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2.09.26 PW SS Briefings
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2026-02-09 1:30 PM - Public Works Study Session
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2.09.26 PW SS Briefings
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Meeting
Date
2/9/2026
Meeting title
Public Works Study Session
Location
BoCC Auditorium
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205 West 5th Room 109 - Ellensburg
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Regular
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term, strategic investment in competitiveness and reinforces a form of The activities and enterprises that Old Heat will house are ones that not only <br /> "path dependence." contribute to a community's dynamic capacity but also accelerate the growth <br /> of prosperity factors of its economic ecosystem. These types of enterprises <br /> Path dependence describes how historical development trajectories shape and are identifiable through using the Regional Contribution Continuum (RCC), as <br /> limit current choices. Regions that grew around a single industry or sector, such explained below(CWU, BCS, 2025). <br /> as agriculture, resource extraction, or warehousing, often lack the institutional <br /> infrastructure, workforce, and supplier base needed to pivot into new high-value A TYPOLOGY OF ENTERPRISE CONTRIBUTIONS (BASED ON THE <br /> industries. Without intervention, these constraints perpetuate underperformance. CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY BUSINESS COMMUNITY SERVICES <br /> REGIONAL CONTRIBUTION CONTINUUM): <br /> Conventional approaches to business recruitment or cluster growth, while <br /> valuable in established industrial ecosystems, offer little strategic guidance Not all businesses contribute equally to prosperity. When looking at the larger <br /> to regions that lack high-wage industry clusters altogether. In such contexts, impact of a business on a community's ecosystem on a continuum, it is helpful to <br /> communities must not only attract or grow businesses but must also select and use a typology of four enterprise types, each representing a different relationship <br /> support the types of enterprises that can systematically improve community between a firm and the community in which it operates. The enterprises and <br /> prosperity. activities Old Heat houses can only be Accelerative and Multiplicative. <br /> DEFINING PROSPERITY IN ECONOMIC ECOSYSTEMS The following models describe impact in terms of value to a local or regional <br /> community over time contributed by given type of enterprise. <br /> In evaluating the full effect of a business' impact in a community, the <br /> multidimensional framework used by the Iowa State University Extension (Fey EXTRACTIVE ENTERPRISES <br /> and Flora, 2006) of eight interdependent forms of capital captures long-term Extractive Enterprise <br /> factors that contribute to a region's Definition: These businesses reduce <br /> prosperity: net community prosperity. <br /> • Financial They may use local labor, land, or tax <br /> • Intellectual incentives, but locate M <br /> • Human ownership, management, intellectual <br /> • Social property, and/or high-skill <br /> • Cultural employment elsewhere. o <br /> • Political Characteristics: U <br /> • Natural Profit/value flows leave the region <br /> • Built Limited local reinvestment <br /> • Time <br /> •A business that contributes to long-term prosperity will strengthen one or more of No improvement in local skill base or infrastructure <br /> these forms of capital without degrading the others. Importantly, this prosperity is Examples: <br /> not measured solely in job quantity or short-term revenue, but in a community's . Externally owned solar farms: use local land but employ few locals and <br /> increasing capacity to shape its own economic future. This capability to export profits. <br /> effectively shape and change is referred to as a community's dynamic capacity". . Absentee landlords: extract housing revenue without improving housing <br /> 28 1 Old Heat CERB Feasibility Study <br />
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