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Indiana Is Emerging
As a 'Digital Heartland'
State agencies have put in motion several new initiatives designed to attract high-tech industries to Indiana. These include formation of a state e-Commerce Division to promote business-to-business communication and e-business, technology certification funding and distribution of major grants through Indiana's 21st Century Research and Technology Fund. Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credits helped attract more than 6,400 new jobs to Indiana in 2000, and business-expansion activity is well on track in 2001 to exceed that figure.
Most of the activity in the Greater Indianapolis area's industrial market during the past several years has focused on bulk warehouse space, which is actually a national trend fueled until recently by a strong economy. The region's central location makes it an ideal for distribution-facility sites. Bulk space accounted for over 7.2 million sq. ft. (669,000 sq. m.) of new construction in 2000, according to an early-2001 research report issued by Colliers Turley Martin Tucker on the central Indiana real estate market. "Yet vacancy for bulk product continues to drop faster than overall vacancy due to increased demand," the research reveals. "In spite of growth during 2000 eclipsing 1999 by over 2 million sq. ft. (185,800 sq. m.), bulk warehouse vacancy actually dropped during that period to its current level of 6.7 percent."
Those promoting Indianapolis as an emerging high-tech haven saw their cause furthered in August, when the BestJobsUSA.com Employment Review designated the city the Digital Heartland. "Indianapolis's designation as the Digital Heartland and its Top 20 ranking affirm that we are moving successfully toward our goal of making Indiana the technology leader of the Midwest by 2005," says Scott Jones, chairman of the Indiana Technology Partnership (ITP). "No other comparable Midwest city made the survey's list, and we have every right to be proud of this accomplishment." ITP is a non-profit association of academic, business and government leaders who are developing a technology-based economic development strategy. A federal investigation into foreign steel imports may ultimately bring relief to the one industrial headache Indiana's business expansion community would identify. Otherwise, business and government leaders in the state are more than confident they can emerge from the current economic slowdown unscathed, thanks to major economic development initiatives already under way, and some new ones announced this year.
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©2001 Conway Data, Inc. All rights reserved. SiteNet data is from many sources and not warranted to be accurate or current.
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