82R26696 BPG-D
 
  By: Button H.C.R. No. 147
 
 
 
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         WHEREAS, Neighboring cities often compete with each other for
  business investment, offering cost reduction incentives to recruit
  individual firms or developers rather than collaborating at the
  regional level to create the conditions for sustained economic
  growth; and
         WHEREAS, Striving to foster job and tax revenue growth,
  cities use tools such as the popular 4A/4B economic development
  sales tax to fund incentives for businesses; unfortunately,
  unhealthy competition reduces the value of incentive packages by
  diluting the free market concept; a competitive, incentive-driven
  approach focuses on local, short-term gains, often to the detriment
  of the important development assets that allow a region to prosper
  over the long term; and
         WHEREAS, Employment and business activity extend across
  municipal boundaries to impact regional development patterns and
  the location of future growth; when cities fail to coordinate their
  efforts, they often intensify uneven investment in
  neighborhoods--for example, promoting the creation of major job
  centers at a distance from affordable housing and thereby
  contributing to traffic congestion, environmental problems, and
  other symptoms of sprawl; not only do these side effects negatively
  affect current residents, but they make the region less appealing
  to the very businesses the incentives are designed to attract; and
         WHEREAS, Research shows that access to an educated and
  skilled workforce is generally more crucial to employers than the
  availability of tax abatements and that individuals often choose
  quality of life over job prospects when deciding where to locate; a
  city undermines the regional coordination required to develop human
  capital and the quality of life essential to retaining that human
  capital when it adopts a localized, reactive, incentive-driven
  approach that emphasizes short-term goals over comprehensive
  planning; and
         WHEREAS, Regional coordination is now more important than
  ever, as high-growth industries tend to be highly mobile and are
  frequently the target of intense competition on the global level;
  and
         WHEREAS, In order to compete for business investment in an
  increasingly complicated global marketplace, while maintaining the
  quality of life that fosters long-term prosperity, neighboring
  cities should avoid bidding against each other for firms and
  development and coordinate their actions within a comprehensive
  planning framework at the regional level; now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby encourage cities to promote long-term economic development
  and job growth by working together on the regional level to attract
  and retain business investment.