Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, February 09, 2011, Image 8
I KAISER WILHELM'S SIX OUNCES OF FRESH GROUND CHUCK SAUERKRAUT ANU MUENSTIR CHEESE LETTUCE, TOMATO, ONIONS, AND PICKLES WITH HORSERADISH MAYONNAISE StW (tab lAJt- take. Special 1075 Baxter St. (next to Mirko) 706.583.8686 %# www.silverliningcupcakeco.com WHAT'S UP IN NEW DEVELOPMENT Marshaling Forces: "...The success of the Research Triangle, of Silicon Valley, of Boston and Austin—does not happen by accident," UGA President Michael Adams told the local Rotary Club in January. "There were conscious decisions in those areas decades ago to capitalize on the nexus of intellectual prowess amassed on the campuses in those areas. Are we ready to do the same in Athens and Georgia? I hope so." Adams talked a lot about economic development during his speech. What he didn't get into, though, were the practicalities of how to achieve that sort of vision here. It's going to take a lot of cooperation across a lot of different lines if such a future is ever to come to pass. No county, university or other com munity is an island. So, where are the opportunities for partnership in eco nomic development? Starting with ACC and UGA, we must first recognize how intertwined these two independent entities are. That level of intertwining is going to be preserved, even as the state budget axe continues to swing in the direction of higher education. If the university is going to continue its growth and develop its reputation as a top-tier research institute, it will have to explore new models for what a campus is. Potential Nexuses: The Project Blue Heron river district proposal being pushed for ward by the ACC Economic Development Foundation is a logical point to begin a meaningful partnership. The university and the city both have a lot of land and resources invested in that river corridor, and so cooperating in a way that fosters integration and creates a hybrid sort of district only makes sense. That men tal wrought-iron fence between town and gown must be blurred for an urban research environment to emerge here that resembles those others that Adams cited. In addition to the river, the university and the city should be looking at how to capitalize on the burgeo.. -g bio-medical community in the western part of town. The new med school will be the center- piece, along with two major hospitals. The question is whether Athens and the university can come up with a cohesive strategy to tie everything that's hap pening there together into a meaningful economic engine. Scattershot development is not the way, but a unified medical district surrounding those major resources could gain a national or international reputation and possibly secondarily attract some of those vaccine factories that some of the smoke-stack chasing economic development crowd have been longing for. Zooming Out: A proposed economic development partnership between Oconee County and ACC unraveled a year or jO back, but perhaps we ought to be considering how our partnerships relate to that goal of regional, university-affiliated economic development. Oconee's proximity still makes it a logical part ner, but perhaps we should consider other neighbors: Jackson • County seems like a good candidate to start with for a con temporary regional economic development strategy. Besides US-441 and US-129 linking Athens to Jackson County and 1-85, there are also a couple of rail lines to round out the traditional infrastructure. The other interesting rela tionship between the two counties is ecological. The Middle and North Oconee rivers flow through both, intertwining them more than any road ever could. Water is the limiting factor to any community's growth, and so a strategy for coopera tion that recognizes that hydrologic kinship may make a lot of sense. Tensions are already high concerning the subject, with a lawsuit over the city of Jefferson's share of Bear Creek Reservoir's water ruffling regional feathers. Working together to manage such a sensitive resource, not only on the supply side, but on the demand side as well (with industrial users being such heavy consumers of municipal water) could help to avoid future conflicts like that lawsuit. Already, Jackson County and Athens-Clarke County's com prehensive plans align fairly well, with mutually support ing agricultural belt areas. How can other growth goals and strategies, such as those for housing and transportation, be pulled together in a similar fashion? Making Regional Local: T-SPLOST, a 12-county list of regional projects, will be up for an all-or-nothing referendum in 2012, and will require some PhD-level political calculus if it is to pass. Rural and suburban road projects must be balanced with voter-rich Athens' desires for urban necessities like transit and bicycle infrastructure in a way that offends neither demo graphic. The 10-year program will raise approximately $1.2 billion, with 50-70 percent going to roads specifically, according to the Northeast Georgia Regional Transportation Roundtable, tasked with selecting the projects. Rather than writing off the roads request, perhaps Athens should look at how its major arterial streets, many of which are also the spokes leading to surrounding counties, could be made to function better for both local and commuter traffic (of all transportation modes). A "Complete Streets"-style approach for major corridors like Prince, North, West Broad, Oconee and Hawthorne could come to resemble Epps Bridge Parkway. Tree- lined medians, bike lanes, bus bays and on-street parking, employed as part of a unified strategy, would accomplish local urban goals while clearing up key chokepoints into and out of the community. Hawthorne is an especially cricical piece of infrastructure- linking our two major hospitals and future medical school— and an interesting case study. Beyond solving its problems in terms of traffic movement, we should also be looking at how roads are the armature upon which future economic development will rest. In the case of urban edge districts like Hawthorne, new local streets around regional economic magnets will allow for a more effective concentration of jobs, buoying the economy of the entire region. Getting Started: Dialing back in on the local, if we were to look at one transit project for the region, it would be the potential for streetcar or light rail service along the rail line from downtown and the proposed river district through the university campus. Such a project could truly bind together the major regional engines into a particularly attractive research district for companies that might move into the Athens area. While UGA can't weigh in particularly heavily on the T-SPLOST process, developing a transit strategy with Athens that rein forces its research ambitions makes a lot of sense. Whether it's town-gown or regional relations, grounding those efforts in real common interests rather than convenience or proximity makes a lot of sense. Further, when regional economic development is grounded in what we all rely on in common, whether ecological or manmade infrastructure, we may find solutions that aren't based on that zero-sum game model which has so far clouded conversations between Athens and its neighbors. Kevan Williams athensrising@flagpole.com Our rivers have always been the limiting resource in regional growth and industry. How can con temporary economic development efforts better reflect that fact? 8 FLAGPOLE.COM • FEBRUARY 9,2011 KEVAN WILLIAMS