Posted by Aaron Wiener on Nov. 14, 2012 at 12:33 pm
Speaking
this morning against a backdrop of construction on the CityMarket at O site in
Shaw, Mayor Vince Gray laid out his ambitious five-year plan to bring jobs and
economic growth to the city.
``This
is our first-ever economic development strategy,`` Gray said proudly, ``which
has emanated in part from our relationships with universities and the business
community.``
The
112-page plan aims to bring 100,000 new jobs—more than three times the number
of unemployed D.C. residents right now—and $1 billion in new tax revenue to the
city over the next five years. It`s based on six ``visions``:
1.``Establish the most business-friendly
economy in the nation`` by assisting businesses through targeted programs and
relaxing building height restrictions in certain parts of the city
2.``Create the largest technology center on
the East Coast`` with a bub at St. Elizabeths and tax incentives for tech firms
and investors
3.``Become the nation`s destination of choice``
by improving infrastructure (including a ``District-wide Wi-Fi system``) and
promoting tourism
4.``End retail leakage`` by changing zoning
and bringing retail to underserved areas to help reduce the $1 billion spent
each year by D.C. residents on retail outside the city
5.``Build a best-in-class global medical
center`` at the McMillan site
6.``Become the top North American destination
for foreign investors, businesses and tourists,`` particularly through efforts
in China
Gray
acknowledged the skepticism his numbers were likely to engender. ``Within five
years, this plan will allow us to create—and you`ll probably ask, `What were
you smoking in the back?`—100,000 new jobs and $1 billion in revenue,`` he
said.
But
he says the city`s come a long way to bring it to this point. ``When you talk
about Microsoft wanting to locate in Ward 8, that would`ve been considered
heresy a few years ago,`` he said.
But
the plan, while impressive in its ambitions, isn`t terribly detailed on the
specifics, despite its many charts and graphs. In response to a question about
how to account for the sudden spurt in construction and economic
activity—Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development Victor Hoskins, who
dubbed himself ``the official crane counter,`` said there are currently 52
cranes up in the city—Gray replied, ``It`s outstanding mayoral leadership.``
The
plan also makes several references to the constraints on office space (and the
resulting high office costs) due to the restrictions on building heights in the
city. But when I asked Gray if the plan anticipated changes to the Height Act,
which are now being studied, he said no.
``We`ve tried to craft a plan over which we have reasonable control,`` he said, referring to the congressional approval needed to amend the 1901 law. But he acknowledged that a change to the Height Act would affect the city`s economic development and ``probably would have a major impact on the number of people living in the city as well.``
The
plan does, however, factor in the potential effects of sequestration if the
federal budget impasse is not resolved. ``We`ve already factored that in,``
Gray said. ``If it doesn`t come to pass, we`ll be in a better situation.``
The city, Gray said, will get half its new jobs in the real estate and construction sector. An additional 25,000 will come from the tech sector.
``We`ve
had two kinds of tech firms in D.C.: those that have started and failed, and
those that have started and succeeded and left,`` he said.
One
of Gray`s goals is to make the city less reliant on the federal government. The
fortunes of the city, he said, have been ``tied to the rise and fall of the
federal government. It doesn`t have to be that way.``
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Greater Greater Washington also covered the Mayor's five-year economic development strategy.
Here is the brief paragraph on McMillan:
For example, this plan envisions a world-class medical center at the McMillan Sand Filtration Site, which is right next to a cluster of hospitals. The job growth in health care and higher education has exceeded all other sectors in DC in the past decade.
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Greater Greater Washington also covered the Mayor's five-year economic development strategy.
Here is the brief paragraph on McMillan:
For example, this plan envisions a world-class medical center at the McMillan Sand Filtration Site, which is right next to a cluster of hospitals. The job growth in health care and higher education has exceeded all other sectors in DC in the past decade.
4 comments:
If you look at the report (http://dmped.dc.gov/DC/DMPED/Programs+and+Initiatives/The+Five-Year+Economic+Development+Strategy+for+DC/Economic+Development+Strategy+Full+Report), it actually says the goal is for McMillan to be developed as a "medical office hub." The "global medical center" line refers to the District as a whole.
Thanks for doing the homework and providing clarification.
McMillan must be preserved to become a grand public park one day. This is what the citizens want. Mayor Gray cannot be blamed for wanting economic development, but that's not going to happen at McMillan; he can undertake that elsewhere. If Childrens Hospital wants to grow,it can build vertically, without touching what will be the grand park across the street.
Mayor Gray: Keep your hands off of McMillan! McMillan was designed thousands of years ago to welcome an alien space craft to earth in the year 2175. Aboard the craft will be alien technology that will allow the aliens and the humans to develop a new society... a society where children play freely, dogs frolic at will, and no one is ever allowed to build anything in anyone else's back yard.
McMillan was designed to house the capital of the new alien-human alliance; by building on McMillan you will likely drive the aliens to another, more understanding planet, which would be a disaster for nearby residents who demand the alien-human alliance be allowed to thrive in the year 2175.
Save McMillan!
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