Traditionally, JobsOhio – the state’s private development arm — has spent about $150 million in grants and loans from profits drawn from state liquor enterprise sales, its main funding source. That number will approximately double in the future, J.P. Nauseef, JobsOhio’s president and chief investment officer, said at a recent JobsOhio board meeting in Youngstown.
“We’ll be roughly doubling that on an annual basis, from $150 million to $300 million a year,” Nauseef said. JobsOhio contracts with the Division of Liquor Control to run day-to-day liquor sales. Net profits from that are used for economic development work. Details of that approach should be revealed in the next year or so, a JobsOhio spokesman said. And Nauseef emphasized that JobsOhio will also focus anew on an area of large concern to Dayton, federal military installations. The Dayton area is home of one of the nation’s largest Air Force bases, Wright-Patterson, where much of the Air Force’s research and logistics work is anchored. Said Nauseef: “We’re going to build a stateside program to drive federal missions, workforce retention and expansion and attractive.” “These strategies, we’re going to start working on some now. But we’re always willing to listen and learn and evolve and make them better,” he added. The goal is make Ohio “the top state in the nation” for military installations and missions, families and veterans. That work will add up to 10,000 new federal jobs in Ohio in the next five years, at a cost of about $3 million to $5 million a year, Nauseef said. Click here to read full article on Springfield News-Sun. Not receiving our content regularly? Make sure to FOLLOW US on Facebook and SIGN UP to get weekly recaps sent directly to your inbox. Have something local to share? Submit your positive news for free HERE. |
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