communities that offer a predictable and adaptable operating environment.
What does the community get for it’s
efforts?• Ebb and flow of economy favors steady new
investment• Local jobs that keep grown children home,
stronger families• Healthier life styles, longer life, lower health care
costs• Stable / safe neighborhoods • Wealth creation at all levels within the
community• Reasonable tax burden, wise use of tax dollars
What is the 50 year vision for Tri-Cities?
Flint Michigan:• Buick / General Motors
began operations in 1904• Flint population peaked
in 1970 at 196,000
• 78,000 GM employees in region in 1978
• “Buick City” 400 acres / 10 % of Flint’s land / 5+ million SF, 28,000 employees in 1985
Buick City – Flint, MI
• Buick City ceased operations in 1999 after 100 years
• Flint population today 92,000
What is the 50 year vision for Tri-Cities?
“To be competitive in the era of sustainability,
economic developers need to pursue highly
collaborative, multi-disciplined, and multi-
jurisdictional approaches to community
readiness.”
Business and
Community
Converge on the
Triple-Bottom-Line
Gary Spanner - PNNL1. PNNL has sustainability mandates as part of
your mission. What are these?2. I suspect that employees don’t leave their
sustainability hat at the office. Yet I know there are challenges in the larger community that may prevent PNNL employees practicing sustainability. What are your thoughts on this?
3. What have you seen that works well in other communities? How can we bring those practices to the Tri-Cities?
Steve Young, Mayor Kennewick
1. Sustainability brings stability and predictability to markets. How important is that when it comes to managing a city like Kennewick?
2. A conclusion from the LWV “Sustainable Communities” is that over the next 20 years the greatest challenge to Tri-Cities quality of life will is urban sprawl. There is a strong push now underway to push Kennewick’s development to the south, opening thousands of acres for new development. How do you reconcile the two statements?
Matt Mathes – American Society of Landscape Architects
1. Mid-Columbia Energy Initiative, on its surface, is game changing in terms of fostering development of a modern/next generation energy economy in the region. Sadly, I did not find much evidence of this when doing the strategy study earlier this year. Do I have it right?
2. In communities across the country landscape architects are the vanguard of change when it comes to sustainable urban design. Tri-Cities seems to me an up-hill battle when it comes to widespread adoption of tried-and-proven concepts for the landscape. Your thoughts?
3. What Ways to incorporate sustainability into an existing or new site.
Diahann Howard – Port of Benton
1. You have been working in economic development for a long time here in the Tri-Cities. We first met when I was here in 2000. What positive changes have you seen in Richland and Benton Port District during your tenure? Are these things playing out regionally?
2. Fragmented approach3. Given a near certain reduction in Hanford related
employment, is there a 50 year vision for Tri-Cities (to avoid the Flint example)?
4. Sustainability is scalable, from small towns to large metro areas (e.g. greenways, recycling, industry targeting, workforce development). Is it just a matter of educating the community to drive these ideas in the tri-Cities?
Panel Questions1. Do stakeholders in the Tri-Cities understand
LEED and the roll it can play in creating a better community?
2. What are the costs/benefits of urban sprawl?3. Health and fitness – what do we know about land
use and community design that encourages healthier living?
4. What are some benefits of a healthier community?
5. What is the role of environmental, social, faith based organizations in economic development?
6. Life Cycle Costing versus ROI is becoming more common in corporate investment decisions. How does this relate to sustainability?
7. Companies are addressing community sustainability earlier in the decision process – where can we meet our goals.
Selected Findings of Tridec Strategy Study
• Largely unsupported industry targets• Skills gap – high, low, not much in middle• Income gap – high, low, not much in middle• Industry gap – agriculture and science/engineering – little in the middle• Lack of entrepreneurship•Missing sense of place - No “here” here•Missing elements to make transition• Lackluster “innovation hub” movement•Difficulty attracting talent
General Recommendations for Achieving Sustainable Economic Development
• Support economic development through dedicated professional staff
• Create a Business Advisory Team with eyes and ears on business needs• Establish policies on
development standards
• Initiate a workable fast-track permitting process
• Think globally, act locally – build partnerships to help strengthen the regional economy
• Stay close to your state Business Development representative – make them a partner to your success
• Manage risks – real and perceived
• Maintain an inventory of sites and buildings ready for development
• Create a vibrant, attractive downtown that will support a community sense of place
• Establish policies on incentives including use of an economic impact model so you know which investment opportunities are worth pursuing
• Understand your workforce by documenting commuting patterns and labor costs by skill set
• Support quality housing, schools, parks, trails and services
• Strive for a business friendly reputation
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Corporate Driver Community Screen
Risk and Crisis Management
Local resources are purposely aligned to meet specific OI needs• Real estate• Transportation• Permitting• Utility Services• Police and Fire Services• Emergency Planning• Regulation
Sustainable Companies Selecting Sustainable Communities
Corporate DriverCommunity Screen
Community investment in OI supply chain increases the regionally sourced materials.
Supply Chain
Companies succeed where the workforce is skilled, reliable, productive:• Workers are loyal, adaptable to
change• Diversified & harmonious at all
levels• Modern, OI focused training
resources• Community is active in job
retention
Human Capital
Sustainable Companies Selecting Sustainable Communities
Corporate DriverCommunity Screen
Community support for a broad array of corporate environmental policies: • Waste stream management• Water resource management• Water use reduction• Energy management best
practices• Recycling, reuse programs
OperationalEco-Efficiency
Sustainable Companies Selecting Sustainable Communities
Corporate DriverCommunity Screen
Sustainable companies are best served by communities with a live/work balace:• Healthy downtown business
districts• Land planning that supports
community health / attractiveness
• Reuse of brownfield properties• Resources devoted to promoting
healthy lifestyles• Public transportation
Talent Attraction and
Retention
Sustainable Companies Selecting Sustainable Communities