Economic Development in the Front Row: Brickyard 400 NASCAR at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Thursday, July 29, 2010 by Ron Gifford


For several years, our friends at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway have donated the use of one of the Turn Two VIP suites to the Indy Partnership, which we’ve used for entertaining business prospects, site consultants and local businesses.

It’s been a wonderful asset for us, particularly as we’ve hosted visitors who’ve never been to Indianapolis before. They’re always awed by the sheer size and majesty of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and from our vantage point, there’s nothing like sitting 10 feet away from the track as cars fly past at 200 miles per hour. 

... And sometimes, as shown by this short video of the first lap of this year’s Brickyard 400 (taken from our suite), we get the best seat in the house for some events. Our guests took home a bit of infield grass and debris in addition to their memories of this most recent race!

Don't Forget: Red Bull Indianapolis GP is coming up on August 29, 2010!

2010 Off to a Fast Start in Green Manufacturing Success Stories

Wednesday, February 17, 2010 by Ron Gifford

In partnership with fellow Central Indiana Corporate Partnership organization Conexus Indiana, I penned the following column -- now appearing on the Inside Indiana Business website -- highlighting some of the monumental clean-tech energy and Indiana advanced manufacturing success stories coming out of the first 45 days of 2010.

 

About Conexus: Conexus Indiana is the state’s advanced manufacturing and logistics initiative, dedicated to making Indiana a global leader in these high‐growth, high‐tech industries. Conexus is focused on strategic priorities like workforce development, creating new industry partnerships and marketing our competitive advantages.

Here is the column as it appears on insideindianabusiness.com:



2010 Off to a Fast Start in Green Manufacturing Success Stories

What do you get when you combine cutting edge technologies, a legacy of engineering expertise, and a rich manufacturing heritage? A flurry of good news that puts central Indiana in the driver's seat of activity to put more electric vehicles on our highways and make renewable energy a practical reality. And if the rest of the year looks anything like the first few weeks, 2010 will be known as the Year of Clean-Tech here at the Crossroads of America.

Let's run down a few of the highlights:

In Anderson, Ind., Remy International announced a new business unit dedicated solely to the development and manufacturing of electric and hybrid motors. Remy is already the largest U.S. producer of hybrid motors, and last year earned a $60 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy as part of an initiative to fuel development of electric vehicle batteries and components.

The move could spur significant investment and create hundreds of new jobs over the next few years, and appears to already be paying dividends – Remy just announced a major contract to supply Mercedes with hybrid motors.

When it comes to electric vehicles, the "green-tech" juggernaut known as EnerDel continues to produce new jobs and investment in the Indianapolis Region, along with cutting-edge batteries. As the only U.S. manufacturer of the lithium ion batteries that power hybrid and plug-in electric vehicles, EnerDel has tapped the rich reservoir of engineering talent that created General Motors' EV1 and other groundbreaking projects here in the region. EnerDel just announced a major new manufacturing facility in Greenfield, Ind., that will ultimately employ 1,100+ -- thus expanding a footprint in greater Indianapolis that includes its northeast Indy headquarters and a battery pack assembly facility in Noblesville, just north of the city.

Throughout the state, tremendous wins are being registered in attracting clean tech manufacturing. Think North America, an electric car manufacturer, has chosen Elkhart as the site of its first U.S. manufacturing plant, joining Electric Motors Corp and NaviStar as the hub of a growing green vehicle cluster along Indiana's northern border.

Brevini Wind (in Muncie, Ind.) has earned $12.8 million in federal tax credits to manufacture gear boxes and other technologies for its massive wind turbines. Just a few weeks ago, U.S. Secretary of Energy Chu visited Columbus, Ind., to announce $54 million in federal stimulus grants to Cummins to increase engine fuel efficiency.

Like any high-tech, innovation-driven industry, the clean tech sector demands a skilled workforce. Here too, Indiana is making great strides, as the state's Department of Workforce Development recently secured a $6 million grant from the U.S. Department of Labor to help workers from other manufacturing sectors take advantage of new jobs in the clean tech space.

The Indy Partnership has aggressively pursued companies in the energy innovation and green manufacturing arenas, both here and abroad – including multiple visits to Europe and China. We plan to continue these recruiting efforts in the years to come, and the level of activity so far in January tells us that our hard work is paying off.

Download our Indiana Clean-Tech Energy Industry Report.

Central Indiana has a long-term strategy designed to strengthen our world-class clean tech sector and re-energize our manufacturing base. Our sister initiative, Energy Systems Network, is playing a leading role in making Indiana a center for energy innovation. The success stories that have marked the start of 2010 are early dividends, but we're confident the best is yet to come.

As the economic development arm for the Central Indiana Corporate Partnership (CICP) and the 10-county Indianapolis Region, Indy Partnership will be doing its part to tell this story and maximize our potential in this booming area of cutting-edge clean technology industries. In Indiana, green tech means green jobs; in other states, they're just green with envy at our success.

LEARN MORE ABOUT INDIANA CLEAN-TECH ENERGY
LEARN MORE ABOUT INDIANA ADVANCED MANUFACTURING

President Obama Announces Expansion of successful Indiana Math and Science Teaching Fellowship Program

Thursday, January 7, 2010 by Ron Gifford

President Barack Obama today praised a program that will place hundreds of highly qualified math and science teachers in Indiana classrooms and announced an expansion of the program to Ohio, Michigan and up to two additional states in 2010.

The Woodrow Wilson Indiana Teaching Fellowship, created at the direction of Gov. Mitch Daniels with financial support from the Lilly Endowment and state funds, provides stipends to prospective teachers who agree to spend a year in exemplary teacher education programs and teach for three years in low-income rural and urban secondary schools. 

“America’s leadership tomorrow depends on how we educate our students today, especially in science, math and engineering,” said President Obama. “That’s why I’m pleased to announce the expansion of our “Educate to Innovate” campaign today and applaud the several new partnerships launched that will help meet our goal of moving American students from the middle to the top of the pack in science and math achievement over the next decade.”

“The Wilson Teaching Fellowship is helping Indiana address a critical shortage of great math and science teachers,” Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett said. “I agree with President Obama and Secretary Duncan that providing our students great teachers is imperative to increasing academic achievement. Hoosier students will benefit greatly from having expert teachers in their classrooms through the Wilson Teaching Fellowship, and I am encouraged our state’s success means students in other states will have the same opportunity.”

Four Indiana universities were chosen to participate: Ball State University, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Purdue University, and the University of Indianapolis.

Woodrow Wilson Teaching Fellows hold baccalaureate degrees in math or science and are high achievers, academically and professionally. They complete an intensive, field-based master’s program in teacher education at a participating university, overseen by both the university’s STEM faculty and its education faculty in cooperation with partner school districts. Fellows receive $30,000 during the Fellowship year and commit to teach for three years, with on-site mentoring, in some of the state’s high-need urban or rural secondary schools.

Interested applicants can find program and application information at http://www.woodrow.org/.  Applications for the 2010 cohort of Fellows are due on January 12, 2010.

The White House press release is available here: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/president-obama-expands-educate-innovate-campaign-excellence-science-technology-eng
 

International Toy Manufacturer Puts Indy on Short List For Worldwide Headquarters Move

Thursday, December 24, 2009 by Ron Gifford

INDIANAPOLIS (Dec. 24, 2009) -- The Indianapolis region has been chosen as one of three finalists for the new world headquarters of a multi-billion dollar international toy manufacturer and distributor, the Indy Partnership announced today. 

                "While we can't publicly identify the company, due to a clause in our confidentiality agreement, we can tell you that we're thrilled to have ended up on the company's 'nice' list," said Indy Partnership President and CEO Ron Gifford.  

                The company realized last year that it had outgrown its existing location in the northern hemisphere. "Twas the night before Christmas, which is traditionally our busiest time," said Will "Buddy" Keebler, director of Elfonomic Development and company spokesman for the project.  " It became clear that our current facilities were like a bag of misfit toys."

                To find a new home, Keebler said the company made a list, checked it twice, and relied heavily on the Indy Partnership's award-winning website to find out which places would be nice.

                The Indianapolis region presented several assets that could meet the company's unique manufacturing and logistics needs.  "We operate an extensive global logistics operation,"  noted Rudy Cervidae, team leader for the company's extensive global logistics operation. "If you ask me, with jewels like the world's second-largest FedEx hub, major distribution centers like Amazon.com, and a great airport, Indianapolis is likely to nose out the competition." 

                Rudy's face also lit up when he talked about being so close to Purdue's Veterinary School. "Although I can't disclose why, some of our team were prancin' and dancin' when they heard about that," he glowed.

                The toy maker was also impressed that central Indiana is home to the most productive manufacturing workforce in the Midwest. "While our workforce might look small, they are extremely talented and efficient, " Keebler observed. "You certainly have an abundant supply of talent to join our workshop associates."

                Indianapolis has some unique characteristics that favor it. "When you spend as much time in shopping malls as our boss does, you can't underestimate the value of being down the street from the headquarters of the Simon Property Group," Keebler said. "Plus, the whole 'World's Largest Christmas Tree' thing on the Circle -- talk about brand alignment!" 

                Easy access to southern Indiana's plentiful coal supplies also caught the company's eye. "Sadly, coal delivery has been a growing part of our business," Keebler lamented.

                The State of Indiana has put together a very attractive incentive package in an attempt to lure the company here, according to Indiana Secretary of Commerce Mitch Roob. "While I can't talk about what's on the company's wish list, let's just say we put out some serious cookies and milk on this one," Roob noted.  Governor Daniels also met privately with the company's founder and chairman, but Roob would not disclose what the Governor asked for. Roob also denied that the Governor sat on the old man's lap, noting that the Governor hasn't done that since he was 9 years old.  

                The company expects to make a final decision after the holiday season. The other two finalists for the site are Santa Claus, Indiana and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.   Although Santa Claus is considered a sentimental favorite, most observers are skeptical about the Pennsylvania site. According to local site consultant Larry Grinch, "It would take a miracle for this baby to end up in Bethlehem."  

Indiana One of 11 States Coming Out of Recession; Led by Strong Life Sciences Cluster (from Stateline.org)

Thursday, November 12, 2009 by Ron Gifford
            
Thursday, November 05, 2009

Report: 11 states emerging from recession

 

 

Moody's Economy.com has found that 11 states are recovering from the recession, while Nevada remains
As the national economy starts its slow recovery, 11 states and the District of Columbia are showing signs of emerging from the recession, according to a new report.

 

Alaska, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Washington, D.C., are in recovery, according to Moody’s Economy.com, an economic forecasting firm. It determines where a state is in the recession based on employment rates, home prices, residential construction and manufacturing production figures. Some or all of these indicators were stable or improving in these states.

The firm also reported that, as of September 2009, Nevada remains firmly gripped by the worst recession because these indicators are still dropping significantly due to the plunging tourism, gambling and construction industries. The rest of the states, while still in recession, have seen the pace of their decline slow down, or moderate.

Moody’s also estimated that the national recession ended in August, although the National Bureau of Economic Research, a private research firm that calculates the official dates of recessions, has yet to declare the end of the current downturn.

 “If the U.S. economic recession ended in August, then some of the states had to have ended by then or slightly before,” said Steven Cochrane, managing director of Moody’s Economy.com.

Another index developed by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia found that seven states Vermont, Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, Montana and the Dakotas were faring better economically in September than three months before, although a Fed spokeswoman cautioned that the index was not meant to predict a state’s future performance. The index is based on unemployment rates, payroll information, hours worked in manufacturing and salary information.

 

Moody's Economy.com predicts that states with less volatile housing markets, such as the Dakotas that saw little change in home prices, will come out of the recession quicker than the rest of the nation, while states which saw larger swings in home prices will face a longer downturn.
Despite these signs that suggest the recession might be easing, most states’ recovery will lag. Cochrane said that although a state can be technically out of recession when it starts producing more goods and services, managers often wait to hire new workers until they are on firmer financial footing. So it’s not uncommon for high unemployment rates to linger even as the economy recovers.

 

“We could see unemployment rise right through the first half of next year,” Cochrane said.

And the end of the federal stimulus program could make things worse, he said. Most states have dumped billions of federal stimulus dollars into shoring up gaping shortfalls in their 2009 and 2010 budgets, but their recovery could backslide when almost all of the federal money is gone at the end of 2010. Since it takes several years for state budgets to recover from a downturn, it’s likely that states will be grappling with shortfalls even as the overall economy recovers.

Even with the federal help, some states, including California, Kentucky, Nevada, New York and Washington, struggled with the largest deficits in modern history and will continue to struggle when the money is gone and deep spending cuts have already been made.

Many of the 11 states identified as recovering were spared the worst of the downturn because their housing prices stayed relatively stable, Cochrane said. None saw the spike in foreclosures that ravaged Nevada, Arizona, California and Florida. Also, their unemployment rates, while high, have mostly stayed below the national average and have started to stabilize.

By contrast, the states slammed by the housing crisis likely have another six to nine months of recession to go, Cochrane said. Industrial states, such as Michigan and Ohio, could also lag in the recovery. Both of those states rely heavily on the auto industry, which is struggling to reinvent itself, a transition that will likely take some time and keep unemployment levels high.

The latest jobs figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that Michigan still suffers the country’s highest unemployment rate, at 15.3 percent in September, where it has been hovering for the past four months. Michigan is no stranger to downturns, having never pulled out of the 2001 recession.

In Wyoming, the recession didn’t start until early this year, when natural gas prices tumbled. Employment took a nosedive. “Our unemployment rate increase in the last couple of months was the fastest in the nation,” said Wenlin Liu, senior economist at the Wyoming Economic Analysis Division. “We’ll probably not have much of a recovery until 2012, maybe 2011.”

 

The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia has found seven states are faring better than they were three months ago. Among the indicators used to pick these states was unemployment. While unemployment is leveling off nationally, some states, such as Ohio, are seeing substantial declines in jobless lines while others, such as Nevada, continue to see more unemployed.
Wyoming, like Oklahoma, New Mexico and Colorado, depends on natural gas for a significant part of its economy. Until prices rise, those states will slump, Liu said.

 

Besides having relatively stable housing prices, the states on Moody’s list benefited from their own particular strengths. Energy production revenues helped states such as Alaska, Louisiana, Montana and North Dakota to stay afloat. Louisiana also boasts low business costs, ports that connect it to foreign markets, health care centers and military installations, all of which were well-positioned to weather the downturn.

Mississippi is in a similar position to Louisiana, according to Moody’s. That has allowed it to lure major investment, such as a Toyota plant in the northeastern part of the state.

Both those states are still seeing the effect of money that flowed in following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, said Sujit CanagaRetna, senior fiscal analyst in the southern office of the Council of State Governments. As that money dries up, however, those two states are in for some “rough sledding,” he predicted.

Indiana has been buoyed by a growing medical research industry focused around the state’s universities. The state’s auto industry also got a boost during the Cash-for-Clunkers program.

Meanwhile, some of the other Midwestern states, such as Nebraska and Iowa, benefited from agriculture prices, which have remained relatively high, according to the report.

In Nebraska, the downturn started later and was shallower than in the nation as a whole, said Eric Thompson, director of the Bureau of Business Research at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Job losses may have slowed in March, he said, but hiring still hasn’t picked up.

Agriculture plays a major role in Missouri’s economy as well, but the state’s low housing prices and diverse economy, which includes biotech research centers as well as metropolitan hubs in Kansas City and St. Louis, have kept it afloat, according to Moody’s.

Idaho’s high-tech sector continued to attract skilled workers, while its amenities and scenery draw retirees, the report said. Also, the tourism industry there hasn’t been as hard hit as in the U.S. as a whole.

In Montana, the service sector has continued to grow as has the state’s population. Low business costs have also helped weather the downturn, as has the fact that the state was one of only two to avoid a budget deficit last year.

Montana’s slump may also be over but “it still feels very much like a recession,” said Patrick Barkey, director of the Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University of Montana. The housing bust hurt the state’s huge wood products industry and the decline in consumer spending also means the state is drawing fewer tourists. As a result, when the state’s economy starts to grow again, it will be at an anemic rate, Barkey said.

North Dakota, meanwhile, continues to hum along. The state’s unemployment rate  — the lowest in the nation  — crossed the 4 percent mark in January of this year and has held relatively steady since then. North Dakota was the only state, along with Montana, to avoid a budget deficit this year.

“Things have been going really well for us,” said Pam Sharp, the director of the state’s Office of Management and Budget. “We don’t feel like we’re in a recession, but we have lost some jobs.”

Elsewhere, in the states where the recession in moderating, according to Moody’s, state-level researchers, waiting for signs of hiring, have been wary of celebrating too soon.

“We called the bottom to the recession in Oklahoma about three months ago,” said Russell Evans, director of the Center for Applied Economic Research at Oklahoma State University. “We’re just hovering along the bottom, waiting for a recovery. It doesn’t make people feel all that much better.”

In South Carolina, the unemployment rate has dropped slightly from its June peak of 12.1 percent. It stood at 11.4 percent in August and 11.6 percent in September, according to preliminary numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s mostly due to discouraged workers giving up, said Sam McClary, a labor market analyst for the state’s Employment Security Commission.

“We’re trying to determine whether we’ve bottomed out or not,” he said. Although buoyed by the slight drop in unemployment, McClary was not ready to declare South Carolina’s recession over. “We’re not ready to jump on the bandwagon.”

States that have invested in high-tech industries or green energy could find themselves in an enviable position, said CanagaRetna. He singled out wind energy in Oklahoma, solar energy in Tennessee and biotech firms in North Carolina as industries that could drag states out of the doldrums. South Carolina could also benefit from a new Boeing plant that the company said it plans to open near Charleston.

“Those states that have a foothold in the area of these new emerging industries will I think be better positioned,” he said.

Russell, of Oklahoma State University, was less sanguine about his state’s wind energy prospects. “I’m probably not overly optimistic that there’s enough to create a big short-term bump,” he said.

(c) 2009. The Pew Charitable Trusts. All rights reserved.

It's A Small World When You're A Pacers' Fan!

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 by Ron Gifford
You just never know who you're going to run into at a Pacers game -- even when you're halfway around the world.  So it was a lot of fun to stop by one of the suites at Wukesong Arena in Beijing last Sunday afternoon and pay a surprise visit on Carla Liebrich and Tina Merriwether, our oldest daughter's social studies teacher and principal, respectively, at Northview Middle School.  Along with two other teachers from Northview (Ms. Krieger and Ms. Williams), Ms. Liebrich and Ms. Merriwether are part of a group of central Indiana educators traveling with Global Indiana -- a nonprofit dedicated to helping educators make connections with other schools around the world.  When the Pacers learned that the group was going to be in Beijing on Game Day, the team lined up suite tickets for all of them.  Sweet, indeed!

The Indiana delegation is participating in some cultural exchange opportunities in Beijing and Shanghai, before traveling to Hangzshou to spend time at the Hangzhou Yongjin Middle School and several other schools.  As you may know, Hangzhou recently became a sister city with Indianapolis, and is located in Zhejiang Province, the sister state for Indiana (we visited Hangzhou last month on the Governor's trade mission).

Oh, yeah, they also played a basketball game that afternoon.  The crowd was certainly into it, especially at the very end when the players tossed autographed mini-balls into the stands.

Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden City, and A Cast of Thousands

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 by Ron Gifford

We arrived in Tiananmen Square on Saturday just about the same time as everyone else in Beijing, or so it seemed.  The vast open space -- reputedly the largest public square in the world -- was teeming with visitors, many of whom came to see the massive floats that had been part of the previous week's parade celebrating the country's 60th anniversary on October 1. 

The Chinese tourists were as interested in seeing us -- okay, some of us -- as we were in seeing them.  Apparently, they don't see too many tall blonde women in China, because when they do, it's time for pictures!!  And almost always, the people wanting the pictures were Chinese women (contrast that with the guys in our group who just wanted their pictures taken with the Denver Nuggets cheerleaders).  Don't know if they really have more fun or not, but blondes certainly have more photo ops.


Great Times At The Great Wall

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 by Ron Gifford

On our first day in Beijing, as I noted in an earlier post from China, we took a group tour to the Great Wall.  You can see the group photo taken there at www.pacers.com, and below is some footage from the Wall.  Yes, one of the guys found a piece of chalk and left a message for all to see -- although only in the pictures and videos; lest anyone think we actually created an international incident by defacing the Wall, the chalk easily washed away. 

Taipei Street Scenes

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 by Ron Gifford

Now that we're back from China -- which means I have access to YouTube again -- I can load up some of the videos I made on our trip (on the video about the Great Wall, you'll hear my wife make fun of the fact that 1.3 billion Chinese don't have Internet access to my "cheesy tourist videos"). 

Taipei Street Scenes

This video is actually from Taipei, Taiwan -- some random street footage showing what life is like in that city of 2.5 million people.  The kids were extremely friendly, as I discovered when a little boy starting jumping up and down in front of my camera to get my attention.

Taipei is an interesting juxtaposition of older buildings and temples and gleaming high-rises like Taipei 101, currently the world's tallest office building.  The American influence is significant:  there are two -- yes, two -- bridges in Taipei named after General MacArthur, along with a Roosevelt Road and other reminders of the U.S.-Taiwan relationship.

The State of Indiana has a business and trade office in Taipei, ably-led by Jeff Wang, who works under the auspices of the Indiana Economic Development Corporation.  I had the chance to visit with Jeff for a little while during our trip, and he thinks there are many emerging opportunities for mutual investment between Indiana and Taiwanese companies.  We'll be watching those closely. 




Blogging from Beijing

Sunday, October 11, 2009 by Ron Gifford

It's 9:30 a.m. on Sunday, and we're packing up to go to Wukesong Arena for the noon tipoff between the Pacers and Denver Nuggets.  It's been a whirlwind of activities since we landed in Beijing 48 hours ago.

We left Taipei immediately after the game on Thursday night, which meant getting to the airport around midnight, with wheels up at 1:00 a.m.  The Chinese government permits very few flights to fly directly from Taiwan to the mainland, and sadly, we weren't one of those.  So we had to do a touch and go in Seoul, Korea before flying to Beijing.  Unfortunately, we had a mechanical problem that kept us on the ground an extra 90 minutes; so instead of landing in Beijing at 5:00 a.m., we landed around 6:30 a.m. -- which put us right in the middle of rush hour.  Two hours later we were finally in our hotel room.

A couple hours later, we were back on the bus for an hour and a half ride to the Great Wall at Mu Tian Yu.  Much has been written about the awesome scale of the Wall: it's all true, and I won't even try to replicate those descriptions here.  Instead, here are a couple of my personal memories from this trip:
  • In order to experience the majesty of the Wall, you take a gondola ride to the top of the ridge where the Wall is built -- probably a couple thousand feet up in elevation.  But before you reach the gondola, you have to run a gauntlet of souvenir vendors, each grabbing and yelling at you, trying to get you to buy T-shirts or mugs, or a Mao hat, or postcards, or the like.  That actually worked out pretty well for one of our tour companions, a prominent Indianapolis business man whose polo shirt wasn't quite warm enough for the chilly weather on the mountain.  After spending time haggling with one of the vendors, he rejoined our group wearing a "I Climbed The Great Wall" sweatshirt.  He claims he got a good deal on it.
  • After touring the wall, you have two ways to get back down: take the gondola back, or take an "alpine slide" type luge ride down.  We chose the latter; and after hiking the Wall for about 2 kilometers, we came to the luge ticket booth.  By happenstance, Rich and Lisa Jones and my wife and I ended up with about 10 of the Pacers and members of the power pack at the top of the luge run.  Each person sits on an individual sled, which has a brake lever to control your speed (and no other controls).  I barely fit on the luge sled; watching Jeff Foster, Solomon Jones and Roy Hibbert squeeze onto one was pretty humorous.  It was a hilarious ride down; I'll post some pretty funny video of the trip down, once I get back home.
Traffic in Beijing is horrible.  There's just no other way to say it.  It feels like we've spent more time sitting in traffic jams than touring the sites.  And a brown haze just sits over the city.  Those of us with a touch of asthma have been spending lots of time with our inhalers.

Final thought on this post:  I'll have to post pictures and video when I get back, because the Chinese government blocks Internet access to websites like YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and other social network sites.  That's a very interesting experience -- trying to log on and being denied access. 

Off to the game now.  Then we head straight to the airport for the 13 hour flight home.  We leave 5:00 p.m. this afternoon (Sunday) and arrive home in Indy at 6:00 p.m.  That will be the longest one hour flight of my life, to be sure.

A Night At The Night Market

Thursday, October 8, 2009 by Ron Gifford

Taipei is well-known for its night markets -- known locally as "streets of snacks."  Imagine a narrow street with food vendors on both sides, mixed in with little retail shops and lots of people, and that's a night market.  Our tour guide gave us this advice:  "only eat with your eyes; you might find the foods don't agree with your stomach." 

My wife and I set out with Rich and Lisa Jones to explore the night market near our hotel.  Notwithstanding our tour guide's admonition, Rich and I were determined to try some scorpion on a stick.  Perhaps lucky for us, we never found the scorpions.  Lots of feet and beaks and other unfamiliar animal body parts, but no scorpions.  I can tell you this, however:  stinky tofu is well-named.  Parts of the street just reeked with the pungent odor of this local treat.  

As unusual and different as this was for us, I can only imagine what Chinese visitors to our community might blog about if they experienced all of the food vendors on the main drag of the Indiana state fair on a Saturday night.  Just think about all the weird stuff we eat off of sticks!  If only I spoke Mandarin, I would google "deep fried twinkie on a stick" to see what showed up on Chinese reviews of Indianapolis.


NBA Games Taipei Welcome Reception

Wednesday, October 7, 2009 by Ron Gifford

The opening reception for the NBA Game in Taipei just ended a few hours ago, and by all accounts, it was a smash with the local fans, who jammed the Grand Ballroom at the Shangri-La hotel.

The reception began with a traditional dance number performed by a group representing one of the native tribes of Formosa, or "beautiful island."  Both teams were introduced by their respective coaches, and a handful of government dignitaries addressed the crowd.  The Mayor of Taipei seemed particularly pleased to be part of the festivities, and told the audience that when he was a graduate student in Massachusetts between 1978 and 1983, he was a big Larry Bird fan.  "I'm still a big fan today, Mr. Bird!" the Mayor told the crowd.

Most of the players took off after the introductions.  We had dinner before the reception with Earl Watson and Dahntay Jones, both of whom said they were worn out from the long flight, as well as another one of Coach Jim O'Brien's tough practices earlier in the day.  But Coach O'Brien and Denver coach George Karl hung out, signed autographs and posed for pictures.

The team has a shoot around tomorrow morning, then square off against the Nuggets at 7:30 p.m. (7:30 a.m. on Thursday in Indianapolis).  The rest of us are touring some of the sites in Taipei, including a trip to the top of Taipei 101, reputedly the world's tallest office tower. 

Hope you enjoy some of the highlights from the reception:


He's No Fellini, But They Gave Him A Video Camera Anyway

Tuesday, October 6, 2009 by Ron Gifford
I'm filming parts of our trip on my Flip video camera, so I'll make all of you the guinea pig audience while I learn how to shoot and edit on the fly here. 

So we took off from Indianapolis International this morning and flew 7 hours to Anchorage, Alaska.  Our video story picks up there (mainly because that's when I was able to dig the Flip out of my bags . . . note to self about "strategic packing" next time). 

We changed crew and loaded fuel, and hung out for about 90 minutes in a small terminal without much to do.  So you'll see many of the players just kind of milling around.  Yes, that's former mayor Steve Goldsmith talking to Jim Morris and one of the Pacers.  You'll be able to figure out who's who.

At the airport, you'll see my fellow Georgetown alumnus Roy Hibbert getting the souvenir picture with his friend Val, and then he gets the star treatment from the fans.  (Not that I feel old or anything, but Roy was born the year AFTER I graduated from Georgetown Law). 

Hope you like it . . . . .

 

Taking It To The Hoop In Taipei

Tuesday, October 6, 2009 by Ron Gifford

I'm 6 feet tall, and when I was in China a few weeks ago, I was easily one of the tallest people on the street. 

Well, that is definitely not the case on this trip.  Guess that's what happens when you travel with an NBA basketball team.

I'm with the Indiana Pacers on their trip to Taipei and Beijing this week, and even though we've only been in Taiwan for a few hours as I write this, it's already been quite some trip.  For starters, these guys are total rock stars here, and make no mistake, Larry Bird is the lead singer as far as the fans go.  From the moment we got off the plane until we checked into the hotel, the cameras, media and fans have been everywhere, seeking autographs and photographs.

We could probably use a seismic graph as well, given the level of excitement here.  This is the first NBA game ever played in Taiwan.  Hard to believe, given the number of jerseys and other pieces of Pacers memorabilia the fans had at the hotel.  They're really into it.  I feel kind of bad, actually, as I walk through the lobby.  I think I'm just tall enough that from a distance, the fans think I might be somebody; then I get closer, and of course it's disappointing for them, and frankly, a bit embarrassing for me, when they realize their mistake and turn away.  Maybe I'll start wearing a custom-designed T-shirt that saves us both the humiliation:  "Nope: too slow, no range, can't drive to my left, no vertical leap . . . ." 

Someone asked me why I wanted to travel 16,000 to see two exhibition games.  Are you kidding me?  If I took the Indy Partnership's cumulative budget for the next ten years, I couldn't buy the great publicity these two games are going to have for our region in these two key emerging markets.  One of the things I learned on my trip to Shanghai and Hangzhou last month is that most Chinese business people have no idea where Indiana is -- and in all fairness, most Hoosiers couldn't find Hangzhou or Zhejiang Province on a map, either.  So these games, and the publicity leading up to them, will give Chinese viewers a much better sense of our community.  Although I have to tell you this:  they may not know where Indiana is, but they know that Reggie Miller played for us, and that Larry Bird is with the team now.  If you go to our Chinese language website -- www.indypartnership.com.cn -- you'll now understand why Reggie is in our marketing materials. 

I'm told that at least 50 million Chinese are expected to watch the TV broadcast of the game in Beijing next Sunday (I don't have the estimates for the game here in Taiwan).   To put that in context:  the only sporting event that gets a larger audience than that in the United States is the Super Bowl.  Monday Night Football averages about 12 million viewers.

On top of the PR from the game, the NBA is hosting a VIP reception in each city the night before the game, with the invitation list including top government and business leaders.  I'll be there, with hundreds of Chinese-language business cards in my pocket, hoping to begin conversations and relationships that lead to new business opportunities in our region.  

So the Taipei reception is tomorrow night.  We'll be doing some tours and other events around the city during the day, with the Pacers as the main act and the rest of us bringing up the entourage.  It's tip-off time for Indiana, in more ways than one.

Is Your City Smarter Than A Fifth Grader?

Thursday, October 1, 2009 by Ron Gifford
I'm off to New York City this morning to participate in IBM's "SmarterCities Forum."  IBM Chairman and CEO Samuel Palmisano has invited folks from the private, public and nonprofit sectors to join him for two days "to explore new approaches to regional partnerships, identify roadblocks, evaluate frameworks for investment and review the tools that are helping our cities meet 21st century realities." 

That should keep us busy for the next couple of days.

We'll cover this ground in six sessions:
  1. A Planet of Smarter Cities -- why cities will become the focal point for economic and population growth around the world.
  2. A Vision for Smarter Cities -- how innovation will shape the new vision of dynamic cities.
  3. What It Takes To Build Smarter Cities -- breakout sessions on transportation, education, energy, public safety and government services.
  4. Culture and the Smarter City -- why culture is the difference between a vibrant and a stagnant community.
  5. Seizing the Opportunity -- best practices from around the country.
  6. The Leadership Challenge -- how can we lead and manage change in our cities?

I'm looking forward to meeting people from all over the country, and I'll share their thoughts with you when I get back.  Until then, look for me on Twitter as I tweet my way through the next two days.  @RDGifford.  

Celebrating October Festival with the Chinese Community in Indianapolis

Sunday, September 27, 2009 by Ron Gifford
My family and I had the great honor of spending Saturday night at the Madame Walker Theatre with members of the Indianapolis Chinese community as they commemorated the 60th anniversary of the establishment of the People's Republic of China and the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the United States.

We were the guests of Weilin Long, who is a director in the City of Indianapolis' Office of Minority and Business Development and very active in the local Chinese community.  She was extremely helpful to me in preparing for the recent trade mission trip I took with Governor Daniels, and Weilin herself recently visited her parents in China. 

Weilin gave us the VIP treatment, with front row seats and a chance to make brief welcoming remarks along with Vice Consul Jing Zhu from the Chinese consulate in Chicago and Virgil Madden, special assistant to Lt. Governor Becky Skillman.  I even did a couple of interviews at intermission for Chinese television. 

The festival was excellent, featuring singing, dancing, traditional Chinese music, ballet, an outstanding cellist, and even a couple of Chinese comics.  I didn't understand a word they said, but trust me -- based on the audience's reaction, these guys were hilarious. 

In fact, you can check out part of their act for yourself.  I took along a new Flip video camera, and my 8- and 12-year-old daughters -- who looked lovely in the Chinese silk dresses I picked up in Hangzhou a few weeks ago -- helped me shoot some footage.   There are no Oscars in our future, to be sure, but this footage will give you a brief taste of what a full house at Madame Walker enjoyed (and just to clarify, these are just a handful of the many wonderful performances that were shared with us Saturday night, including a fabulous cello solo by Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra cellist Jian-Wen Tong).





The festival was co-sponsored by the Indianapolis Chinese Community Center; Confucius Institute; Indianapolis Chinese Medical Association; IUPUI Chinese School; IUPUI Students and Scholars Association; Indianapolis Chinese Performing Arts, Inc.; and Lilly Chinese Culture Network.

I'm convinced more than ever that we have a great opportunity to make Indianapolis a vibrant and welcoming community for Chinese businesses and families.  I'm heading to Taiwan and Beijing in a week, and there will be more to say about that soon.  But for now, to the many friends we met on Saturday night, let me simply say, "xie xie." 


"I Like To Move It, Move It; We Like To Move It."

Friday, September 25, 2009 by Ron Gifford

This just in from the 2009 Indiana Logistics Directory, released this week:

When compared to all other states, Indiana ranks in the top 10 in 33 logistics-related categories and in the top five for almost half of those.  Maybe "Will.I.Am" from the Black-Eyed Peas was really singing about us, after all.
 

 


Indiana Rankings:

  • 1st in pass-through interstates
  • 1st in shortest distance to median center of U.S. population
  • 1st in rail tons of primary metals originated
  • 1st in rail tons of primary metals terminated
  • 2nd in rail tons of petroleum products terminated
  • 2nd in rail tons of waste and scrap material terminated
  • 2nd in world's largest FedEx air hubs (Indianapolis)
  • 2nd in pass-through truck tonnage
  • 3rd in local freight railroads
  • 3rd in total freight railroads
  • 4th in Class I railroads
  • 5th in local rail mileage
  • 5th in rail carload
  • 5th in truck tonnage
  • 6th in rail tons of waste and scrap material originated
  • 6th in largest cargo airports (Indianapolis)
  • 6th in rail tons of farm products originated
  • 6th in regional railroads
  • 7th in domestic waterborne shipping
  • 7th in rail tons of food products originated
  • 7th in number of airports
  • 8th in trucking employment
  • 8th in rail tons of coal terminated
  • 8th in rail tons of coal originated
  • 8th in rail mileage
  • 8th in rail tons of transportation equip. originated
  • 8th in NAFTA exports
  • 9th in freight shipped out of state
  • 9th in Class I rail mileage
  • 9th in rail tons carried
  • 9th in freight rail employment
  • 10th in rail tons received
  • 10th in number of trucking companies
  • 11th in rail tons originated
  • 11th in rail tons terminated in NAFTA trade dollars
  • 12th in transportation-warehousing employment
  • 12th in interstate miles
  • 15th in total foreign/domestic waterborne shipping

Check out www.Indianalogistics.com for more details about Indiana transportation logistics.

LEARN MORE ABOUT LOGISTICS IN CENTRAL INDIANA

Best Business Tax Climate in the Midwest; One of the Best in the Nation

Friday, September 25, 2009 by Ron Gifford
Indiana continues to score well in the Tax Foundation's annual survey of states' business tax climate.  We ranked 12th in the country and best in the Midwest.  Here's a press release issued today by the Indiana Economic Development Corporation:


INDIANAPOLIS
(Sept. 24, 2009) - Indiana's growing national reputation as a great state to do business has received another boost. The state moved up two places in the Tax Foundation's 2010 Business Tax Climate Index for business tax climate. Indiana is 12th overall, up from 14th in 2009, and remains the top state in the Midwest for business tax competitiveness.

The Tax Foundation is a nonpartisan tax research group based in Washington, D.C. 
 
Rankings for other nearby states include Michigan 17th; Kentucky 20th; Illinois 30th; Wisconsin 42nd; Minnesota 43rd; Iowa 46th; and Ohio 47th. In its seventh year of publication, the report measures five indexes of states' business tax competitiveness including property tax rates, sales tax, individual tax, corporate tax and unemployment insurance taxes.  The Tax Foundation presents the Index annually as a tool for lawmakers, businesses and individuals to gauge how their states' tax systems compare.


"While other states are imposing tax increases to cover budget shortfalls, Indiana's solid fiscal house and competitive tax environment have earned us national attention as a frontrunner for new jobs and investment," said Mitch Roob, Secretary of Commerce and chief executive officer of the Indiana Economic Development Corporation.  "While there is still much work to be done, Governor Daniels' focus on job creation and economic development continues to pay off, even during a time of national recession."
 
The Tax Foundation study is the latest in a series of national accolades the state has scored in economic development.  In March, Chief Executive magazine found the Hoosier state to be the best place to do business in the Midwest and among the top 11 states nationwide for business, according to feedback from more than 500 businesspersons and published in its annual "Best & Worst States" survey.
 
The Tax Foundation's full report is available at www.taxfoundation.org .
 

You Knew It Had To Happen Sooner Or Later

Wednesday, September 16, 2009 by Ron Gifford

If you ever read any of my old IBJ columns, or have had any exposure to my sense of humor, you had to know that it was only a matter of time before I went haiku on you.  After all, how could I possibly go to Japan, write a blog, and not at some point invoke the literary cliche and mangle a beautiful form of ancient poetry?

So with just a few minutes of internet time left here before heading off to Narita, I thought I'd capture a few moments from our trip in the traditional three metrical phrases of 5, 7, and 5 moras or on (syllables, in English).

China, then Japan;

New friends, ideas, prospects.

Mission: successful.

Always moving, he

Goes from meeting to meeting:

it's my man Mitch-san.

"One in a million."
Special here, but not so much
When you're in China.

 

Language barriers

can fall with patient efforts.

Translators help, too.

 

Eating adventures:

New tastes, smells and textures; but --

Food should not move, right?

 

Standing in gift shop,

calculating exchange rate.

Gotta yen for that?

 

Twelve days on the road.

Good reason to come home now:

No clean underwear.


We are wheels up from Narita in about 4 hours; should be on the ground in Indianapolis at 6:30 Wednesday night.  See you all then.

A Personal Reflection On This Trip to Japan

Tuesday, September 15, 2009 by Ron Gifford
I had my first personal experience with Japan nearly 32 years ago to the day.

I was a long-haired skinny 18-year-old from tiny New Buffalo, Michigan (pop. 2,000), the first one in my family to go to college and generally unsophisticated about world affairs.  As I checked in at the East Quad dorm reception desk to start my freshman year at the University of Michigan, I learned that my roommate, a guy named Andrew Mylnarchik, had already arrived.  

I figured the guy's parents were Polish or Slavic;  I grew up with a lot of kids like that.  So imagine my surprise when I opened the door to my room and saw a 6-foot tall Japanese guy standing there, smoking a cigarette and drinking a glass of Scotch.

Oh, Toto, we don't know where we are.  Wrong room, maybe? 

My new roommate stuck out his hand.  "Hi, I'm Andrew Mylnarchik.  I'm from Tokyo.  Pleased to meet you."

And thus began the most unlikely of friendships that brought together two young kids who were literally and figuratively worlds apart from each other. 

I shared that story with several members of our delegation last night as I introduced them to Andrew-san at the Friends of Indiana reception that Governor Daniels hosted at the conclusion of our stay here. 

Here's the quick backstory:  Andrew grew up in Tokyo.  His dad, Roy Mlynarchik, is a first-generation Russian-American; drafted into the Army from Harvard during World War II, he was stationed in Tokyo at the end of the war.  Given his Russian language skills, Mr. Mylnarchik was quickly recruited by the State Department, and served our country for 40+ years in Tokyo.  (It was good to see him again this past weekend; still sharp and engaged on geopolitical events.)

Well, as these things happen, Roy fell in love with a Japanese woman, married her and had a son, whom they named Andrew.   Andy went to St. Mary's International School in Tokyo, and when it came time to go to college, decided that U-Michigan was the right place to go.  I'm sure he never anticipated the culture shock of living with me! (Actually, I am sure, because he's told me that several times over the years.)

After graduation, Andrew moved back to Tokyo and began a distinguished career in the financial services and banking industries.  The last time we saw each other, before this weekend, was in 1987, when Andy spent a long weekend with Kathy and me in Indy.  But over the years we've stayed in touch, first by cards and letters, and then more recently with email.  So this trip provided a great chance for me to meet his family and see Tokyo and surrounding areas with an excellent tour guide.  And true to our deal, Andrew refused to spill the beans when Governor Daniels and others asked him last night if he had any good dirt on me from our college years. 

I'm going to share one other story with you about Andrew that also has an Indiana connection, or more accurately stated, a Purdue connection.

But first let me tell you a fact that will become more relevant in a bit:  did you know that of all the colleges and universities in America, Purdue has one of, if not the highest number of international students enrolled in its programs?  And Indiana University has a very large number of international students as well.  Each year, thousands of bright, connected, ambitious international students spend time in our state, learning not just about their fields of study but also a little bit about Indiana, which they take back home with them. 

So I'm up at Purdue last spring, speaking to a group of upperclass students in a Krannert business school class.  I had lunch with about 20 of the students afterward, and what interested me was the fact that more than half of the students were from other countries, and particularly Asia.  One of the students asked me a "brain drain" kind of question: did I think it was a bad thing that so many of the international students were going to go back home, and not stay in Indiana. 

Not at all, I told them.  Sure, we'd love to have these smart young minds stay in Indiana, but it's also pretty naive to think that most of the international students will do that.  So I'm happy to have them spend time here before going home, for at least two reasons:  first, we're sending potential ambassadors for Indiana all over the world, and as those students become business, civic or government leaders, we will have good friends to work with in those countries.  Second, I pretty much told them the same story I shared with you at the beginning of this post; and I reflected on my own experience of having had a roommate from Tokyo, and how good it's been on many levels to have maintained that friendship. 

The lunch ended, and one of the class' graduate assistants came up to me.  "I know your old roommate," she told me incredulously.  After college she'd moved from Texas to Tokyo, and interned at a firm where Andrew worked.  "I recognized his name right away, and he's still exactly as you described him."

So just because it's a cliche doesn't mean it's not true:  it is a small world.  And my personal lesson from 32 years ago has been reinforced by the lessons we continued to learn on this trip: people who live on opposite sides of the globe, but who share similar values, goals and aspirations, can build long-lasting friendships that continue to teach us, engage us, and nurture us.

By the way, 32 years later, Andrew and I concluded that we pretty much look the same as we did as young men.  We haven't changed one bit, other than perhaps for our failing eyesight.