The ENDOW Regional Assessment€¦ · •Anschutz Medical Campus (CU Hospital and Health Sciences...

Preview:

Citation preview

The ENDOWRegional

AssessmentFor Business Development

and Innovation Zones

1

Agenda

About ENDOW

Business development and innovation zones

What is the Regional Assessment?

How to use the Regional Assessment

Key dates

Where to find help

2

ENDOWEconomically Needed Diversification Options for Wyoming

3

ENDOWSenate enrolled Act No. 64

• 15 industry leaders from across the state

ENDOW Council

Director of Diversification

20 Year Diversification Plan

4

Innovate. Unify. ENDOW.

5

Innovate. Unify. ENDOW.

Unified State Support

Regional Perspective

Long-Term State Vision & Accountability

6

ANALOGUES THAT WORKBusiness Development and Innovation Zones Concept Inspiration

7

Alberta’s Industrial Heartland225 square miles of industrial land specifically zoned for business and commercial use

Hub for chemical, petrochemical, and oil & gas logistics

Over 40 companies • Petroleum Fractionation• Petrochemical Manufacturing• Petroleum Refining• Bitumen Upgrading• Other industrial centers

Organic industrial growth since 1950

Alberta’s Industrial Heartland Association formally launched in 1998• Unites five municipalities, three counties, three levels of government, and non-industrial land owners

$45 billion invested

Workforce of more than 7,000 people

8

ENDOW Business Development and Innovation Zones

expand on successful analogues to leverage Wyoming’s unique advantages and create fit-for-Wyoming solutions

Fitzsimmons Redevelopment

Nearly one-square mile medical campus in Aurora, Colorado

Focused on education, patient care, and bioscience research and startups• Anschutz Medical Campus (CU Hospital and Health Sciences programs, Children's Hospital Colorado,

and the future VA hospital)• Fitzsimmons Life Science District

$5.4 billion economic impact – nearly twice the size of Colorado’s ski industry

19,000 employees at the campus• 41,000 jobs statewide support the campus• 43,000 jobs on campus predicted at full build-out

9

ENDOW Business Development and Innovation Zones

expand on successful analogues to leverage Wyoming’s unique advantages and create fit-for-Wyoming solutions

BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT AND INNOVATION ZONES

10

Business Development & Innovation ZonesAs Defined by Senate enrolled Act No. 64

“[D]efined geographic areas within the state in which local, state and federal permitting and other regulatory requirements will be met for all or significant segments of industry located in the zone or in which industries or businesses would be benefitted substantially as a result of being located in proximity to each other[.]” W.S. 9-12-1401(f)(i)

BDIZs• Encourage private investment in Wyoming through

reduced regulatory risk, innovative incentives, and infrastructure investments

• Create unique environments where education, workforce training, research, innovation and private sector businesses come together

11

Business Development & Innovation ZonesReports Required by senate enrolled Act No. 64

August 30, 2017Identification of potential business development and innovation zones

December 31, 2017Identification of specific areas which should be designated a business development and innovation zones• Considering specific industries• Description by location in the state, including recommended boundaries• Identification of existing industries in each zone which could be expanded

and used to attract other businesses

August 1, 2018Strategy for creation and plans for implementation of business development and innovation zones

12

Businesses & Industriesin Business Development & Innovation Zones

• agriculture and agricultural business• renewable energy sources• advanced clean coal technologies• nuclear fuel processing and

enrichment• hybrid energy sources• enhanced oil recovery• inland distribution ports• international trade

• food and beverage industry• international trust and fiduciary

business and related sectors• emerging research and technological

development• value added manufacturing involving

Wyoming resources• existing, new and emerging

economic sectors and subsectors

The following industries and businesses are specified in the ENDOW legislation

13

ASSET MAPPINGto identify Business Development and Innovation Zones

14

Purpose of asset mapping

Innovations Assets Amenities Other Requirements

• Markets• Incentives• Land

Ownership• Other

Considerations

BDIZ

Asset map focus for August 30 reportPotential business development and innovation zones

15

• Provides objective, data-driven view of assets around the state• Tool for communication to and from communities, legislators, and

other stakeholders

Business Development and Innovation Zones

Workflow

Map required assets for each business and industry to characterizeAssets by Industry

Identify BDIZ Business and Industries, and Assets Required for Each

Compile and Map Statewide Inventory of Assets

Identify Industrial Assets intersections, consider unmapped requirements to defineBusiness Development and Innovation Zones & Gaps

ENDOW Council

UW Industry Experts

Communities-

Regional Assessment

State AgenciesWho

HOW

WHA

T

16

Simplified ExampleLarge-Scale Manufacturing

Large-Scale Manufacturing Requires:1. Transportation

1. Rail2. Highways

2. Labor ForceOther assets, e.g. feedstock, electricity & reasonable wages, are excluded here for simplification in illustration.

17

Interstate

US Highways

WY Highways

Railroads

Airports

70-150 flights/day

40-70 flights/day

Near Railroad and Highway

Large-Scale Manufacturing

Transportation

18

19

County MFG Employment>30060-mile radius centered on county population centers

Large-Scale Manufacturing

Workforce

20

MFG Labor > 300Near RR and Highway

Near RR, Highway, and Labor Force

Large-Scale Manufacturing

Industrial Assets

All CCUS Assets Present

All Large-Scale MFG Assets Present

21

CO2 Capture Use and Storage & Large-Scale Manufacturing

Industrial Assets

REGIONAL ASSESSMENT

An opportunity to communicate your vision for BDIZs in your area, and to ensure that all of your assets are represented

22

The Regional AssessmentWhat’s in it for my Community?

Accurate Asset Maps

Strengthening Regional Networks

Reflect Local Priorities

Identification of Gaps

23

REGIONAL ASSESSMENTHow to use the

24

www.wyomingbusiness.org/ENDOWassessment

Collaboration is encouraged

25

Information and an invitation to participate in the Regional Assessment have been sent to

• Counties

• Cities and towns

• Local Economic Development Professionals

Please work with local economic development professionals and Wyoming Business Council regional directors to collaborate with other counties, cities, or towns in your area.

Regional Assessment

Instructions

Regional Description

Specific Area Suggestions

Industry Focus

• Assets and Infrastructure• Community Amenities

Geographic Inventory

26

Regional DescriptionList the general information about the region being assessed.

27

e.g. Goshen County, Cheyenne, Northeast WyomingRegion Name

List all of the counties in the region

Counties in Region

List all of the towns in the region

Cities and Towns in Region

List each team member’s role in the assessment, organization, title, and contact information.

Regional Assessment

Team

Specific Area Suggestions

We want to hear from you.

Communities with proposed sites compiled in anticipation of this initiative that are not already in Wyoming Sites are encouraged to contact your Wyoming Business Council Regional Director or Sarah Fitz-Gerald, Industrial Development Manager at the Wyoming Business Council.

Some things we’d like to discuss:

• How specific areas might fit with innovations, assets, and amenities

• A plan to incorporate specific site locations into general industrial asset maps

28

Industry Focus

For each Industry specified in the ENDOW legislation:

• Indicate your area’s level of focus

• List any companies you've been recruiting or developing, and any projects, programs or initiatives you've been working on that relate to each industry

If there are industries that your area is focused on that are not listed in the ENDOW legislation:

• Identify each new industry

• Indicate your area’s level of focus

• List any companies you've been recruiting or developing, and any projects, programs or initiatives you've been working on that relate to each industry

29

Geographic inventory

Community Amenities• City/Town Life• Outdoor Life

Business Support Services• Venture Capital• Industrial

Services• Professional

Services

Natural Resources Transportation Pipelines

30

Assets and Infrastructure

What we’re not asking for

The following assets are already in our statewide inventory:• Natural Resources

• Coal, Oil, Natural Gas, NGLs, Uranium, Bentonite, Trona, Rare Earth Elements, Wind, Surface Water, Ground Water, Iron, Reservoir, Solar, Flat Land, Protected Areas & Biomass.

• Transportation• Road, Railroad, and Air Transportation

• Pipelines• Oil, Gas, NGL, CO2 pipelines and Electrical Transmission and

Substations• Community Amenities

• National parks & forests• State parks and recreation areas

31

Check out NREX.wyo.gov to see what is in our database.

Geographic InventoryCommunity Amenities

Examples: Locally Owned Restaurants

32

Amenity Cheyenne Burns AlbinCity/Town Life

Number of Locally Owned Restaurants 26 1

Number of Wineries (within 100 miles)

Number of Breweries

Number of Live Entertainment Venues

Number of Shopping Venues

Number of Museums

Geographic InventoryBusiness & Industrial Services, Natural Resources, Transportation, and Pipelines

Column AAsset Name

Name of Asset

Column BGeographic Location

Type

How you have described the feature’s location?

•Street Address•Latitude and Longitude

•Township, range, and section

•GIS spatial data•Map or internet source

•Other (like the name of a city)

Column CGeographic Location

Provide the feature’s location

Column DLocation Source

How did you find the asset?

Column ENotes and Details

Describe the asset and tell us anything else you think we should know

Examples: Welding Shop Mfg LLC Granite Canyon Quarry 33

Key Dates

• 4/5/2017 – Rollout to regionals and local test group for feedback and familiarization

• 4/12/2017 – Follow up with regionals and local test group

• 5/19/2017 – Rollout to communities• 6/30/2017 – Assessments due back to WBC

– Please send to sarah.fitz-gerald@wyo.gov• 7/15/2017 – Deliverables for Aug 30th report

34

You are EssentialWe’re Here to Help

WBC Industrial Development Manager

Sarah Fitz-Gerald307-777-6319 | sarah.fitz-gerald@wyo.gov

WBC Regional Directors

Northwest – Leah Bruscino307-754-5785 | leah.bruscino@wyo.gov

West Central – Roger Bower307-857-1155 |roger.bower@wyo.gov

Southwest – Elaina Zempel307-877-2203 | elaina.zempel@wyo.gov

South Central – Pat Robbins307-389-0867 | pat.robbins@wyo.gov

Southeast – Heather Tupper307-777-2804 | heather.tupper@wyo.gov

East Central – Kim Rightmer307-577-6012 | kim.rightmer@wyo.gov

Northeast – Brandi Harlow307-689-1320 | brandi.harlow@wyo.gov 35

Wyomingbusiness.org

36

Recommended