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Tuesday, October 30, 2018

City and County Mayors along with the Chamber of Commerce Pleased with Industrial Site Designation

Joint Press Release from Cumberland Co. Mayor Allen Foster, Crossville Mayor James Mayberry, and the Crossville/Cumberland Co. Chamber of Commerce:

The Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development (TNCED) announced yesterday that three new sites had received the State’s highest designation of being prepared to accommodate an industrial project. The 20-acre pad-site in the Interchange Business Park is one of those and is now a “Select Tennessee Certified Site”.

Interchange Business Park Site (Photo courtesy TNCED)

All of Interchange Business Park was reviewed back in 2015/2016 as a part of the Select Tennessee Property Evaluation Program-a mandatory first-step in applying for the designation as a Select Certified Site. This application was prepared at the Chamber and awarded at no cost to the City. Then in April of 2017, the city’s successful application for a Site Development Grant brought the community the $500,000 grant to commence the prep work on the 20-acre site in the Park. The City committed $250,000 to complete an industrial pad which was matched by Cumberland County government (another $250,000). That project is wrapping up this month.

Cumberland County Mayor Allen Foster commented, “This is a great example of how working together can benefit our area. When Cumberland County, the City of Crossville, and the Chamber cooperate, our community prospers. This is a result of years of work and is a step toward bringing in more good jobs to Cumberland County.” Only three Tennessee communities achieved the designation of having a Select Tennessee Certified Site-the Halls Industrial Site, the Walker East Industrial Park in Ripley and the Interchange Industrial Park in Crossville. That brings the total up to 57 sites in the entirety of the State.
Co. Mayor
Allen Foster

James Mayberry, Mayor of Crossville, said, “This announcement is not the end of the Interchange Business Park’s story, but is only the beginning. Until there is a business (maybe two) that occupies this 20-acre site, this remains an option to help us to attract new industry to our community. Now we must market the pad to a company looking to employ at least 100 individuals at competitive wages.”
Crossville Mayor
James Mayberry

Now the work begins to use the site as a tool to attract a new company to Crossville. The City, on a recommendation from the JECDB, has set some basic standards on what project can land there that includes a minimum of 100 new jobs that pay at least 10% more than the local manufacturing median wage. The purchase price of the land will be up to $100,000 per acre on the site. In the past, the City has offered offsets to the purchase of City-owned land that would bring the price down, but the new company must meet these minimum jobs/wage targets.
Chamber Director
Brad Allamong

“Some wondered why we were investing over $100,000 in the Target Industry/Workforce Study” back in May of 2017 and now we have the answer,” indicated Brad Allamong. “The pad-site, now a premier site in the State of Tennessee, will be marketed by us to the targeted companies identified in the study and also marketed on the State of Tennessee’s Site.”

Mayor Mayberry noted, “Interchange Business Park has seen two significant developments within the last year, the expansion of the SKF building-a partner in the CoLinx family of companies and the location of Maverik Oils out of California. Once again, this success proves-if you have the site which is ready for development-you are going to have industrial expansion and relocation. Sitting right beside Interstate 40, we are in a prime location for growth-this is good for everyone.”


“During my campaign, I talked a lot about working together,” commented Mayor Foster. “We haven’t skipped a beat. Great things are ahead for our community if we will just commit to working in partnership for Cumberland County.”

1 comment:

  1. I didn't read anything in the article about how the Chamber, City and Commission were going to attract good high paying union jobs. Where is that in the plan? Or is it in there at all? I doubt it.

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