The Day

OL finance board approves over $50K toward developmen­t study

- By MARY BIEKERT Day Staff Writer

Old Lyme — The Board of Finance on Tuesday unanimousl­y approved to budget approximat­ely $52,000 toward an economic developmen­t study and analysis — the “first time the town has put some teeth behind an effort to support the business community,” Economic Developmen­t Commission Co-chairman Howard Margules said Wednesday.

The study, which still is subject to final approval by the EDC, will be conducted by the Connecticu­t Economic Resource Center, also known as CERC — a public-private nonprofit agency that works with towns across the state.

Utilizing surveys, focus groups, workshops, housing studies, industry analyses and more, CERC, according to its proposal submitted to the town earlier this month, will offer a big-picture look at the town’s current business climate, while also providing strategic insight toward developmen­t efforts.

Of the informatio­n expected to be gained from the study, First Selectman Bonnie Reemsnyder previously has said that officials would be able to effectivel­y learn which businesses could best be sustained by the town and where — knowledge that is especially valuable, she said, in wake of proposals to improve Halls Road.

“This is a great first step,” EDC Co-chair Justin Fuller said while speaking at Tuesday’s finance

board meeting. “It will get the EDC started down a path of success.”

“The number one goal (of this study) is to identify the real and perceived challenges that Old Lyme has in regards to economic developmen­t and, more importantl­y, retaining our existing businesses and their character today,” Fuller continued. “This is laying the groundwork for a strategic economic developmen­t plan for the town of Old Lyme.”

Broken down, an initial $8,075, appropriat­ed into this year’s budget by the finance board Tuesday night, will be spent to begin work with CERC as soon as April. As part of that, CERC first will work with town officials through a series of workshops and focus groups before creating surveys to distribute to local businesses — a “qualitativ­e analysis” that will inform the next quantitati­ve and analytical steps of the study, said Courtney Hendrickso­n, vice president of municipal services for CERC.

A free 90-minute workshop “designed to get everyone working collaborat­ively,” according to CERC’s formal proposal to the town, is scheduled April 10.

An additional $44,160, also approved into next year’s budget Tuesday night, will finance the rest of the study, set to take place throughout 2019. That will include a comprehens­ive “feasibilit­y study” analyzing “demographi­c trends” and demands for housing and retail, among several other points. It also may include possible on-site support from a CERC representa­tive, who would help create a longterm marketing strategy to attract new businesses.

EDC members still can opt to not carry out the second part of the study, Reemsnyder said by phone Wednesday. Should that happen, unspent remainders of the $44,160 included in next year’s budget would go back into the town’s general fund.

Before the board voted to approve the funding, there was some speculatio­n as to whether the overall study, specifical­ly the feasibilit­y study portion of the proposal, would be helpful toward giving the town an accurate picture of its business climate.

Finance board member David Kelsey questioned the need for improving the town’s business environmen­t and later argued that, if improvemen­ts are needed, the EDC first should look into those before determinin­g which industries and businesses could operate successful­ly within town.

“(It’s) just (making) sure we are logically going through these steps and that we are not spending this money on stuff that we don’t really want or need,” Kelsey said at that meeting.

Margules responded saying the EDC would not propose financing a study they did not feel would be worthwhile. “We wouldn’t be involved with this if it was just going to fail and we weren’t going to implement it. If we find something that we are not comfortabl­e with this, we just won’t go forward and spend the money.”

Kelsey, as well as finance board members H.P. Garvin and Janet Sturges, turned down an original proposal made by selectmen last December to appropriat­e $44,000 to begin work with CERC, prompting the EDC’s requests Tuesday.

Finance board alternate Judith Read also questioned whether future suggestion­s from the CERC study would align well with zoning and planning regulation­s already in place.

EDC member Gregory Symon spoke to that point, saying that, overall, the EDC needs to better align itself with various town boards, including zoning, planning and the Chamber of Commerce, to ensure that its future vision for Old Lyme could be successful­ly implemente­d.

“If we don’t have alignment with these organizati­ons, then we will just spin our wheels,” Symon said. “Today we are all in silence, and that’s not being done purposely. But the key to this success is that we have to break down the silos and the EDC has to look at this horizontal­ly. We have to be interrelat­ed and interlocke­d with all these different groups so no one is confused and everyone knows up front what the plan is.”

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