Bill Text: TX HCR147 | 2011-2012 | 82nd Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Encouraging cities to promote long-term economic development and job growth by working together on the regional level to attract and retain business investment.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-05-23 - Received from the House [HCR147 Detail]
Download: Texas-2011-HCR147-Introduced.html
82R26696 BPG-D | ||
By: Button | H.C.R. No. 147 |
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WHEREAS, Neighboring cities often compete with each other for | ||
business investment, offering cost reduction incentives to recruit | ||
individual firms or developers rather than collaborating at the | ||
regional level to create the conditions for sustained economic | ||
growth; and | ||
WHEREAS, Striving to foster job and tax revenue growth, | ||
cities use tools such as the popular 4A/4B economic development | ||
sales tax to fund incentives for businesses; unfortunately, | ||
unhealthy competition reduces the value of incentive packages by | ||
diluting the free market concept; a competitive, incentive-driven | ||
approach focuses on local, short-term gains, often to the detriment | ||
of the important development assets that allow a region to prosper | ||
over the long term; and | ||
WHEREAS, Employment and business activity extend across | ||
municipal boundaries to impact regional development patterns and | ||
the location of future growth; when cities fail to coordinate their | ||
efforts, they often intensify uneven investment in | ||
neighborhoods--for example, promoting the creation of major job | ||
centers at a distance from affordable housing and thereby | ||
contributing to traffic congestion, environmental problems, and | ||
other symptoms of sprawl; not only do these side effects negatively | ||
affect current residents, but they make the region less appealing | ||
to the very businesses the incentives are designed to attract; and | ||
WHEREAS, Research shows that access to an educated and | ||
skilled workforce is generally more crucial to employers than the | ||
availability of tax abatements and that individuals often choose | ||
quality of life over job prospects when deciding where to locate; a | ||
city undermines the regional coordination required to develop human | ||
capital and the quality of life essential to retaining that human | ||
capital when it adopts a localized, reactive, incentive-driven | ||
approach that emphasizes short-term goals over comprehensive | ||
planning; and | ||
WHEREAS, Regional coordination is now more important than | ||
ever, as high-growth industries tend to be highly mobile and are | ||
frequently the target of intense competition on the global level; | ||
and | ||
WHEREAS, In order to compete for business investment in an | ||
increasingly complicated global marketplace, while maintaining the | ||
quality of life that fosters long-term prosperity, neighboring | ||
cities should avoid bidding against each other for firms and | ||
development and coordinate their actions within a comprehensive | ||
planning framework at the regional level; now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby encourage cities to promote long-term economic development | ||
and job growth by working together on the regional level to attract | ||
and retain business investment. |