Regional November 10, 2011 12:05 AM

WNY Regional Economic Development Council Announces Priority Projects

WNY Regional Economic Development Council Announces Priority Projects

The Western New York Regional Economic Development Council today finalized and adopted the council's five-year strategic plan and priority projects for the region, which is composed of Allegany, Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie and Niagara counties.  Focused on preparing the region's workforce for its key industry sectors, investing in smart growth infrastructure to pave the way for private investment, attracting and retaining more visitors and leveraging Western New York's research capacity to drive innovation and commercialization, the plan will be submitted in response to Governor Andrew Cuomo's challenge to stimulate real, regional economic development. 

"We strongly believe our plan deserves to win, not just because it is truly a home-grown plan that reflects the values and aspirations of Western New York's citizens, but because it is a practical plan that is achievable," said Western New York Regional Council co-chair and Managing Partner at Larkin Development Group Howard Zemsky.  "Public participation was an integral component of our strategy, which justifies our priority projects for state funding."

The Governor has made $1 billion available for the 10 Regional Councils, including $200 million in competitive funding.  A Strategic Plan Review Committee will analyze and compare each region's Strategic Plan.  Based upon this review, four regions will be awarded up to $40 million each in capital funding and tax credits to be applied toward the priority capital projects identified in their plans. The remaining allocations will be divided among the other six regions. "

A Strategy for Prosperity in Western New York," a comprehensive plan to create a more dynamic and sustainable economy for the region and its citizens, identifies three fundamental opportunities: job readiness, smart growth and entrepreneurship.  The strategy also puts forth ways to capitalize on opportunities in eight economic sectors where Western New York has advantages to build on: advanced manufacturing, agriculture, bi-national logistics, energy, health and life sciences, higher education, professional services and tourism.  The plan can be found at: http://nyworks.ny.gov/content/western-new-york

The Council reserves the right to edit the Strategic Plan until its submission date, at 4 p.m. Monday, November 14. The plan is the product of a planning process that involved the Regional Council members, more than 200 stakeholders from across Western New York and more than 1,000 citizens who added their voice through interactive forums and the Empire State Development website.

The Western New York Regional Economic Development Council also identified priority projects that it recommends for immediate state support.  The projects represent critical opportunities to build upon the region's strengths and competitive advantages, and immediately accelerate job creation and economic growth.  The projects represent a regional approach, as there are some projects with a regional impact, and at least one project in each county.

The projects collectively support direct creation/retention of more than 1,500 jobs with nearly $285 million in capital investment and $74 million in state investment.

Western New York's priority projects support the continued transformation of the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus as a key driver of economic development (Roswell Park Cancer Institute Genome Project, Hauptman Woodward Crystallization Laboratory and Center for Innovation in Medicine); train and prepare our workforce (Urban Automotive Center of Excellence, Buffalo Arts and Technology Center and Hospitality and Tourism Center); attract and retain more visitors (Niagara Experience Center); support smart growth with investments in central business districts in Buffalo, Olean and Chautauqua County; and help renewable energy, advanced manufacturing and life sciences companies grow with Excelsior Jobs Program tax credits.

The Western New York Regional Economic Development Council is one of ten regional councils across New York that will serve as a single point of contact for economic activity in the region.  Through their strategic planning process, the councils will identify and expedite priority projects that demonstrate the greatest potential for job growth. Each regional council will develop a plan for the development of their region, which will provide a regional vision for economic development, address critical issues and opportunities, and lay out an implementation roadmap for future growth.

Western New York Regional Economic Development Council Priority Projects    

Roswell Park Cancer Institute Genome Project will build a robust approach to personalized medicine based on detailed definition and study of genetic sequences, the health information data associated with the individuals, genetic sequences and a powerful informatics approach to enable analysis and discovery to inform more personalized medicine.

Hauptman Woodward Crystallization Laboratory will expand the high throughput crystallization laboratory biotech services at this research institution to expand services and offer competitive and sustainable research.

Center for Innovation in Medicine will be a center for innovation and entrepreneurship, which will include a cutting-edge, state-of-the-art medical device prototyping facility.  It will be the only U.S. center for entrepreneurship in the heart of a clinical facility and will include a fabrication center, machine shop, and clean room, to create new devices and techniques and a training center for physicians to test them.

The Urban Automotive Center of Excellence will be a facility to provide training in the field of auto body repair and auto-service technicians and mechanics. Students will also receive GED and Mentorship assistance.

Buffalo Arts and Technology Center is two co-located programs: health care industry training for unemployed and underemployed adults and an after-school arts and technology program that will provide at-risk teens with the tools needed to succeed in school and graduate.

Rainbow%20Centre-thumb-600x351-15054.jpgHospitality and Tourism Center (above) will renovate nearly 90,000 sq. ft. of the former Rainbow Centre for the Hospitality and Tourism Center.  Niagara County Community College will train students for employment in the growing field of hospitality and leisure in a facility that will include 8 teaching kitchens/classrooms, student restaurant, culinary theatre, Barnes and Noble college bookstore and retail center, bakery, deli, wine boutique and exhibition space.  It will also add a small business development center to help support entrepreneurism hospitality.

East State Street Re-construction will reconstruct E. State St. (NYS Route 417) to include replacement of the water line, sanitary sewer line, and installation of new storm sewer and complete road base to enhance access to Downtown, critical to the employees in that area including Cutco Cutlery, Dal Tile, Olean Advanced Products and Cooper Industries.

Olean CBD will redevelop several properties on N. Union and West St. along with the redesign of Union Street and adjoining streetscape improvements in order to advance downtown revitalization and to encourage private investment at the site.

genny streetscape.bmpBuffalo CBD will reestablish high-quality, multi-modal transportation corridors that link Main Street, the Genesee Gateway (above) and the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus, critical to continued private sector reinvestment in the central business district.

Small Business Green Retrofit Initiative will provide incentive grants to small businesses and non-profit organizations throughout the region for pre-retrofit repairs on commercial properties to help businesses increase energy efficiency and stabilize central business districts.

Niagara Experience Center (entry image) plan calls for the NEC to be an 80,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art "experiential museum" utilizing masterful story-telling techniques to present the true story of Niagara--its importance to nature, history, technology, the development of two nations and more--all using the best of technology and showmanship to create a setting that is enlightening to the scholar and the six-year-old alike.  At the same time the Center will inform visitors about the many other cultural destinations throughout the region encouraging visit to those locations.

High-Temp Materials Characterization Laboratory at Alfred State will purchase equipment and renovate facilities for testing applications of high-temperature materials, including a wind energy/fluid mechanics lab; a thermal science/solar energy lab; a photovoltaic solar energy lab; an alternative fuels laboratory and a power conversion and controls laboratory. 

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Niagara Falls truly deserves a museum that tells the story of its amazing history. If done correctly, this would be a tourism magnet and help change negative perceptions of the area.

Score: 10 ( 12 votes ) Vote up Vote down Report this comment

Some decent and worthy projects here but I must admit I am a bit underwelmed that this is what they came up with. The City should have found the money long ago for the Genessee-Ellicott street improvements considering all of the private investment there over the past couple of years.

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I saw no where in the PDF of an urban automotive center of excellence. I'm just wondering what page it's on, thanks!

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I had previously read that funding was in place, privately, for the streetscape project. In fact, it's probably searchable on BRO. What happened?

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Shouldn’t the Urban Automotive center of excellence fall under BOCES already, and the Hospitality and Tourism/Buffalo Arts and Technology Center called under ECC? We already have organization in places that do these things. I’d hate to see a great idea go into competition with programs we already have. The other research things could be pushed to UB now that I think about it.

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i see bump outs on Genesee. Good Stuff!

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From the Buffalo News article (http://www.buffalonews.com/city/communities/buffalo/article626525.ece)

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* $2 million for the Urban Automotive Center of Excellence, a facility to provide training for auto body repair and auto-service technicians and mechanics in conjunction with Erie Community College.

"It's very hard for people in the city to get to the Southtowns, so we're bringing the program to the city," Zemsky said.
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So this logic works for an auto mechanic program, but not for a health sciences program? Give me a break! Put the health sciences program near where most of the health institutions are (the BNMC) and the car programs where most of the cars are and there is plenty of space for driveways and car lots (the suburbs).

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Zemsky on the board, and his property directly benefits from street enhancements....mmm?

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At first blush these seem like good initiatives. The bi-national logistics focus is interesting to me. I would love to see Buffalo become a bigger shipping port. It would be great to also have docking facilities for river-boat style tourist cruise lines to dock here as people tour the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence.

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I often wondered why no one has picked up the great lakes cruises...they do this all over the coast and Canada..why not the Great Lakes. This would definatley be a great addition to our future waterfront...I've heard such great stories of the Canandaigua and Crystal Beach..dinner and dancing on boats. HOpefully we can see that again some time!!

With the Genessee Gateway and new infrastructure going in I would hope this would give SHERER'S the incentive to clean up their property/facade and welcome themselves to 2011.

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It might be interesting to see the contrasts of types of projects among what the 10 regions propose.

A few things in WNY's list don't sound to me as though they'd at all grow the state's economy or job base (regardless of whether or not they're good ideas in general). For one example, auto repair training. That won't cause the total amount of car repair customers to grow.

The cynic in me thinks the winning regions will be chosen more based on political basis than proposal merits anyway. I'm guessing that would be good for WNY because we have several factors in our favor politically for this. I'll be very surprised if the 4 winners don't include at least one of Buffalo's region or Rochester's, or maybe both.

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When do the winners get picked?

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