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Five more Iowa sites rated ‘development ready’

Dec. 19, 2016 12:45 pm, Updated: Dec. 19, 2016 2:31 pm
DES MOINES - Five more industrial sites in Iowa have been certified as 'development ready” by state officials, raising the hopes of officials in Forest City, Clinton, Grinnell, Waterloo and Osage of landing large projects with good-paying jobs to their communities.
The announcement Monday by Gov. Terry Branstad, Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds and Debi Durham, director of the Iowa Economic Development Authority, brought to 16 the number of Iowa industrial locations that have met the criteria set by a third-party rating agency.
'Creating jobs and increasing family incomes for Iowans is my administration's top priority,” Branstad said during his weekly news conference. 'With the announcement that five Iowa sites have gone through a rigorous certification process to be considered ‘development-ready,' we are moving Iowa to the top of the list for projects that are looking for a home. Those projects mean more jobs and income for Iowans.”
The program, started in May 2012, previously certified sites and parks in Van Meter, Dexter, Iowa Falls, Fort Dodge, Mason City, Norwalk, Perry, Davenport, Middletown, Cedar Rapids and Marion. To date, there has been more than $490 million worth of activity on sites or parks within the program, Durham said.
Durham said the Iowa program is becoming a national leader as an independent, third-party certification process that uses the nationally recognized site selection firm of McCallum Sweeney Consulting as the sole certifying agent. The process is designed to consider a combination of national site location standards, as well as Iowa's natural assets and industry needs of the state's targeted sectors, she added.
'Iowa is improving its competitive position in the world of site selection by certifying five additional sites,” said Durham, who noted that site certification is one of the fastest growing trends in the site-selection business, and by introducing 16 certified sites to the market, Iowa is better able to compete for large-scale projects.
The five latest certified sites began the process in 2014 to meet the program standards and achieve Monday's designation. Seven subsequent application rounds have been opened since the program was established with additional sites working their way through various phases of the program, Durham said.
'We've had a number of firms come look at our park and, as we've been able to develop the pieces to the site certification process, you know, we've already got answers to a lot of the things they want to know,” said Clinton Mayor Mark Vulich in discussing a 'shovel-ready” rail park on the city's west side.
By going through the process, developers - working closely with their local officials, utility partners and consultants - are better prepared to market their sites with specific site-related information and community data, state officials said. All site due diligence is completed and resulting issues are mitigated, making the site 'risk-free” and thus accelerating the development schedule.
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Gov. Terry Branstad, Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds and representatives of five Iowa communities listen to Debi Durham, director of the Iowa Economic Development Authority, during an announcement Monday that the number of 'development ready' certified sites in Iowa has risen to 16. (Rod Boshart/The Gazette)