State ‘job growth fund’ opens for business

Applicants must assist infrastructure or job training.


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  • | 7:57 a.m. July 13, 2017
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Florida is starting to accept pitches for $85 million that lawmakers set aside for economic-development projects.

Gov. Rick Scott announced Wednesday the state Department of Economic Opportunity and Enterprise Florida are accepting proposals for money in the “Florida Job Growth Grant Fund,” which was created during a June special legislative session.

“We are competing against other states and countries for new jobs, and we must aggressively fight to make Florida the best destination for business,” Scott said in a prepared statement.

The creation of the fund was a compromise this spring after the House blocked Scott’s request for a similar amount of money that would have gone to business incentives awarded out of the public-private Enterprise Florida.

Rather than providing direct incentives to individual companies that expand or relocate to Florida, money from the new fund must go toward infrastructure projects or job training. 

The Department of Economic Opportunity and Enterprise Florida will recommend projects to Scott for approval.

House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’ Lakes, led criticism during the past two years of Scott’s requests for money for business incentives, often calling such incentives “corporate welfare” and even labeling them “de facto socialism.”

With the new fund in place, Corcoran cozied up to Scott during a “victory” tour after the special session, declaring the fund “a brand new model for the rest of the nation.”

Corcoran said Wednesday in a prepared statement that the fund “will free up the governor to cut through unnecessary bureaucracy, regulation, and red tape to improve infrastructure and education leading to greater job growth and opportunity for all Floridians.”

With infrastructure proposals, for example, government entities must detail anticipated economic impacts and “how the public infrastructure improvements will connect to a broader economic development vision for the community and benefit current or future businesses.”

Applications for job-training money are required to describe how the proposals support state college and university programs, as well as provide sustainable workforce skills to more than a single employer.

Applicants also must predict the number of jobs that will be created from the job training.

Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, said the “new transparency measures” provide the “right balance between accountability to the taxpayers who fund our government and the flexibility needed to remain nationally competitive.”

 

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