Chattanooga Times Free Press

High impact

Six cited for leading their industries at Chamber annual meeting

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

The head of See Rock City, one of the Chattanoog­a area’s oldest tourist attraction­s, looked out into the horizon Tuesday.

“The future of Chattanoog­a is in the hands of all those kids in Hamilton County schools,” said CEO Bill Chapin. “Without an educated and qualified workforce, business cannot compete.”

See Rock City was one of six local organizati­ons cited at the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce’s annual meeting for leading their industries and positively impacting the community.

The Lookout Mountain attraction won the Business Education Investor award for partnering with the school system to create a strong talent pipeline.

Susan Harris, See Rock City’s president, said the business has “a generation­al commitment” to workforce and community developmen­t.

She mentioned a partnershi­p with The Howard School’s future ready institute in hospitalit­y, in which the venture made a five-year, $250,000 pledge earlier this year.

“We’re excited to take a leadership role in this space,” Harris said. She also talked about the entity’s work in the Chattanoog­a Climbs economic developmen­t effort, the Chattanoog­a Convention and Visitors Bureau and the Chattanoog­a 2.0 education initiative, adding that talent developmen­t is a challenge for the area.

Tom Glenn, the president of Elder’s Ace Hardware and the Chamber’s outgoing chairman, told about 1,000 people at the meeting at the Convention Center that it’s key for the business group to confront “the brutal facts” about the area.

He said the Velocity 2040 visioning

and strategic planning process the Chamber oversaw the past year or so compared Chattanoog­a with other midsize cities such as Provo, Utah, Huntsville, Alabama, and Knoxville.

While Chattanoog­a excelled on some metrics, such as cost of living, utility rates and high-speed internet, the city was at the bottom on others, Glenn said. Crime, the increase in the gross domestic product (from 2012 to 2017) and employment growth were among those in which the city ranked low, he said.

“We had a great renaissanc­e and momentum,” Glenn said. “Maybe we were starting to lose a little momentum.”

Jim Vaughn, the market president for SunTrust Bank in East Tennessee who is the incoming Chamber chairman, said the Chattanoog­a Climbs five-year strategy focuses on economic and talent developmen­t and attraction.

He said there have been 26 investor commitment­s so far from organizati­ons, businesses or communitie­s. There are 63 additional requests pending, Vaughn said.

The annual meeting also recognized local companies that are more than 100 years old.

Jeff DeLoach, president of the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press, said the business is 150 years old this year.

“Our records show we are the thirdlonge­st serving business in Chattanoog­a,” he said. “As our community and the world changes, as innovation happens, it’s obvious that a business has to change with the times to be around 100 years later.”

DeLoach said that to help the community celebrate the Chattanoog­a companies which have been around 100 years or more, the Times Free Press and the Chamber joined to produce a special section that will be included in Sunday’s newspaper and in its electronic editions.

Christy Gillenwate­r, the Chamber’s president and CEO, said Chattanoog­a’s willingnes­s to collaborat­e is part of its “secret sauce.”

She noted that almost 5,000 people responded to its survey for the Velocity 2040, 20-year vision. For Chattanoog­a Climbs, there were 900 people involved in that process, Gillenwate­r said.

“I have to argue, I don’t know how many communitie­s had that kind of buyin to their economic developmen­t plan,” Gillenwate­r said.

Contact Mike Pare at mpare@times freepress.com or 423-757-6318. Follow him on Twitter @MikePareTF­P.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Jessica Olivia-Calderin, of the Internatio­nal Business Council, accepts an award for Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce Council of the Year. At left is Christy Gillenwate­r, Chamber chief executive.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Jessica Olivia-Calderin, of the Internatio­nal Business Council, accepts an award for Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce Council of the Year. At left is Christy Gillenwate­r, Chamber chief executive.

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