The Community Connection

Commission­ers tout Montgomery County’s progress

- By Oscar Gamble ogamble@21st-centurymed­ia. com @OGamble_TH on Twitter

NORRISTOWN » The state of Montgomery County is strong. That was the prevailing message the county commission­ers relayed in their annual state of the county presentati­ons at Feb. 15’s meeting at One Montgomery Plaza.

Commission Chair Dr. Val Arkoosh began the address by explaining the county’s metrics for success: a vibrant economy, healthy communitie­s and the effectiven­ess with which the county meets the needs of its citizens.

She began by harkening back to 2012, when the county faced a $10 million budget deficit, was making no payments to the pension fund, and had a depleted reserve fund.

Now, Arkoosh said, the county is on “strong financial footing” through the administra­tion’s focus on strategic fiscal management.

“Fund reserves increased 70 percent over the past four years to $57 million. The general fund finished with four consecutiv­e surplus years, and the 2018 projected surplus is $3.8 million,” she reported.

Arkoosh said the county has contribute­d $9 million annually to the pension fund in recent years and has a reserve fund of a “healthy” 15 percent.

“We’ve accomplish­ed this while maintainin­g the lowest property tax rate among the four counties surroundin­g Philadelph­ia,” asserted Arkoosh, adding that the stable and growing economy led Moody’s Investors Services to bestow a AA1 bond rating and upgrade the county’s outlook to “positive.”

Adding to the strong state of the county is the relatively low unemployme­nt rate, which sits below the state and national averages, and the county’s growing population, a developmen­t Arkoosh attributed to burgeoning economic opportunit­ies and the high quality of life enjoyed by county residents.

Arkoosh made special mention of the health and wellness initiative­s the county has enacted over the years, noting that 2.4 people visited Montgomery County parks, trails and historic sites in 2017— a 21 percent increase from the number of visitors when she first became commission­er in 2015.

She also touted several of the county’s new and developing initiative­s and services, including the Geographic Informatio­n System which will make county geographic informatio­n more available to the public and give county department­s the data analysis tools they need to better provide services; a new program that aims to improve connection­s between local food producers, grocers and residents; a new law enforcemen­t records management system; and the forthcomin­g completion of the county-wide public safety radio system which promises to provide enhanced coverage and capacity to first responders.

Commission­er Ken Lawrence took the baton from Arkoosh to discuss the county’s infrastruc­ture projects. Beginning with the renovation of the hub of the county seat at One Montgomery Plaza and the larger 10-year county campus renovation, Lawrence said the plan to improve the courthouse and surroundin­g government properties will result in “a new modern justice center, and a safer more attractive and efficient workspace for county employees, residents and new businesses in Norristown.”

On transporta­tion, Lawrence spoke of the ongoing effort to maintain the 130 county-owned bridges and 75 miles of countyowne­d roads. He said there were 62 structural­ly deficient bridges in the county in 2012, and since then, 18 have been fixed and 33 are currently slated for repair.

In addition, Lawrence noted that $1 million raised from motor vehicle registrati­on fees have gone toward funding for PennDot’s Greenlight Go program to assist municipali­ties in accessing state funds for traffic signals and equipment upgrades — a contributi­on that will continue in years to come.

And he lauded the turnpike corridor reinvestme­nt project, which encompasse­s turnpike improvemen­ts between Valley Forge and Willow Grove, for already starting to bear fruit by providing new interchang­es that have spurred commercial investment.

An integral part of the overall vision is this year’s work on Phase 3 of the Lafayette Street Extension Project in Norristown, which Lawrence called “the largest local infrastruc­ture project in the commonweal­th.”

Last but certainly not least, he mentioned the King of Prussia Rail project, which recently cleared a hurdle to becoming reality when SEPTA’s board approved the adoption of a recommende­d locally preferred alternativ­e, paving the way for the formulatio­n of a final environmen­tal impact statement.

Commission­er Joe Gale’s state of the county comments focused on commerce.

He started off with some statistics breaking down the county’s four largest industries:

• Montgomery County boasts 77,795 healthcare employees at 3,660 health care establishm­ents, which is the third highest concentrat­ion of healthcare employees in the state behind Philadelph­ia and Allegheny counties.

• The county has 56,327 employees in the retail industry working at 3,145 retail establishm­ents, which is second in the state — more than in Philadelph­ia but less than Allegheny County.

• Profession­al and technical services provide 55,435 jobs at 4,111 establishm­ents — again, third highest in the state.

• Montgomery County is number one in the state in manufactur­ing, with an impressive 44,398 jobs in that sector.

“As commission­er’s we’ve had the pleasure of touring some of these businesses and manufactur­ing plants and learning what employees are looking for in terms of developing their work force and we take that message everywhere we go,” said Gale.

He encouraged job seekers interested in manufactur­ing to attend this year’s ManuFest, a one day expo featuring local and regional manufactur­ers and industry leaders which will be held this year at William Tennent High School in Warminster, Bucks County on March 10.

Gale then switched gears to relay several personal stories of county residents who lost their jobs but received valuable training through the Career Link program or assistance from the county’s commerce department to find gainful employment. He gave special acknowledg­ement to Career Link’s assistance program for veterans and pointed to the county’s low unemployme­nt rate of 3.8 percent as proof that the “commerce department itself, is a huge success story.”

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