Nereta Summit Paul Raetsch- CEDS
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Transcript of Nereta Summit Paul Raetsch- CEDS
GETTING YOUR WORKFORCE SYSTEM INVOLVED WITH EDA THROUGH THE REGIONAL CEDS
Paul RaetschRetired EDA Regional Director
Talent Pipeline Strategic Alignment SummitNERETA
April 29, 2016
Why should workforce developers care about the EDA Mission?
• To lead the federal economic development agenda by promoting innovation and competitiveness, preparing American regions for growth and success in the worldwide economy.
Linden Pointe, Hermitage, PA ETA/EDA
EDA Investment Programs FY 2016• Public Works $100 M• Economic Adjustment $ 35 M• Planning $ 32 M• University Centers $ 10 M• Trade Adjustment Assistance $ 13 M• Regional Innovation Strategies $ 20 M• Coal Communities. $ 15 M
Tec Centro, Lancaster, PA
Eligible EDA Applicants:
• Economic Development Districts
• States• City and Local
Governments• Indian Tribes• Colleges and Universities• Nonprofit Organizations
Possible collaborations?Bioprocess Technology Training Center, UPR, Mayaquez
Secret to EDA Success?Bottom Up Development
• Investments selected consistent with Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy (CEDS)
• CEDS developed regionally with broad-based local involvement
• EDA responds to, rather than dictates, local vision
• Federal dollars - local control
RESPOND, Camden, NJ
CEDS: A Guide to Prosperity
Purposes:• To guide the economic growth of a region through an ongoing
economic development planning process
• To qualify the region for EDA assistance
Northern Tier EDD (and a WIB), Towanda, PA
https://www.eda.gov/ceds/
What is a CEDS?
What is a CEDS Supposed to Do?
What makes the CEDS Process Successful?
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard BRAC
Summary Background;
SWOT Analysis;
Strategic Direction/Action Plan: The strategic direction and action plan (Vision – Goal – Objectives). The action plan should also identify projects and actions and the stakeholder(s) responsible for implementation, timetables, and opportunities for the integrated use of other local, state, and federal funds;
Evaluation Framework: Performance measures used to evaluate the organization’s implementation of the CEDS and impact on the regional economy.
Economic Resiliency
The Outline of the CEDS Report (according to 13CFR303.7)
Administration’s Job-Driven Training Checklist (http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/skills_report.pdf)
How can economic development professionals get involved?
Strategy Committee: The Strategy Committee is the entity identified by the Planning Organization as responsible for developing, revising, or replacing the CEDS. The Strategy Committee must represent the main economic interests of the region.The Strategy Committee should include: • Public officials;• Community leaders;• Representatives of workforce development boards;• Representatives of institutions of higher education;• Minority and labor groups.
Mayor Domenic J. Sarno said the new center is the result of a unique collaboration that includes the Regional Employment Board of Hampden County and local unions representing carpenters and electricians, along with Springfield Technical Community College and the Roger L. Putnam Vocational Technical Academy.
Vintage EDA
Getting prosperous means focusing on creating jobs with higher wages and better working conditions, reducing poverty and increasing economic opportunities for all of the region’s citizens.
The New Economy Model: Getting Prosperous
The New Economy Model: Getting BetterGetting better means boosting the skills of the region’s workforce, ensuring a technologically advanced infrastructure, fast and responsive government, and ensuring a high quality of life that will be attractive to knowledge workers.
Alamo College, TX Technology Center Nash CC, NC Training Center
Regions that meet the challenges of the New Economy focusing on innovation, learning, and constant adaptation… will be the ones that succeed and prosper.
Atlantic Cape CC, NJ, Aviation Technology Training Center
“Regionalism is an unnatural act among non-consenting adults.” Al McGeehan, Mayor of Holland, Michigan
Collaborate. Leading Regional Innovation ClustersTHE COUNCIL ON COMPETITIVENESS 2010
In every successful case, there is a group of leaders who coalesce around the common recognition that the old, locally focused development strategies are not working and that regional collaboration offers the best chance for success.
The ability to act like a region frequently requires building temporary coalitions, but effective regional leadership requires an ongoing intermediary organization to keep regionalism alive.
Effective regional leadership can overcome the structural disadvantages posed by program stovepipes, local economic jealousy and competing political jurisdictions.
The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Regional Leadership1. Be Proactive 2. Begin with the End in Mind3. Seek First to Understand, then to Be Understood4. Put First Things First 5. Think Win-Win, Be Inclusive6. Synergize7. Sharpen the Saw
(TAKE THE ED DIRECTOR TO LUNCH, OR COFFEE????)
Knowledge economy assets
Collaborative institutions & organizations
Regional Mindset
Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Regional Growth
Strategic Planning for a Technology-Driven WorldCollaborative Economics, 2002
The CEDS can be the glue that binds the collaborative institutions with a regional mindset.
ATLANTA REGIONAlabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
401 West Peachtree Street, NWSuite 1820Atlanta, GA 30308-3510404-730-3002404-730-3025 fax
Philip Paradise, Regional [email protected]
DENVER REGIONColorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming 1244 Speer BoulevardSuite 670Denver, CO 80204-3591303-844-4715303-844-3968 fax
Robert Olson, Regional [email protected]
AUSTIN REGIONArkansas, Louisiana,New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas327 Congress AvenueSuite 200Austin, TX 78701-4037512-381-8144512-381-8177 fax
Pedro R. Garza, Regional [email protected]
PHILADELPHIA REGIONConnecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands
Curtis Center, Suite 140 SouthIndependence Square West Philadelphia, PA 19106-3821215-597-4603 215-597-1063 faxWillie Taylor, Regional [email protected]
CHICAGO REGIONIllinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin111 North Canal StreetSuite 855Chicago, IL 60606-7204312-353-7706312-353-8575 fax
Jeannette Tamayo Regional [email protected]
SEATTLE REGIONAlaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada,Oregon, Washington, American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, Federated States of Micronesia, Rep. of Marshall Islands, Rep. of Palau
Jackson Federal Building, Suite 1856915 Second Avenue Seattle, WA 8174-1001206-220-7660206-220-7669 fax
A. Leonard Smith, Regional [email protected]
"Well, in our country," said Alice, still panting a little, "you'd generally get to somewhere else — if you run very fast for a long time, as we've been doing.“
"A slow sort of country!" said the Queen. "Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!" [1]
For more information on any step in the process of preparing a CEDS, please contact your appropriate EDA regional office (see http://www.eda.gov/contact/).