News & INSIGHTS

Community development playbook seeks to fuel $1.1 billion transformation in Erie region


GoErie.com, Kevin Flowers | Original Article

July 8, 2022


The approach is strategic, driven by conversations with dozens of community stakeholders and aimed at creating as much as $1.1 billion worth of big-impact change throughout the Erie region.

It seeks to make sure that Erie is well-positioned to access the billions of dollars in federal aid and other funding that will be available over the next several years for a host of uses.  

The plan also includes nearly three dozen suggested priority projects for the region. They include:

And as part of the plan, a new “nerve center” has been created to coordinate projects, streamline funding requests and make sure that public, private and civic leaders stay on the same page.

Titled “Erie’s Inclusive Growth: A Framework for Action,” the initial draft of the region’s investment playbook —endorsed by a host of local officials including Erie Mayor Joe Schember and Erie County Executive Brenton Davis — was unveiled Friday.

The playbook was designed by urban policy experts Bruce Katz and Florian Schalliol of New Localism Associates of Arlington, Va., which helps municipalities craft growth strategies and find innovative ways to fund community development. 

A guide to get the money

The investment playbook Katz and Shalliol designed for the Erie region, which could be revised over time, will help the region’s leaders effectively pursue different pots of government funding, both from existing aid programs and grants that are expected to be available over the next few years. 

That includes funding from the American Rescue Plan that has already been allocated to municipalities, as well as  the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, approved by Congress in November, a $550 billion plan intended to improve roads, bridges, railroads, airports and upgrade public transit throughout the country.

For each of its recommended projects, the playbook also lays out how they could be funded via combinations of federal, state, local and public/private investments. 

Katz and Shalliol reviewed a dozen regional plans and interviewed roughly 50 "stakeholders" in the region as they did their playbook research, including elected officials, local planners, business owners, members of local board/authorities, members of the minority community and the leaders of various neighborhood groups.

Katz said the playbook’s purpose is a simple one: to make sure Erie is well-positioned to go after what he called the “firehose” of state and federal funding.

“The federal government is investing enormous amounts of funds... This is a moment where you just don’t need a plan for your city or county or metropolitan area, you need a playbook,” Katz said. 

“You need a portfolio of projects where you could (estimate) the capital costs and begin to think through leveraging up private and civic investment for transformative impact.”

Schember said the playbook “will serve as our region’s road map for many years to come.  It is a living playbook that will change as needs of the Erie region change.”

Davis added: “The investment playbook is a starting point to identify and prioritize projects in Erie County. This will allow us to leverage similar projects collectively across the region to maximize the potential for federal investment.”

Recommended projects

Katz said Erie’s playbook identifies dozens of projects countywide that can maximize federal investments.  Many of them are shovel ready, he said, and focus on diversity, equity and inclusion.

The projects recommended by the playbook include: 

Building new industries in plastics recycling, advanced manufacturing, and the blue economy:

Entrepreneurship aimed at growing new businesses, especially those owned by people of color: 

Improving community-wide infrastructure:

Downtown Erie improvements

Erie’s bayfront

West 12th Street industrial corridor

Neighborhood improvements

The potential funding sources for the recommended projects/initiatives include city, county, federal and state grants; investor equity; bank borrowing; "soft loans" which generally have more favorable borrowing terms than market-rate loans; and philanthropic grants.

'Ambitious' playbook

Katz said much of the community development work that has happened in Erie in recent years has laid the groundwork for the playbook’s effective deployment. 

That includes the Erie Downtown Development Corp. accessing federal Opportunity Zones, which provide special tax benefits for investors who use capital gains to invest in designated low-income areas, to finance downtown improvement projects near Perry Square, as well as the city of Erie’s continued commitment to Erie Refocused, the city’s comprehensive, multiyear development plan.

“We were intrigued by the notion that you could do a playbook both for the greater downtown, but do it in such a way, anticipating the infrastructure money, that you would be required to think countywide,” Katz said.  “The result is we have a playbook that is probably the most ambitious in the United States right now.”

Erie’s playbook was inspired in large part by the East Side Avenues initiative in Buffalo, N.Y., which focused on boosting small businesses, improving public spaces and workforce development, and building wealth/creating opportunities within communities of color. 

That effort was also heavily financed by federal, state, private and philanthropic sources.

Kim Thomas, the former director of the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development's northwest region office, has been hired to direct the investment playbook’s Nerve Center.  

She will work closely with a steering committee that includes Davis and Schember, a number of other local officials/business leaders, and those working on Erie-area diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

Christina Marsh, Erie Insurance’s diversity and community development officer, called the playbook “an extension of the collaboration we’re already seeing in Erie, with public, private and civic leadership coming to the table for the good of the community.”

Katz agreed.

"I think you're ready in Erie," Katz said. "You can get everybody around one table... And there's a lot of important things happening here already."