“font-family:”>Gov. Jay Nixon intends to call legislators into

special session in September to iron out three initiatives in the

economic development bill, he said at a July 21 press conference

held at the Danforth Plant Science Center.

“font-family:”>“We need bold vision and competitive spirit again,

because we aren’t competing against one Cold War arch-enemy: we are

competing against the world,” Nixon said.

“font-family:”> Here’s his

to-do list.

“font-family:”> First, pass

the Missouri Science and Innovation Reinvestment Act. The act

creates an ongoing source of funding to foster investment in

high-tech and scientific research companies, he said. The funding

will come from capturing a percentage of tax revenue generated by

employees at new and existing life science companies clustered in

St. Louis, Kansas City and in the animal health corridor that

extends from St. Joseph to Kansas City to Columbia.

“margin: 0in 0in 0pt; mso-margin-top-alt: auto; mso-margin-bottom-alt: auto;”>

Next, push forward the Compete Missouri

Job Training Program, which provides financial assistance and

incentives for new job training to qualifying businesses and

technology centers.

“font-family:”>“We needed tools that were sharper, more effective

and more user-friendly,” Nixon said. “So we’re cutting through red

tape, streamlining processes and meeting the job creators where

they are, rather than forcing them to contort their business plans

to fit our obsolete economic development regulations.”

“font-family:”>Third, he said foreign trade is a “breakaway

success.”

“font-family:”>Missouri’s total exports grew by 35 percent in 2010,

for a total of nearly $13 billion. And during the first quarter of

2011, Missouri exports were up an additional 18 percent.

“font-family:”>Transportation equipment, chemicals, pharmaceuticals

and aerospace are the state’s top exports, but he said food and

agricultural products are picking up steam.

“font-family:”>“We’re going to keep on making things at the most

sophisticated and efficient manufacturing facilities in the

nation,” he said. “Now we need a better way to get our goods from

here to there.”

“font-family:”>He said the creation of a thriving commercial hub in

St. Louis, outlined in the Aerotropolis initiative, would allow

Missouri to continue to drive up exports. The hub would provide

infrastructure, such as warehouses and cold storage facilities,

around Lambert-St. Louis International Airport to support more

international exports.

“font-family:”>Lastly, he mentioned the Broadband Now initiative to

expand the state’s digital networks.

“font-family:”>Yet, all these must be done in a fiscally

responsible way, he said. Tax credit reform is what will give us

the money to invest, he said.

“font-family:”>“If we don’t get tax credit reform, we simply can’t

afford it,” Nixon said. “And as the responsible steward of our

taxpayers’ hard-earned dollars, I simply will not sign any

legislation we can’t pay for.”

“font-family:”>State Rep. Clem Smith is glad Nixon is calling a

special session to go over the economic bill, he said. However, the

press conference was the first time he had been briefed on Nixon’s

plans for the bill.

“font-family:”>“They keep saying it’s been a bipartisan effort, but

I sit on economic development,” Smith said. “And unless I missed

the phone call, there has no been communication on their

end.”

“font-family:”>Smith is most concerned that legislators will

continue to try and phase out the Missouri Circuit Breaker, now the

Missouri Property Tax Credit. This program gives a tax credit for

renters who are disabled or seniors and whose incomes fall below

designated levels.

“font-family:”>Regarding the Aerotropolis initiative for the

commercial hub, State Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal agreed that paying

for Aerotropolis will be a challenge.

“font-family:”>“We are going to have to do a really fine-tuned

balancing act,” she said.

“font-family:”>Chappelle-Nadal also said any new construction

projects created by Aerotropolis should state minority

participation goals.

“font-family:”>“This is in the middle of North County and an area

where people are underemployed,” she said.

“font-family:”>“If Paul McKee and the other key players want to

participate and get tax credits from the state, they’re all going

to have to be good civic participants and ensure that we have a

high level of minority participation.”

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