Friday, March 18, 2011

Economic Development on the cheap

Rhode Island EDC has committed $75 million of RI Tax payer money to bring 38 Studio, a video game developer, to Rhode Island. In return 38 Studios is supposed to create 400 jobs for RI. The rationale is that the video game industry  is the next growth industry.  RI  needs the jobs and taxes these will generate. The video game industry needs a well educated, highly trained and skilled workforce made up of artists, musicians, artistically oriented engineers and technicians.

Yet, the educational resources we will need to train these worker are being cut back. Congress is cutting federal support for arts education, while Providence, the home of RISD and soon to be 38 Studios, is cutting its arts programs in the school system. So once again our big economic development ideas are in conflict. We are attracting an arts based business with a tax payer investment to a private enterprise while under-investing in the children of the same tax payers and underfunding the education system that is supposed to train a generation of students to staff the graphic arts,  musicians positions these companies will need. . Makes sense -- Rhode Island sense that is.

Meanwhile Borders books has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Borders has 3 stores in Rhode Island in Garden City, Providence Place mall and T.F. Green Airport –– were on the list to close. Today, it was announced that the Cranston (Garden City) store will not be closing. The jobs will be saved, the customers will still have access to their bookstore. A small gain in a sea of closures, bankruptcies and job losses. How did this happen? Did EDC jump in? Did Governor Chafee or Speaker Fox intervene?

No, it was done because the owners of Garden City, the Los Angeles County Employees Retirement Association, was willing to make a deal that satisfied everyone. These seems like a win, win situation. RI keeps the jobs and collects the taxes, Garden City keeps earning money with an occupied building and the L A County Employees Retirement Fund continues to get a return for its members. And Borders gets a break on its lease while continuing to earn money from the store..

Maybe more business to business cooperation is what we need. Note that with all the anti-public union talk from the Tea Party and its allies, it was a county employee retirement fund that help save the day, not a too big to fail Bank.. Maybe when cooler minds get together to solve a problem, small changes are possible. .

Maybe enough small steps can save enough jobs and businesses to compensate for one big gamble. Maybe by sharing the pain, these individual efforts will rebuild a sense of community to solve the problems. Economic development on the cheap -- just maybe it will trump the grand plans, big bets and the "if it wasn't my idea, it ain't worth doing" mentality that seems to dominate economic development thinking in Rhode Island.


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