florida's six pillars framework: sharing a unified approach among state and regional agencies

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Florida’s Six Pillars Framework: Sharing a

Unified Approach among State and Regional

AgenciesPatricia Steed, Executive Director, Central Florida Regional

Planning Council, Bartow, FL

Existing Developed Lands and Permanent Conservation Lands

Developed LandConservation LandsPermanently Protected

Florida’s Heartland: 2060 Trend

Developed LandConservation LandsPermanently Protected

Transportation and Economic Development: Present System Can't Meet Future Demands

Source: Florida Dept of Transportation, 2010

Trend: Growing U.S. Population

US Census Bureau, 201220601850 2000195019001800

450 million

300 million

200 million

100 million

Trend: Aging Population

Trend: More Diverse Population

Agriculture & Natural Resources

Construction Manufacturing Retail Transportation & Logistics Services

Services0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%1950 1975 2008

Shar

e of

U.S

. Gro

ss D

omes

tic P

rodu

ct

Trend: Service, Information Economy

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, 2010.

Trend: Manufacturing Resurgence?U.S. Manufacturing GDP (in Trillions of 2005$)

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 $0.5

$1.0

$1.5

$2.0

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Trend: New Technologies

Trend: Knowledge Economy

20.5%

14.5%

11.5%

6.5%

$16,904

$23,936

$30,092

$46,632

Less than High School Graduate

High School Diploma Only

Associate’s Degree or Some College

Bachelor’s Degree or Higher

Unemployment Rate Median Earnings2010

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey.

Six Pillars of Florida’s Future EconomyTM

Pillar 1:Talent Supply & Education

Talent Supply & EducationHigh School Graduation Rates

Pillar 2:Innovation & Economic Development

Innovation & Economic DevelopmentTrade Exports and Imports

Net Exports (in millions of 2005 dollars), 2000-2012

Pillar 3:Infrastructure & Growth Leadership

Infrastructure & Growth LeadershipAnnual Building Permits

Pillar 4:Business Climate & Competitiveness

Business Climate & CompetitivenessEmployment by Industry

Distribution of Employment by Industry, 2010

Pillar 5:Civic & Governance Systems

Civic & Governance SystemsVoter Participation

Pillar 6:Quality of Life & Quality Places

Quality of Life & Quality Places

House Cost Index

County House Cost IndexDeSoto 80.93Glades 83.72Hardee 84.99Hendry 84.99Highlands 82.8Okeechobee 81.17Polk 83.42

Apalachee

West

North Central

Northeast

Tampa Bay

Southwest

South

Treasure Coast

East Central

Central

Florida’s 10 Regional Planning Councils Serve as

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DISTRICTS

Florida Economic Development Districts

Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy (CEDS)

2012 Updates

Six Pillars of Florida’s Future EconomyTM

Metrics Used:• Average Annual

Wage

• High School Graduation Rates

• 8th Grade Math Performance

• Gross Domestic Product

• Bed Tax Collections

• Trade Exports And Imports

• Annual Building Permits

• Vehicle Miles Traveled

• Per Lane Mile

• Average Annual Unemployment Rates

• Employment By Industry

• Wages By Industry

• Millage Rates

• Registered Nonprofit Organizations (501 (C)(3) Only)

• Voter Participation

• Per Capita Income

• House Cost Index

• Persons Living In Poverty

• Population Counts, Estimates And Projections

Five Year Statewide Economic Development Strategic Plan

Section 20.60(5)(a)4, Florida Statutes requires DEO to develop and regularly update a 5-year strategic plan with input from:

• Enterprise Florida, Inc.• Workforce Florida, Inc.• Local governments• Local and regional economic development organizations• Other local, state, Federal agencies• Business community• Educational institutions • Public

Six Pillars of Florida’s Future EconomyTM

First State Economic Development Plan

Florida Strategic Plan for Economic Development

Developed by:Department of Economic Opportunity (DEO)

• Aligned on Six Pillars• Consistent with RPC’s CEDS• RPC’s lead statewide stakeholder public input

Florida’s Vision

33

Florida will have thenation’s top performing economy

and be recognized as theworld’s best place to live, learn,

work, and do business

Online Resources: www.floridatransportationplan.com

34

Florida Transportation Plan Contents

35

Vision Element (August 2015)Trends, uncertainties, and themes that will shape the future of transportation in Florida (50 years)

Policy Element (December 2015)Goals and objectives to guide the Florida Department of Transportation and partners toward the vision (25 years)

Implementation Element (2016)Emphasis areas with key actions (5-25 years)COMING

SOON

Alignment with Other Statewide PlansSIS Policy Plan

Strategic Highway Safety Plan

Freight Mobility & Trade Plan

Modal plans» Aviation, Motor Carrier,

Rail, Seaports/Waterways

Complete Streets Implementation Plan

36

37

SafetySecurity

and

for residents,visitors, businesses

38

Source: NOAA, SLOSH Maximum of Maximums Web Map, 2014

More Transportation Choicesfor people and freight

40

41

42

Transportation solutions that support Florida’s global

Economic Competitiveness

Regional Visions

44

Heartland2060.com

Where Will Our Future Take Us?

Source: 1000 Friends of Florida

Developed landConserved land

20602005

Economic Diversification

Infrastructure to Support Diversified

Economy

Early Learning, K-16, Lifelong Education

Education, Workforce, and Economic Development

Integrating with Natural Resources Planning

Supporting Economic Development

Ensuring Multimodal Connectivity

Enhancing and Creating Sustainable

Communities

Transportation& Land Use

Health Care

Cultural Identity

Community Resources

Water

Sustainable and Viable Natural Systems

Agriculture

Energy/Climate Change

Environment and Natural Resources

Heartland 2060 Task Forces

Transportation& Land Use

Community Resources

Environment and Natural Resources

Education, Workforce, and Economic Development

Tale

nt S

uppl

y &

Edu

catio

n

Inno

vatio

n &

Eco

nom

icD

evel

opm

ent

Infr

astr

uctu

re &

Gro

wth

Lea

ders

hip

Busi

ness

Clim

ate

& C

ompe

titive

ness

Civi

c &

Gov

erna

nce

Syst

ems

Qua

lity

of L

ife&

Qua

lity

Plac

es

1 2 3 4 5 6

Heartland 2060 Task Forces and Six Pillars

The Heartland Tomorrow…Future Industry Clusters

Renewable Energy

Research &Development

Agriculture Logistics

Life Sciences & Healthcare

Tourism & Ecotourism

Alternative Fuels

Energy Productio

n

Agriculture Business & Technology

Manufacturing

Advanced Manufacturi

ng

Economic Opportunities (from the CEDS)

Where we could be going…

CE

Renewable Energy

Logistics

Alternative Fuels

Energy Productio

nManufacturing

Advanced Manufacturi

ng

Research & Developmen

t

Healthcare & Life Sciences

Tourism & Ecotourism

Agriculture

Agriculture Business

& Technolog

y

…natural resources

& healthcare

the Current Economy

Regional Economic Engines

A future that…Resembles the Present.

“If we continue with business-as-usual, including healthcare, natural resources, and ecotourism, then we can expect our future to look like…”

• Following current and historical trends in:

o populationo employmento land use

• Continuing economic prominence of agriculture, healthcare, mining, warehousing, ecotourism, and service industries

Current Economy

EELogistics

Healthcare & Life

Sciences

Tourism & Ecotourism

Manufacturing

Agriculture

Agriculture Business

& Technolog

y

Renewable Energy

Research & Development

Alternative Fuels

Energy Production

Advanced Manufacturing

…generation & technology

the Energy Economy

Regional Economic Engines as Futures:

“If we focus on supplying technologies and goods that create energy and become energy exporters, then we can expect our future to look like…”

A future that is…Focused on Energy.

• Developing an alternative fuels industry based on agriculture

• Manufacturing and installing renewable energy technologies

• Using high-tech energy technologies to become an energy exporter

• Energy efficiency and conservation technologies

Energy Economy

Goals guide Scenarios = Energy

DeSoto CountySolar Farm

Energy Conservation + Alternative Fuels = Future Economic Opportunities

TE

Renewable Energy

Research & Developme

nt

Healthcare & Life

Sciences

Tourism & Ecotourism

Energy Productio

n

Agriculture

Agriculture Business & Technology

Alternative Fuels

Logistics

Manufacturing

Advanced Manufacturing

…logistics & manufacturin

g

the Trade Economy

Regional Economic Engines

A future that is…Making & Moving Goods.

“If we focus on employment hubs for manufacturing, transportation, and warehousing, then we can expect our future to look like…”

• Using current and future industrial areas and logistics and trade networks

• Maintaining high capacity transportation networks for moving goods

• Enhancing distribution of air cargo

• Connecting ports• Establishing

advanced manufacturing and warehousing facilities

Trade Economy

Goals guide Scenarios = TRADE• Florida as a

Global Gateway

Implications of Trends on the Heartland

Heartland’s future looks bright…• Location in fast-growing state/region• Lower-cost production site close to global trade lanes• Increasingly high value natural resources• Appealing quality of life

But the region faces competitive challenges• Availability of skilled labor—educational attainment• Lack of multimodal transportation connections• Resource protection

Where Will Future Jobs Be Located?

• Regional employment centers—existing & new• Economically

productive rural lands• Agriculture• Renewable energy• Mining• Military

What Infrastructure Is Needed to Support a Diversified Economy?

Road Rail Air Marine Energy Water Telecom

Healthcare and Social Services

Niche Manufacturing

Component Manufacturing

Logistics and Distribution

Bio-fuels and Energy

Sustainable Agriculture

Environmental Sciences

Tourism and Recreation

High Medium Low

Population and Employment Projections

As inputs: to scenario modeling for Sustainable Regional Vision

Planand for the new Long Range Transportation Plan for the

Heartland

Transportation, Land Use and Natural Resources: Regional Systems Planning Efforts

5.6% 0.4%0.9% 0.6%

5.2%

67.0%

14.9%0.8%4.6%

Single Family Multi-Family Commercial Industrial Institutional Agriculture Conservation Mixed-Use Mining

Existing Land Uses

Sustainable & Viable Natural Systems: Systems Planning Efforts are Improving

Linking Land Use, Economy,Environment & Transportation

• Connections between growth and development and transportation access

• Planning land use and transportation to sustain viable natural systems

• Enhancing mobility while preserving community character

• Linking visioning to land use and transportation planning

…in the Heartland

45.63 Miles of regional roadway will be over capacity in 2040, a 343% increase from 2014.

District One Freight Mobility & Trade PlanExecutive Overview October 2016

District 1 Freight Mobility & Trade Plan

District 1 Freight Mobility & Trade Plan

How Do We Get There? Cross-Cutting Strategies

Align state, regional, local plans

Build strong industry clusters

Position Florida as global hub

Strengthenand connect Florida’s regions

Questions

cfrpc.orgHeartland2060.com

Heartlandregionaltpo.org

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