Mark Your
Calendar
Marketing Committee Wednesday, July 11,
2007 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., SDNEDC Office
Wednesday, August 1,
2007 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., SDNEDC Office
Public Policy
Committee Monday, July 9, 2007 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., SDNEDC
Office
Thursday, August 2, 2007 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., SDNEDC
Office
Please RSVP for every
event!
SDNEDC President's Message -
Video click
here
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SDNEDC Renewing Members: North County
Times, Moon Ridge Meadows, Benefits Matrix,
San Diego Chargers,
AT&T
Presentation to the Board – Presenter: Ramona
Finnila, who serves on the Board of the San Diego County Regional
Airport Authority, gave a presentation on the activities of the
Airport Authority and an update of plans for the San Diego
International Airport (SDIA).
The Airport Authority was
created by the California legislature to 1) operate the airport, 2)
plan for the future of air travel in the region, and 3) serve as the
airport land use commission. San Diego's airport is the nation's
smallest major airport with 661 acres and 1 runway. As a comparison,
the Oakland airport serves roughly the same number of passengers
annually with 2,500 acres and 4 runways. Currently, the San Diego
airport serves 17.5 million airport passengers (MAP).
By
2030, forecasts predict that the airport will serve between 27 and
33 million passengers. The Airport Authority's Master Plan was
recently approved with the following measures to address the
forecasted increase of passengers: add 10 new gates at Terminal 2;
improve transit access through new multi-modal transit center; build
new two-level roadway for Terminal 2; create new space for aircraft
overnight parking.
The Airport Authority is also looking at
ways to better utilize capacity at other airports in the region,
including Rodriguez Field in Tijuana, and Palomar Airport in
Carlsbad.
Marketing Committee – Diane Strand, Committee
Chair, briefed the board on the activities of the committee. She
provided a summary of the Kudos program which gives other
organizations the opportunity to learn about the SDNEDC. The
Economic Roundtable TV show is shooting the first episode which will
be about real estate and development in North County. Steve Jahn
from San Diego Magazine gave a summary of the progress of the San
Diego North Economic Outlook publication and outlined the
advertising options.
Public Policy Committee – Paul
O'Neal, Committee Chair, briefed the board on activities of the
committee. He announced that David Nilson has been selected as the
new Chair of the committee. This month's committee meeting was a
joint meeting of the public policy committee and the Chargers
subcommittee. Scott Strand, Chair of the Chargers subcommittee gave
a summary of the presentation by Mark Fabiani, Special Counsel for
the Chargers.
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| San Diego North EDC to publish directory of
'green' companies, resources |
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The San Diego North Economic
Development Council said it is in the process of compiling a
regional "green" directory linking consumers to environmentally
friendly products and resources in an effort to bolster their
presence in San Diego.
Dubbed the Environmental -- Clean --
Green Index, the directory of more than 400 San Diego companies will
point consumers to places where they can properly dispose of harmful
chemicals and other materials, help them find architects or builders
involved in green design techniques and identify places where they
can go for renewable energy products, such as solar
panels.
The directory could become available in the next
month or two, depending on when the council finds enough sponsorship
support, said Gary Knight, president and CEO of San Diego North
EDC.
"Right now we've been collecting the data, but we're
hoping to get people to step up and get this published," he
said.
Knight said it's the council's job to make known San
Diego's presence in the fields of renewable energies and clean
technologies.
According to a 2004 report by Environmental
Entrepreneurs and the Natural Resources Defense Council, venture
capital investments in California's clean technology industry could
seed as many as 114,000 jobs statewide through 2010.
"If each
city is doing their own thing it's disjointed and appears much
smaller," he said. "Instead of each group spending similar dollars
for similar goals, we need to have a summit."
Last week,
Knight met with leaders of the city of San Diego's business
development department to discuss its initiative. He said he hoped
to involve local cities, chambers of commerce and economic
development departments.
"We're going to be faced with some
stringent air quality regulations and water regulations," Knight
said. "We don't want to drive our businesses out of California,
because we want to be more environmentally conscious."
In
recent weeks, stricter environmental regulations, such as more
stringent stormwater runoff and sewage treatment rules, have been
passed down to local municipalities.
Last week, Carlsbad
forecasted it would spend about $2.15 million on new stormwater
regulations in the coming fiscal year.
And statewide
initiatives also are on the horizon.
In September 2006, the
California legislature passed AB 32, the Global Warming Solutions
Act of 2006, which aims to reduce the state's manmade greenhouse gas
emissions back to 1990 emission levels by 2020. It is being touted
as the nation's most ambitious global warming solutions
law.
Compliance costs associated with reducing the amount of
air and water pollution have caused some businesses to reconsider
remaining in, or locating to, California. Business development and
retention programs countywide work to stifle the tendency, but
Knight said more can be done.
He said the directory, which
will also link users to state and local resources, will promote the
local economy and encourage companies involved in initiatives, such
as biomass, to locate to San Diego. |
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