New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) is a not-for-profit corporation that promotes economic growth across New York City's five boroughs. It is the City's official economic development corporation. The agency has its headquarters in Lower Manhattan.
Video New York City Economic Development Corporation
Governance
As of April 2018, NYCEDC's Board of Directors has 27 members. The Mayor of New York directly appoints seven members, including the Chairperson. Ten additional members are appointed by the Mayor from nominees of the Borough Presidents and the Speaker of the New York City Council. Each Borough President nominates one member and the Speaker of the City Council nominates five. Ten members are appointed by the Chairperson from a list of persons approved by the Mayor. NYCEDC is not a New York City agency.
The organization's Senior Vice President of Life Sciences and Healthcare was Doug Thiede as of 2018.
Maps New York City Economic Development Corporation
Roles
Through annual contracts with the City of New York, NYCEDC is a nonprofit organization that serves as the City's primary entity for promoting and implementing economic development.
As of 2007, the NYCEDC had a role in setting rates of business taxation, an alternative to the passing of tax legislation. Specifically, the Corporation was charged with negotiating firm-specific tax incentives with businesses as encouragement to either relocate to, or remain in, New York City.
The NYCEDC also:
- Develops real estate, using partnerships between the public and private sectors.
- Provides business, economic, and policy advice to the City, not-for-profit, and for-profit private sectors.
- Manages City properties and assets, including manufacturing and distribution hubs and other infrastructure.
- Invests in and provides financial tools that allow businesses and not-for-profits.
- Conducts research, collects input from stakeholders, and launches initiatives.
History
NYCEDC was formed in 1991 as the result of a merger of two major not-for-profit and a handful of minor corporations which performed economic development services for the City. One of the major merger partners was the Public Development Corporation (PDC), which was formed in 1966 to rescue the City from its deteriorating economy by selling City property and leasing industrial space. PDC was responsible for construction of the Nassau Street Mall, the Brooklyn Army Terminal, Jamaica Center, and the South Street Seaport, among other activities. The second major merger partner was the Financial Services Corporation (FSC) which had been formed in 1980 to administer government financing programs that promote business expansion in New York City. Formation of the NYCEDC followed recommendations from the consulting firm McKinsey & Company, who had been engaged in mid-1990 to "advise on the reorganisation of the NYC development system.
Carl Weisbrod, formerly of PDC prior to its merger with FSC, was the first president of NYCEDC under the Dinkins administration. Weisbrod was succeeded by Charles Millard and Michael G. Carey under the Giuliani administration, followed by Andrew Alper, the first president appointed to the position during the Bloomberg administration. Robert C. Lieber was appointed in January 2007 and served until Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg appointed him as Deputy Mayor for Economic Development & Rebuilding in December 2007. Seth Pinsky served as President from February 2008 to August 2013.
Applied Sciences NYC
One of NYCEDC's largest initiatives to date is Applied Sciences NYC, a competition to create a new world-class engineering campus in NYC. In December 2011, Mayor Bloomberg announced the selection of a historic partnership with Cornell University and the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology to create a groundbreaking, two-million-square foot applied science and engineering campus on Roosevelt Island, to be called Cornell Tech. Applied Sciences NYC is expected to more than double the number of both full-time graduate engineering students and faculty in New York City. Over the next three decades the Applied Sciences NYC initiative is expected to generate more than $33 billion in overall nominal economic impact, add over 48,000 jobs, and launch nearly 1,000 spin-off companies. The Applied Sciences NYC initiative also includes the establishment of a campus in Downtown Brooklyn developed by a consortium led by NYU that focuses on the challenges facing cities, and a new institute for data sciences at Columbia University.
Other entities
New York City Industrial Development Agency (NYCIDA) is a public benefit corporation under New York State law that provides companies with access to tax-exempt bond financing or tax benefits to strengthen and diversify the City's tax and employment base, helps businesses locate and expand their operations within New York City, and encourages economic development by retaining jobs and creating new ones. NYCIDA is administered by NYCEDC.
New York City Capital Resource Corporation (NYCCRC), also administered by NYCEDC, is a local development corporation that provides lower-cost financing programs for eligible capital projects to qualified not-for-profit institutions and manufacturing, industrial, and other businesses.
Public projects
NYCEDC is currently working with the City on a number of projects and initiatives, including:
- Hunts Point, Bronx
- Coney Island, Brooklyn
- Sunset Park Waterfront, Brooklyn
- 125th Street, Manhattan
- Essex Crossing, Manhattan
- High Line, Manhattan
- The Hub, Bronx
- Downtown Jamaica Initiatives, Queens
- Gotham Center, Queens
- Hunter's Point South, Queens
- Willets Point, Queens
- East River Ferry Service
- New Stapleton Waterfront, Staten Island
- St. George Terminal, Staten Island
- Kingsbridge Armory, Bronx
- New York Wheel, Staten Island
- Empire Outlets, Staten Island
- Seward Park, Manhattan
- Brooklyn Army Terminal, Brooklyn
Startup Engagement
In 2012 and 2013 the NYC EDC supported the NYC Next Big Idea Award which were won by Entrepreneurs Brian Shimmerlik with Vengo in 2012 as well as Founders Bernhard Mehl, Maximilian Schuetz and Carl Pfeiffer of KISI in 2013.
Waterfront rehabilitation
NYCEDC also works to reactivate miles of the City's working waterfront and expand maritime and manufacturing employment to stimulate the local economy. The Sunset Park Vision Plan, for example, is a comprehensive framework that presents strategies to maximize the efficient movement of goods, protect and grow industrial employment, promote green practices, and balance neighborhood and industrial development goals in an environmentally sustainable manner. NYCEDC helps improve public access to waterfronts through projects such as the construction of the East River Waterfront Esplanade along a two-mile shorefront of Lower Manhattan. The agency also manages the inspection and rehabilitation of approximately 75 miles of structures supporting waterfront esplanades throughout the five boroughs
References
Notes
Publications
Project information
External links
- Official website
- NYCEDC: Transforming New York City (video)
Source of article : Wikipedia