Title: Oregon Economic
1Oregon Economic Community Development Department
- 2003 General Session Presentation to the
- Joint Legislative Ways Means Subcommittee on
Transportation and Economic Development
2Agency Overview
- Marty Brantley Director
- Jack Isselmann Commission Chair
- April 15, 2003
3Oregons Economy State Revenues
- Income tax is the main source of revenue for the
state - We have an urgent need to increase the amount of
available revenue in order to adequately fund
state programs - The best way to accomplish this is to create more
jobs, generating more income tax revenues for the
state.
Income to State
Income Tax Revenues
JOBS
4Oregons Economy Economic Development
- Global competition for businesses and jobs
- Essential role for state economic development
5Oregon Economic Community Development
Department Refocus
Mission
Structure
People
Money
Accountability
6Oregon Economic Community Development
Department Mission
- Old Mission
- OECDD assists Oregon businesses and governments
in creating economic opportunities and building
strong communities throughout the state - Refocused Mission
- Sustained, quality jobs for all Oregonians at
least cost.
7OECDD Structure
- Consolidating 14 teams into three functional
groups business development, community
development and administration - Shifting more staff and more staff time
toward business development duties, which means
the retention, expansion and recruitment of good
jobs. - Currently revising structure to flatten the
organization and streamline processes
8OECDD People
- Knowledgeable, professional staff
- Lacking the tools to be competitive
- Industrial land supply
- Strategic Reserve Fund for business deals and
workforce training - 03-05 proposal reduces staffing by 24 FTE from
beginning of 2001
9OECDD Money
- 03-05 agency budget proposal is below Governors
Balanced Budget - Economic Development is 14 of proposed budget
- Community Development is 79
- Pass-Throughs are 7
- Proposal increases funds for core operations
10OECDD Accountability
- Improve performance tracking and reporting system
(based on National Association of State
Development Agencies report) - Improve staff accountability by tying to job
creation/retention results
11Refocused Budget
- Proposed budget is lower than the Governors
Balanced Budget. Total requested is 13 million
less, staffing at 18 lower than 01-03. - Revised proposal was built based on desired
results then we determined the resources needed
to achieve those results
12Refocused Budget (cont.)
- Governors Balance Budget
- Community Development
- 290.7M
- Program Services
- 29.1M
- 116.25 FTE
- Lottery Bond Debt Service
- 50.7M
- Agency Refocused Budget
- Community Development
- 281.03M
- Program Services
- 25.7M
- 109.38 FTE
- Lottery Bond Debt Service
- 50.7M
13Refocus
- Reassessed priority and options for refocus
toward economic development and job creation, a
priority of the Governor and the Legislature - Mission sustained, quality jobs for all
Oregonians and the least cost - Structure Focus on business development, people
in the field deliver services to businesses and
communities, central operation support service
delivery - People determined staffing needs to deliver
results in jobs and financing - Money requesting 100 million in Lottery Funds
and 2 million in General Funds for 03-05 - Refocus directs more staff time toward business
development and job creation, increases Strategic
Reserve Fund (by 3 million) and provides funding
for technology transfer (2 million). It also
focuses infrastructure investment to support more
projects with immediate economic benefit.
14Program Areas
- OECDD budget presentation will focus on three
categories business development, community
development and administration - Business Development
- Business retention and expansion
- Small, Women and Minority-owned Business
- Finance
- Marketing, Business Recruiting
- International Trade
- Community Development
- Community Assistance
- Infrastructure
- Administration
15Additional Program Areas
- Oregon Tourism Commission
- Effectively market Oregon as a travel destination
to help strengthen the tourism-based industries
throughout the state. Provides resources and
marketing expertise for the local/regional
partner organizations. These partners benefit
from assistance such as research and matching
grants to rural development assistance and
cooperative marketing programs. A nine-member
commission, appointed by the governor, oversees
the budget and workplan. - Oregon Arts Commission
- Provides leadership, funding and arts programs
through grants, special initiatives and services
to Oregon communities. Nine commissioners,
appointed by the governor, determine needs and
establish policies for public support of the
arts.
16Additional Program Areas (cont.)
- Oregon Film and Video Office
- A semi-independent state agency that promotes the
statewide development of the film, video and
multimedia industry, the office works to enhance
the industrys revenues, profile and reputation
within the state and among the industry
internationally. Also helps prepare Oregon for
significant employment opportunities with digital
media and telecommunications. - Pass Through and Debt Service
- Pass through is used to account for lottery
resources that are direct legislative
appropriations to programs outside of the agency
and for debt service costs on lottery revenue
bonds.
17Affiliated Boards and Commissions
- OECDD works directly with the following boards
and commissions in carrying out its program
initiatives
- Oregon Economic and Community Development
Commission - Oregon International Trade Commission
- Ports Advisory Committee
- Governors Small Business Council
- Finance Committee for the Oregon Economic and
Community Development Department - Connecting Oregon Communities Advisory Board
- Regional Boards and Partnerships
- Council on Knowledge and Economic Development
- Statutory bodies
In addition, OECDD works closely with Department
of Consumer and Business Services, Department of
Administrative Services, Oregon Department of
Transportation, Oregon Department of Agriculture,
Oregon Economic Development Association,
Community Solutions Team and the Governors
office.
18Budget
- More than 79 of OECDDs proposed budget is
restricted to infrastructure projects such as
water and sewer plants, industrial park
development, port facilities, etc. - 7 of our budget is simply passed through to
others such as the Tourism Commission, Arts
Commission, Film Video Office and
Regional/Rural Investment Funds - Approximately 14 of the budget funds OECDDs
core operations business development
(retention, expansion and recruitment), business
finance, assistance to small and emerging
businesses and OECDD staffing
19Refocused Budget Proposal
20OECDD Budget by fund type
- About 27 of OECDD budget request is for lottery
funds - Other funds (61) include proceeds and debt
services associated with the Oregon Bond Bank,
loan repayments from previously financed projects
and Business Finance funds from revolving loan
funds to operate business finance programs
212003-05 Core Operations budget
- Core operations include business development,
program funding and staffing support - Infrastructure (a form of Other Fund) and Federal
Funds pay for 37 of staffing, and business
finance funds (a form of Other Fund) pay for 100
of business finance programs and staffing
22OECDD Lottery Fund Use
- 51 of Lottery Funds will go toward debt service
for lottery bonds sold to finance infrastructure
projects this includes 5.7 million as
pass-through for the Port of Portland Columbia
River channel deepening project. - 16 of Lottery Funds represents pass-through to
sister agencies and the Regional/Rural Investment
Funds other entities determine uses for these
funds
23OECDD Infrastructure Budget Proposal
- Infrastructure investments use lottery funds,
lottery bonds, loan repayments and other funds - Lottery Funds Previously sold lottery bonds
require 45 million for debt service Columbia
River channel deepening, a pass-through to the
Port of Portland, requires 5.7 million for debt
service about 57 million of the May 2003 sale
of lottery bonds will be carried forward to
03-05, therefore shown as expenditure for 03-05 - Federal Funds Community Development Block
Grant, at 32.4 million, targets low,
moderate-income communities Safe Drinking Water
Loan Fund, at 22.5 million, targets loans to
communities for water treatment plants (OECDD
administers federal block grant for
non-entitlement communities. Cities such as
Portland, Eugene, etc. receive their share
directly)
24OECDD Infrastructure Budget Proposal
25Legislative Budget Options
26Agency Accountability
- Contribute to Oregon Benchmarks
- Line of Sight Framework
- Improve performance tracking reporting
27Links to Oregon Benchmarks
- OECDD contributed to the following Benchmarks and
development benchmark 2002 - Percent of Oregonians employed outside the
Willamette Valley and the Portland tri-county
area - Oregons national rank in traded sector strength
- Oregons national rank in new companies
- Net job growth
- Per capita personal income as a percent of the US
per capita income (US100) - Exports to non-primary partners as a percentage
of total exports - Percent of Oregonians who use a computer or
related electronic device to access the internet - Percent of Oregonians served by public drinking
water systems that meet health-based standards - BM 2002 Percent of cities desiring industrial
development that have marketable industrial
sites.
The agency also has 22 measures to represent its
scope of responsibility to external reviewers.
The Progress Board believes these numbers are
appropriate and that the agency is in line with
all requirements.
28Strategic PlanActions to make Oregon a great
place to do business
- In order to really focus on short- and long-term
job growth OECDD must realign the staff, service
delivery system and structure of the department.
We must have a measurable job-development/creation
outcome tied to the actions we take. The
department has been successful during some very
difficult economic times and we must be more
efficient, innovative and direct with the limited
resources we have. - The first step in this metamorphosis is a
structural overhaul. By looking at our structure,
we have developed a line-of-sight approach to
our organization that will better serve our
customer base and will help change the business
climate of the state. The line-of-sight flow
charts for each of the three core functions
follow
29Line of Sight Framework
30Agency Structure
- OECDD 2001-03 existing organizational structure
- Accountability rests with each of 14 teams
- Staffing for the department, excluding Arts and
Tourism, was 134 FTE at the beginning of 01-03.
The 03-05 refocused budget proposal reduces that
to 109.38 FTE
31Agency Structure
32Organizational Accountability
- OECDD 2003-05 Proposed Organizational
Accountability - Business Development
- Accountability is distributed among 5 functional
groups - More senior staff (regional development officers)
will be refocused toward business development and
job creation - Community Development
- Accountability is distributed among 2 functional
groups - Both infrastructure investments and community
assistance will be refocused toward possible
economic development and job creation - Administration
- Strengthen partnerships to increase leverage of
state funds and staff - Streamline processes to improve accountability
with fewer staff
33Organizational Accountability (cont.)
- Overall Agency Goals
- Assist in the creation/retention of 17,580 jobs
- 75 business expansion/recruitment projects
- Finance 115 million in business projects
- Assist with 48 million in export sales growth
34Proposed 2003-05 Functional Accountability
35Proposed 2003-05 Functional Accountability
(cont.)
36Proposed 2003-05 Functional Accountability
(cont.)
37Summary of Refocus
- Total requested budget is 13 million less than
Governors Balanced Budget - With an 18 reduction in staff as compared to
01-03 - While maintaining a high level of infrastructure
financing services to local communities - Our goal is to take our refocused agency and
provide/retain over 17,000 jobs, reduce the
unemployment rate and provide more income tax
revenues for the state budget. - OECDD - Creating sustained, quality jobs for
all Oregonians at the least cost.
38OECDD
- Other required information
39Agency Historical Overview
- The department has its roots in the Economic
Development Commission established in 1953. From
the beginning, the department activities have
included policy development and services related
to industrial investment and trade promotion. It
was established as a separate agency in 1973. In
1975, Ports joined the agency, followed by the
Tourism Commission and the Film and Video Office
in 1983. The department began offering financial
services to business in 1976. The first trade
office opened in Tokyo in 1984. That same year
the state lottery was authorized, with revenues
dedicated to economic development. In 1987,
foreign offices opened in Taipei and Korea, and
the department was restructured giving it
responsibility for the Job Training Partnership
Act, Small Business Development Center Network,
Community Development Block Grant and the Special
Public Works Fund. Also, the Regional Strategies
Program was established.
- 1973 Economic Development Department becomes a
separate agency - 1984 Oregon State Lottery established by
voters, dedicated to job creation and economic
development - 1985 Enterprise Zone Program created (ORS
285B.650-.728) - 1987 Department restructured
- 1987 17 department programs or funds
established by legislature - 1993 Department reorganized by statute
Economic Development Commission given policy
control (ORS 285A.040-.060) - 1997 Interim Work Group on Economic and
Community development appointed to recommend
changes to implement New Directions - 1997 Department Reorganized
- 1999 Interim Task Force on Performance
appointed to recommend changes to department
performance measures (budget note assignment
included in HB 5015 budget report 6/18/99) - 2001 Long-term financing of department
infrastructure resources via lottery bonds
approved (Chpt 637, OR Laws 2001)
40Administrative Costs
- Activities included in administrative costs
- Directors office (policy direction, liaison with
business community/other stakeholders, agency
accountability), centralized agency-wide support
functions such as budgeting, payroll, information
technology, employee recruitment and human
resources, lease contracts, web site design,
public information, and reception. - Using this definition, administrative cost is1.2
of proposed 2003-2005 budget.
41Cost Control Measures
- Steps taken to control costs, with emphasis on
efficiency gains - Reduce office space and rent
- Eliminate lease for office equipment
- Reduce travel via use of tele- and
video-conference - Streamline process for funding decisions to
reduce staff time required - Modified communications to stakeholders and the
public via use of email, web sites, etc. - Â
- Steps taken to coordinate with related
programs/other agencies to reduce duplications - Use a shared list of projects to initiate funding
decisions (Needs and Issues). - Collectively strategize annually on approach to
community priorities (Lead Agency meeting). - Meet once a month with communities addressing
difficult projects to brain-storm solutions (One
Stop Meetings.) - Participate regularly with other state agencies
to strategize coordinated solutions to community
problems (Community Solutions Team).
42Legislative Agenda
- HB 2300--Department omnibus bill to improve and
streamline public infrastructure and small
business service programs eliminates redundant
statutory references regarding assessment of
small business programs provides for
verification of jobs data with Employment
Department records provide a jobs focus with
Regional and Rural Investment programs vehicle
to provide for authority to support industrial
lands mitigation costs -
- SB 467--Establishes an industrial lands
certification process for project ready sites,
working with state economic and community
development agencies, community solutions office,
local governments and the private sector. Issue
Will require maintaining adequate lottery bond
authority to jump-start assessment, mitigation
and infrastructure costs for preparing industrial
lands throughout the state. -
- SB 890--authorizes issuance of lottery bonds and
use of proceeds to finance Columbia River channel
deepening in the biennium beginning July 1, 2003.
Issue Will require providing for change of
debt service requirements in next biennium and
future biennia. -
- SB 363--Sponsored by the Council on Knowledge and
Economic Development to allocate lottery funding
for the Higher Education Technology Transfer Fund
and to the department for technology transfer
assistance to traditional businesses throughout
Oregon. Issue Some of this funding has been
provided for in the Department's readjusted
Governor's budget.
43Legislative Agenda (cont.)
- Other relevant bills that may impact operations
and budget needs of the department - HB 2969--Establishes Office of Small Business in
the department establishes Small Business
Council in statute. -
- SB 869--Establishes an Electronic Products
Stewardship Advisory Committee, appointed by the
Department, to develop recycling methods, create
business opportunities, working with other state
agencies and high technology industry
representatives. -
- SB 441--Establishes Oregon Quality Jobs Board,
chaired by department appointment to provide for
natural resource demonstration projects, an
extension of Jobs in the Woods work of previous
biennia requires economic analyses, development
of employment quality benchmarks and biennial
reporting to the legislature. -
- Budget Issues of Sister Agencies
- Tourism CommissionHB 2267 increases lodging tax
by 1 and dedicates proceeds to tourism
promotion.If enacted, what are effects on use of
Lottery Fund and requirements for performance
tracking and reporting. - Oregon Arts CommissionHB 5548 ceased General Fund
distribution to the Arts Commission for the rest
of 01-03. If General Fund reductions continue
into 03-05 Oregon will likely lose grant funding
from federal government and private foundations
for arts. - Oregon Film and Video OfficeSB 79 creates and
funds a Production Incentive Fund to attract film
and video projects to Oregon. HB 5548 ceased
Lottery Fund distribution to the Film and Video
Office for the rest of 01-03. If such reductions
continue into 03-05, operations of the Film and
Video Office will curtail severely.
44IT Strategy
- Provide the technical tools and environment
required by the department to respond to the
challenges posed by changing economic conditions - Develop and enhance the departments Information
Systems to handle increased connectivity and
rising demands for data and tracking reporting
performance as adopted by the OECDC. Ensure
integration of all department program databases - Continued expansion of information available on
the departments website including profiles of
every Oregon community, specific information
about industrial sites throughout Oregon, trade
statistics and other commonly sought information - Development of databases and applications with
the ability to link with those of other agencies
on community needs and investments - Improve electronic tracking of business and
industry outreach activities, including the
distribution of responses and investment leads. - Â
- Key enterprise-wide technology issues that need
to be addressed in the new statewide Strategic
Technology Plan - There are difficulties in sharing documents and
information with other departments and locales
due to varying software products and standards - Retention of IS and other technologically
proficient staff - Need for a central, statewide clearinghouse for
Internet commerce and web hosting - Cross-agency reporting system Integrated
database system with other community solution
departments to track investments, future issues
and needs
45Affirmative Action Report
- The focus of the Oregon Economic and Community
Development Department affirmative action plan
for the 2001-2003 biennium was to improve
representation of women, people of color and
people with disabilities in upper and middle
management positions, and in job categories with
few employees, and with lower job turnover or
promotional opportunities. - The plan to achieve a more diverse workforce
included setting goals to hire one woman and one
person of color in the Official and Administrator
EEO job group one woman, or person of color, in
the Professional Accounting/Finance job group,
and two people with disabilities. Success in
meeting the goals were
- the goal to hire one woman in the Official and
Administrator job groups was met, but the goal to
hire one person of color in the job group was not
met, - although the goal to hire one woman, or person of
color, in the Professional Accounting/Finance
jobs was not met, the number of women and people
of color increased in the Professional jobs in
general, - the goal to hire two people with disabilities was
met, - a voluntary survey of employees to determine the
accuracy of the number of employees with
disabilities represented in the current workforce
resulted in an increase in the representation of
employees with disabilities, which exceeded the
goal of 6 set by the Governors Affirmative
Action Office and - overall, the representation of women and people
of color remained steady, and the representation
of people of color and people with disabilities
increased as shown below