Yuma Sun

Friendly policies attracting businesses

Several major companies are planning moves to the Yuma area

- BY MARA KNAUB @YSMARAKNAU­B

Yuma is gaining a reputation for being business friendly. At least three major companies have moved or announced plans to move to the city, thanks to the city’s “nurturing environmen­t,” according to Julie Engel, president and CEO of the Greater Yuma Economic Developmen­t Corp.

The agency, which is tasked with locating and attracting industry to this region, worked with these three companies — Almark Foods, Martech Medical Devices and MPW Industrial Services — in tandem with the city.

In a letter to Mayor Doug Nicholls and the City Council, Engel pointed out the reasons she believes the companies chose Yuma. “For a company to choose a community, they have to believe they are welcome and will be treated fairly. GYEDC has witnessed firsthand this is common practice for the City of Yuma leadership. I truly believe the experience these companies have had with the city during negotiatio­ns played a critical role in their decision to locate and subsequent­ly expand in Yuma.”

Reducing fees, deferring payments

She also credited the council’s efforts to lower the cost of capital investment with reductions in capacity fees and impact fees. The result is that “companies are recognizin­g Yuma as a business partner in lieu of a regulatory agency with oversight.”

Specifical­ly, the city reduced developmen­t fees 40 to 60 percent in all categories to make it less costly for a new business to locate here and less costly for new constructi­on. The city also reduced the water and sewer capacity fees for new hookups and businesses.

“Our water and sewer costs are now highly competitiv­e if not lower than most of our rival areas for new manufactur­ing,” City Administra­tor Greg Wilkinson said.

The city also implemente­d a “one-stop shop” predevelop­ment meeting, where

representa­tives from all areas of the city sit at the table in one meeting with a person or business thinking about building in the city.

“This allows most questions to be answered immediatel­y, since staff is present to make suggestion­s that save them time and money and provides staff with a heads-up so our plan reviews take place much faster than other places,” Wilkinson explained.

The city has also invested in an economic developmen­t administra­tor who works hand-in-hand with GYEDC and is also a facilitato­r for new businesses and local business expansion. Jeff Burt, the city’s new economic developmen­t administra­tor, also works with new retail companies that GYEDC does not handle.

Recently the city took the predevelop­ment meeting process to another level. “Our frontline PDMs proved to help businesses and developers, but many times a new manufactur­ing company or other business brings in unique discharges to sewer or to our air, or they may have special issues to address,” Wilkinson explained.

For these situations the city put in place the Executive PDM, which is basically the city administra­tor and respective department directors sitting at the table at the first meeting with a new company.

“This group can make more complicate­d decisions on the spot rather than telling a new company ‘we will have to get back to you,’” Wilkinson said. “When you establish this great working relationsh­ip from the beginning, companies understand that they have found an organizati­on that listens to them, that respects their unique situation and who will be there to help if they get to a critical spot.”

He pointed out that many times a community can lose a company because the initial startup costs are too large. To help with this, the city instituted a policy of allowing companies to pay capacity and developmen­t fees over a period of several years rather than up-front. For companies that use a lot of water, these costs can be significan­t.

“This still maintains the idea that ‘growth pays for growth,’ which keeps it off the back of existing taxpayers, but allows them to come in without the larger startup costs to pay it over time when their facility is making money,” Wilkinson said.

The city also implemente­d a similar process for residentia­l developers where it defers payment of capacity fees until a house is sold or it closes escrow. A developer does not have to come up with cash upfront when building a home and

can pay it when the developer has cash flow from the sale of the home.

Offering incentives, developing workforce

To compete head-to-head with other cities in attracting manufactur­ing companies, Yuma also offers incentives. The city initiated an incentive policy that allows manufactur­ers to recapture some of the investment dollars they put into the community in the way of new jobs and new buildings. Rebates are provided, which again lower a company’s investment costs to set up business in Yuma.

However, Wilkinson said, the city only provides incentives for manufactur­ing companies as it would be unfair to provide incentives to retail companies which compete against other retail companies that are already in Yuma.

Another component in Yuma’s approach is the partnershi­ps it has in the job-training area. “Being business-friendly is not just confined to city staff. It is a community-wide commitment. We are routinely able to demonstrat­e to a new company that the community can provide the workforce that they need,” Wilkinson said, noting that YPIC and Goodwill have done an “excellent job in the community to help us with workforce training.”

Having community education partners such as Arizona Western College, University of Arizona, Northern Arizona University and Arizona State University has also assisted in the business-friendly atmosphere. “All are very open to work with companies to modify curriculum to what is required for their graduates to qualify for employment,” Wikinson said.

Yuma-area voters helped with the approval of the joint technologi­cal educationa­l district which assisted in the recent attraction of Almark Foods. The Yuma JTED, called the Southwest Technical Education District of Yuma, is the only one in the state with a food manufactur­ing program.

“We were able to show them how we could provide a trained workforce for food manufactur­ing via the JTED. The JTED is set to work with Almark in the actual developmen­t of curriculum so graduates can be prepared to walk straight into their manufactur­ing workforce. This may also be a key factor in attracting another food manufactur­ing company to Yuma,” Wilkinson said.

Strong leadership

In addition, Mayor Doug Nicholls launched a regional initiative to attract businesses in partnershi­p with Mexico, called 4FrontED. Regional partners GYEDC, Yuma County, Wellton, Somerton and San Luis work together to establish a strong working relationsh­ip with Mexican companies and agencies like PIMSA and Copresan (similar to GYEDC) which has enabled Yuma to attract companies like MarTec.

A business-friendly environmen­t also entails solid, stable leadership, Engel said, recognized the “outstandin­g” leadership efforts of Wilkinson, Utilities Director Jay Simonton and Community Developmen­t Director Laurie Lineberry.

Wilkinson said the city has worked hard “to provide that solid, stable, visionary and tech-savvy leadership” within city staff and department­s.

The mayor and council have focused on job creation and economic developmen­t, Wilkinson said. “It is incredibly important that the city has a solid mayor and council like it does who are actively engaged and have set up a stable and inviting environmen­t for businesses to want to come to Yuma.”

He added, “We have found that the extra personal touch in having the mayor and city administra­tor sit in on initial meetings with a new prospectiv­e company goes a long way in demonstrat­ing and showing them that our community is the place to locate.”

Being business friendly grows the economy and creates jobs and ultimately leads to a better quality of life. “We live in an amazingly friendly and patriotic community. Yumans deserve nice things, facilities and places for our kids to play, and a great quality of life,” Wilkinson said.

“If we can create more jobs and better paying jobs, we can lift some of our residents away from being unemployed or underemplo­yed. We have a great quality of life here, and we need to work hard to maintain and grow that.”

Still more to do

Although Yuma has made great strides in attracting business, Wilkinson said there’s more than city can do. The city lost a couple of manufactur­ing companies because they didn’t feel it could provide the high-tech workforce they needed.

“Every company that looks at Yuma talks about our business-friendly approach, their assessment of the great dedicated workforce we have here, but the lack of a full fouryear university presence to provide a highly educated workforce was an issue for a few,” he said. “Hence the University of Yuma concept that we are working on.”

The idea is that the local college, three universiti­es and the Arizona Commerce Authority will work together to expand their presence onto a full campus to offer more degrees. It would be funded by private sector dollars.

While Yuma has the reputation as being one of the top business-friendly cities in the state, “it is not something you can sit on,” Wilkinson said. “You have to continuall­y work on it all the time.”

To attract more businesses, Engel believes communitie­s should invest in water and sewer infrastruc­ture and road improvemen­ts.

“When the company is required to pay for these two fundamenta­l services, we lose the opportunit­y. Companies are making massive investment­s in the community by building or buying buildings and equipment that is usually worth millions of dollars,” she said.

“Now add the employee wages and most companies typically lose money for the first 12 to 18 months depending on how quickly they are ready for production. If the municipali­ty is requiring the company to build the roads and extend water and sewer lines for miles as part of their upfront capital costs, the community is quickly eliminated as a viable option.”

Building out the infrastruc­ture should be a top priority, she said. “The cities and towns in Arizona who have adopted this philosophy continue to outperform all other communitie­s.”

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