Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling, the state's chief job creation officer, got a lunch pail full of ideas tonight about how to create more jobs in Virginia.
At the Richmond Times-Dispatch's 28th Public Square, Bolling ducked on the question of whether the state should allow uranium mining in Southside Virginia, but endorsed fewer regulations, more tax breaks and increased emphasis on biotechnology as ways to create jobs in a state where the unemployment rate is at a 25 year high.
He heard from a playwright, a man dressed in ball and chains to protest over-regulation and a union boss during a 90-minute question and answer session before about 100 people attending the meeting at the Richmond Times-Dispatch building.
Bolling and Gov. Bob McDonnell have made jobs creation a central focus of their administration. The McDonnell administration has proposed a series of job-creation measures, including tax incentives to lure industry, tourists and movie producers to Virginia. Despite a $4 billion budget deficit that the General Assembly is trying to address, the incentives will cost about $50 million.
"You've got to spend money to make money," said Bolling, who disclosed that he and McDonnell plan to visit the 50 largest businesses in the state over the next year to find out what their leaders like and don't like about Virginia.
Several state officials and at least two members of the General Assembly were in the audience.
To playwright Jonathan Logan, worried about a lack of opportunity in the artistic community, Bolling said the economic development package includes motion picture production tax credits of up to $5 million over the next two years. The last major production here, the HBO production of the John Adams mini-series cost $1.2 million and generated $80 million in expenditures in Virginia, he said.
Linwood Russell, who runs an assisted living business and was dressed in prison stripes, said "I'm being micro-managed by a state work force that don't understand."
He said a new $50 license fee and regulations over whom he can hire are making it hard to do business.
When Bolling, suggesting that Russell might serve on a panel that is being set up to review regulations, asked Russell to give a card to his aide, Russell said "they always lose my number."
Richard Atkinson, owner of a medical research laboratory in the Virginia Biotechnology Research Park in Jackson Ward, said the state should invest in equipment, such as a centrifuge, to help tenants of the park.
Bolling acknowledged that the state has lagged in the biotechnology field behind many other states, but said the incentive program will offer performance grants for biotech research.
Businessman Ron Melancon said the state should try to re-attract a Disney Park to Virginia. After citizen opposition, Disney located a theme park in another state.
Decrying the lack of tourist promotion money, Bolling said "if I hear about the Robert Trent Jones golf trail one more time, I'm going to barf."
The state of Alabama has been advertising the golf trail on Virginia TV stations.
McDonnell has proposed increasing state funding for tourist promotion by $3.6 million in each of the next two years.
Breanne Armbrust, with the Virginia People's Assembly, said that jobs brought into that state should be sustainable and pay a living wage. She also asked about the elimination of the corporate income tax.
Bolling replied that the end of the tax is not part of the administration's "Jobs and Opportunity Agenda", but he thinks reducing or eliminating it would have "a tremendous economic benefit."
He said scrapping the tax would create an even greater shortfall and is not feasible now but could be in future years.
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