ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A MYSTERY

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OFF the BEAT

ROBERT L. SPINKS, MA, MS

COMMENTATOR

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A MYSTERY Published on Wed, April 20, 2011 by Robert Spinks, MA, MS http://www.sequimgazette.com/spinks

Note: This is the first of a multi-part series that examines economic development efforts on the Olympic Peninsula.

responsible for the airport, marine, industrial, and economic development duties of the Port District.

Employment in Clallam County continues a 4-year downward spiral, according to the State of Washington. That translates into an 11.3% rate of unemployment, better than last year’s high of 12.3%. Those are numbers that far exceed state and national unemployment levels.

Many significant projects face Robb and the Port daily. There is the $8 million Black Ball Terminal project with construction beginning next year; the groundbreaking for the Port’s Composites Manufacturing Campus including construction of a $4 million 125,000 square foot building to kickoff that expansion; the Central Waterfront Plan to enhance marine operations and to accommodate larger vessels; the Lincoln Park Tree Removal project to increase airport safety; and much more.

With double digit unemployment, you would think, economic development would be the critical topic on the Olympic Peninsula. While often bantered about, often misunderstood, and often challenged by politics, personalities and limited options to lure new business, economic development is a mystery to many. There are many players in the jig-saw puzzle that makes up economic development. The brightest stars in this arena are the Port of Port Angeles (The Port) and the Clallam County Economic Development Council (EDC). Executive Director of the Port, Jeff Robb has multi-generational ties to the Sequim area and is Page 1 of 2

What is Economic Development? Economic development while hard to define seems to have many people thinking they know it when they see it. Clallam EDC Executive Director Linda Rotmark is fast to note that economic development is not quick. She likens it more to farming a crop verse being on a fast track to instant prosperity; a growing cycle that can take years before a full harvest is realized. The Clallam County Economic Development Action Plan published in May 2010, had area


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