ย Maryland, Virginia and the District could be humming with high-tech commerce if plans for a new “Chesapeake Crescent” partnership materialize as the region’s leaders sketched out Tuesday.
ย Gov. Martin O’Malley, Rep. Steny Hoyer, Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, District Mayor Adrian Fenty and other representatives from the region introduced the Chesapeake Crescent Initiative at a news conference.
ย The plan calls for a public-private partnership to capitalize on the region’s federal presence, research universities and educated workforce.
ย “We are all connected in one way or another,” O’Malley said. “The long and short of it is we are much stronger as a region than we can be as one metropolitan region or one state.”
ย California’s Silicon Valley and Route 128 outside Boston, George Vradenburg said, are the standard.
ย “We intend to catch up and pass them,” said Vradenburg, a former AOL Time Warner executive.
ย Vradenburg and Herb Miller, the CEO of Western Development Corp., were named co-vice chairmen of the Chesapeake Crescent, according to a statement. Miller led the idea of opening regional malls dubbed the Mills Concept, which began with the opening of Potomac Mills in Woodbridge, Va., in 1985.
ย The initiative has four main objectives: growing an innovative economy based on “green technology,” energy, and defense contracting; developing clean energy and protecting the environment; improving infrastructure; and building a sustainable partnership.
ย The group already plans to push the federal government to adopt plug-in hybrid cars, which would create the infrastructure needed in the area to fuel the cars and be a catalyst for private businesses and individuals to do the same. Also, Fenty said he hopes to train workers to fill “green-collar” jobs as the District and private developers build and renovate buildings to be environmentally-friendly.
ย The idea of a partnership arose, Miller said, during a conversation between him and then Baltimore Mayor O’Malley. The two began talking, Miller said, because they were reading the same book during a flight to a Shopping Center Convention in Las Vegas three years ago.
ย The partnership sprang from existing efforts between the states to clean up the Chesapeake Bay.
ย O’Malley came up with the name of the initiative, Miller said, from John Smith’s description of the bay as no better place to live.
ย Even though times have changed, O’Malley said, the Chesapeake region is still one of the most beautiful, creative and dynamic corridors in the United States.
ย And its population is well positioned to power the economic initiative. Almost 35 percent of the residents of the Chesapeake Crescent have a bachelor’s degree, more than the 24 percent nationally, according to a Brookings Institute study.
ย Also, the gross metropolitan product of the area is more than a half-trillion dollars, which makes up 8 percent of the national total from just about 4 percent of the nation’s workforce, according to the same study.
ย David Edgerley, secretary of Maryland’s Department of Business & Economic Development, said it’s important to look beyond jurisdictions when strengthening an economic center, noting not many people know what counties make up Silicon Valley in California.
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