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Standing up against what's wrong for Milwaukee: Part 2
 
By Steve Jagler RSS Feed Twitter Feed
Special to OnMilwaukee.com

E-mail author | Author bio
More articles by Steve Jagler

What is a blog?  For us it is a short blurb that we write when the mood strikes us.  It can be first person, funny or informative. In short, a blog is whatever we want it to be. Published Feb. 1, 2008 at 9:12 a.m.
Tags: belling, sykes, ceo, milwaukee 7

As you may know, in the past couple of weeks, I have been just hammered on the air and in print by Milwaukee radio bullies Mark Belling and Charlie Sykes.

It all started when I wrote a blog for OnMilwaukee.com that relayed the comments five local chief executive officers made about what a terrible place Milwaukee is to do business.

Several bloggers and dozens of business and civic people thanked me for standing up for Milwaukee.

However, the radio guys took my blog completely out of context and attacked me. In reality, my blog repeated the CEOs' comments about Milwaukee. My blog simply questioned whether any greater good comes to the region when five of its CEOs publicly trash the Milwaukee area as a terrible place to do business during a Public Policy Forum event intended to help the region attract global talent.

Furthermore, the CEOs' public condemnations came when the Milwaukee 7 initiative is doing everything it can to convince Miller/Coors to locate its combined headquarters here, instead of Denver.

Contrary to what the radio boys claimed, my blog did NOT say the CEOs' comments were wrong or even misguided. My blog did NOT say the Milwaukee region does not have its problems.

But you wouldn't know that by what Belling and Sykes said and wrote. You see, the truth is often trampled when it does not fit snugly into their agendas.

However, unlike most of the local people, public servants, organizations and businesses that Belling and Sykes criticize on a daily basis, I do have a forum or two for rebuttal.

And rebut, I shall.

To be sure, the Milwaukee region DOES have its challenges. They include, in no particular order, high property taxes; redundant layers of government; inner city poverty, unemployment and crime; a struggling Milwaukee Public Schools system; and limited public mass transit.

But we need to keep some perspective here.

  • The City of Milwaukee gave more than $26 million in financial incentives for Manpower Inc. to build a parking garage at its new Downtown headquarters. The city gave more than $2 million in assistance for Bucyrus International Inc. to expand in Milwaukee. The fact that the CEOs of those companies held out their hands, asking for all of the public taxpayer support they could get on one day, and then turned around and stabbed the city in the back at the Public Policy Forum was not lost on many people at the City of Milwaukee Birthday Party Tuesday night.
  • Milwaukee's Menomonee River Valley is chock full of companies that have moved or plan to move from the suburbs, including Taylor Dynamometer Inc. (from New Berlin), Proven Direct (from Menomonee Falls), Derse Inc. (from Wauwatosa) and Sigma Group (from Oak Creek). Others such as Palermo Villa Inc. and Caleffi North America Inc. already have moved and are growing in the valley.
  • Cambridge Major Laboratories Inc., a Germantown-based manufacturer and developer of pharmaceutical ingredients, is planning to build a new 120,000-sq. ft. facility near its existing headquarters. The project will cost more than $100 million and create about 50 new jobs.
  • Sargento Foods Inc. plans major expansions for its Wisconsin plants in Plymouth, Hilbert and Kiel, where it plans to create up to 500 new jobs over the next five years. Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle announced this week that Sargento will receive $3 million in Enterprise Development Zone tax credits and $1.25 million in additional state assistance to help with the expansions.
  • Developer and philanthropist Joseph Zilber is developing the former Pabst Brewery site and, knowing Mr. Zilber, I have no doubt that it will be a first-class venue.
  • Progress is starting to pick up speed in the Park East Corridor.
  • Milwaukee's Historic Third Ward continues to be reborn with bustling businesses and condominium projects that just a few years ago were unimaginable.

And the hits keep coming.

As the Small Business Times reported in a recent cover story, the City of Milwaukee is now plotting a revival in the 30th Street Industrial Corridor, building on the catalysts of $3 million in state tax credits for businesses that relocate to the Tower Automotive site, $1.7 million in tax incremental financing (TIF) for DRS Power & Control Technologies Inc. to improve the neighborhood, $500,000 from the Milwaukee Department of Public Works to make streetscape improvements and several other components of public assistance that are helping companies such as Master Lock Co., United Milwaukee Scrap LLC and Glenn Rieder Architectural Millwork & Custom Interior Contracting expand in the city.

Uline Inc. of Waukegan, Ill., recently announced it will move its headquarters across the state line to Pleasant Prairie, bringing 1,000 jobs to a region that is supposedly a terrible place to do business. Uline is investing about $100 million in this God-awful place. The company received more than $6 million in incentives and aid from the State of Wisconsin to come here. In addition to Uline, several other Chicago area-based firms recently have opted to build facilities in Kenosha County instead of northern Illinois, including Vernon Hills-based Rust-Oleum Corp. and Lake Forest Village-based Hospira Inc. Plus, Abbott Labs has purchased 482 acres in Pleasant Prairie with plans to eventually build a massive office and research complex.

And guess what? Business advocates in northern Illinois are now screaming because Wisconsin is luring away so many of their businesses. At a recent meeting of the Lake County Chamber of Commerce in Independence Grove, Lake County Partners president Dave Young blamed Illinois' "unfriendly business climate" for the flight of businesses TO Wisconsin.

"We have a governor (in Illinois) who goes out of his way to antagonize the business community," Young said at the luncheon, according to the Lake County News-Sun. "Unfortunately, right next door in Kenosha County, Gov. Jim Doyle is very adept at business recruitment and actually enjoys it."

Hello? Must be a parallel universe, I guess.

I'm reminded of comments made by CenterPoint Properties chief executive officer Michael Mullen, who told the SBT Commercial Real Estate Conference audience a couple years ago that Milwaukee should embrace its place as a de facto suburb of Chicago. Why? Because the Milwaukee region's labor costs are lower, our land is cheaper, our tax rates are lower, our workforce is better trained and it's easier to get around here, Mullen said.

Wisconsin has many competitive advantages, Mullen said.

So, let's use them. On Milwaukee!



More Information ...
Steve Jagler is executive editor of Small Business Times in Milwaukee.

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9 comments about this article.
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Recent Talkbacks ...

Posted by boomerang on Feb. 1, 2008 at 9:43 p.m. (report)

The CEO's are right, I just moved back from Chicago (grew up in Shorewood) after a 17 years. Milwaukee has begun a tremendous change, the bars, neighborhoods have all changed for the positive, in a great way. But what remains in MKE is a bizarre, socialist, retroactive thinking towards business and the world around us. The CEO's in the article are merely speaking what they know: Your kids, your company, and you are competing globally and in the US against people that want to achieve; and they are willing to work harder, complain less and do what it takes to do so. If you don't feel comfortable with that, enjoy it while you can: your children will be great at cleaning Chinese, Indian, and Russian homes.

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Posted by chksng19 on Feb. 1, 2008 at 9:28 p.m. (report)

As a counselor to small businesses trying to get established in our area, I'd say Milwaukee is a fine area to locate a business! There are things people who live here do not realize; qualities of life which go unrecognized by locals... but jump out at you once you move elsewhere. I've lived in 22 states, and finally got to move my family back to Wisconsin. The warm friendliness of people here shocked my Oklahoma-born wife, as did the willingness of people to help in emergencies. And many, many other things. I for one KNOW Milwaukee and the whole area are wonderful for new business.

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Posted by Realist on Feb. 1, 2008 at 9:05 p.m. (report)

"Greedy CEO's can't get wealthy?????" Does anyone know anything about economics? You need those people to create JOBS. Stop making this a Liberal vs. Conservative issue.

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Posted by rufus on Feb. 1, 2008 at 5:13 p.m. (report)

This blog was right on, all the way down the line. He took the high road and made a great case to the fact that things ARE getting done here. That part about the Illinois guy crying out loud because Wisconsin gets it and is stealing away all of their businesses makes the Milwaukee radio blowhards look absolutely stupid. What is it about this town that makes us want to drag ourselves down all the time? And these radio guys ... I am sick of their hot air. They trash this town and this state every day. They are perpetually offended about something or someone. One day it's racial minorities. The next day it's gays. The next day it's environmentalists. Today, I guess it was a business journalist's turn. These guys have lost all their credibility. I don't even listen to them anymore. They contribute absolutely nothing of redeeming value to this region. They're just full of themselves. And they hate it when someone dares to challenge their myopic viewpoints.

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Posted by KIDJRVILLA on Feb. 1, 2008 at 3:20 p.m. (report)

"Milwaukee region DOES have its challenges" - Forgot the Rich Arrogant CEOs that cry and complain about a city they get wealthy from. They probably paid the conservative media to attack back for posting them comments. I guess if they are wealthy, why not send someone else to fight their battles?

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Show me the other 4 Talkbacks
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