HomeMy WebLinkAboutChapter 6 - Economic Competiveness FINAL MC doneRosemount 2040 Comprehensive Plan Chapter 6 – Economic Competiveness
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CHAPTER 6: ECONOMIC COMPETIVENESS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ELEMENT
ROSEMOUNT EMPLOYMENT BASE AND RESIDENT E MPLOYMENT
Rosemount is uniquely situated in the southeast Twin Cities metro area with prime access to
highways, ports and the regional airport. US Highway 52, a four-lane, north to south running
highway, connects Rosemount to Rochester and the Mayo Clinic and downtown St. Paul; the four-
lane, east to west running, County Road 42 connects Rosemount to Hastings and Burnsville and to
major routes leading into downtown Minneapolis; and the Mississippi River is on Rosemount’s
northeast boundary, including three barge terminals. The location of Rosemount’s economic base is
also uniquely situated compared to its population base. The majority of Rosemount’s households
are located in the western third of the City, while Rosemount businesses, industry, and institutions
are spread throughout the community. Taking advantage of these economic development
opportunities during the next 20 years will be the purpose of the Economic Competitiveness Section
of the Comprehensive Plan.
Table 6-1 shows the ten businesses and institutions that employ the most workers within
Rosemount. Two of the top three employers are educational institutions: Rosemount – Apple
Valley – Eagan – Independent School District #196 and Dakota County Technical College. It will
be important for Rosemount to maintain cooperative relationships with these institutions, not only
because of their importance as employers
within the City, but also to ensure that their
education programs prepare trained workers
for current and future Rosemount
businesses. Table 6-1 also shows that seven
of the remaining eight large employers are
manufacturing or industrial in nature. This
illustrates the importance of industrial
business for employment within the
community, and also points to opportunities
for additional tax base expansion into other
business sectors such as retail, services, or
financial.
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Table 6-1: Rosemount Top Ten Employers in 2018
Product or Service Employees
Flint Hills Resources Oil Refining 863
Rosemount Apple Valley Eagan
School District #196
Education 767
Dakota County Technical College Education 373
Proto Labs Prototyping and Production 300
Wayne Transports Trucking 300
Spectro Alloys Aluminum Smelting 179
Endres Processing Recycled Food Products 90
City of Rosemount Municipal Government 80
Eldorado Packaging Multiwall Bags 75
Minnesota Energy Resources Natural Gas 55
Source: City of Rosemount
Table 6-2 shows that 12,243 Rosemount residents were employed in 2015, while there were only
7,822 jobs offered by businesses within Rosemount, which requires over 4,400 people leaving
Rosemount to find employment. When looking at the various industries in which residents are
employed, the disparity between where residents work and what employment opportunities are
available in Rosemount is most marked in four industries: Retail Trade; Finance, Insurance, and Real
Estate (FIRE); Professional, Scientific Management and Administrative; and Educational, Health
and Social Services.
Of the four industries listed above, all but Retail Trade offer average wages that match Rosemount’s
level of household income. For example, in the professional, scientific, management and
administration (professional) industry, there are 1,329 Rosemount residents employed within this
field while there are only 223 jobs available in the City, creating an employment pool of 1,106
workers. Table 6-3 shows the average yearly wage for jobs within Rosemount for a worker in a
professional field is $51,447, while the metro area
average yearly wage is $68,744. Professional
businesses would typically be located within the
commercial, corporate campus or business park
land use designations of the Comprehensive Plan.
Commuting habits of Rosemount residents
reaffirm that much of the employment for
Rosemount residents is located outside of the City
borders. Approximately 43% of residents commute
to a place of employment located outside of
Dakota County. Additionally, 40% of all residents
have commute times longer than 30 minutes.
Providing places of employment within the
community for Rosemount workers will reduce the overall cost of commuting and strengthen the
local economy. Reduced commuting costs can have a positive impact on the local economy by
freeing up income that would normally be spent getting to and from work for more discretionary
spending.
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The City should recruit businesses in the financial, insurance, and real estate (FIRE) and other
professional industries to locate within Rosemount. There is a significant amount of Rosemount
residents who are employed in these fields from which the new businesses could draw their
employees. It is anticipated that there will be a continued labor shortage over the next decade as the
population ages and the birth rate declines. The commute information, coupled with the education
attainment of Rosemount residents, serves as a proxy for an available workforce in the City. In the
future, with additional residential growth, promoting the availability of a community workforce will
be one of the City’s business attraction strategies.
Table 6-2: Comparison of Employees to Employers within Rosemount in 2015
Rosemount
Residents
Employed by
each Industry
Number of Employees
in Rosemount
Businesses by Industry
Deficiency of Jobs
within Rosemount to
match Resident's Place
of Employment
Agriculture 33 0 -33
Arts, Entertainment, Recreation and
Food Service 950 42 -908
Construction 358 1,214 856
Educational, Health and Social Services 2,742 1561 -1,181
Finance and Insurance, and Real Estate 1,300 120 -1,180
Information 350 16 334
Manufacturing 1,296 1,962 666
Other Services (Except Public
Administration) 575 154 -421
Professional, Scientific, Management
and Administrative 1,329 223 -1,106
Public Administration 540 318 222
Retail Trade 1,391 224 -1167
Transportation, Warehousing and
Utilities 909 1,133 224
Wholesale Trade 470 86 -384
Total 12,243 7,822 -4421
Source: Minnesota Department of Economic Development and US Census Bureau
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Table 6-3: Rosemount Industries in 2012
Establishments Employees Total Wages
Average
Weekly Wage
Average
Yearly Wage
Accommodation and Food Services 29 466 $5,105,000 $210 $10,954
Administrative Support and Waste
Management & Remediation Services 23 207 $8,089,000 $751 $39,077
Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing,
Hunting and Mining 4 32 $1,846,751 $1,127 $57,711
Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation 12 87 $866,000 $191 $9,954
Construction 59 811 $46,605,926 $1,105 $57,467
Health Care and Social Assistance 36 393 $7,502,000 $367 $19,089
Manufacturing 19 1440 $138,167,000 $1,845 $95,949
Other Services (Except Public
Administration) 27 221 $6,999,000 $609 $31,669
Professional, Scientific, and Technical
Services 55 94 $4,836,000 $989 $51,447
Public Administration 3 43 $2,279,736 $1,020 $53,017
Real Estate, Rental and Leasing 9 14 $386,000 $530 $27,571
Retail Trade 34 347 $8,250,000 $457 $23,775
Transportation, Warehousing and
Utilities 20 706 $44,792,000 $1,220 $63,445
Source: Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development
ROSEMOUNT PORT AUTHO RITY
In 1979, the City of Rosemount established the Rosemount Housing and Redevelopment Authority
(HRA), which implemented a number of projects, most notably the Rosemount Plaza block located
southeast of the intersection of 145th Street West and South Robert Trail. In 1991, the City
converted the HRA into the Rosemount Port Authority for the purpose of undertaking housing,
economic development, and redevelopment activities within the City. The Port Authority has seven
members consisting of up to five Councilmembers including the Mayor, and at least two appointed
residents.
The Port Authority sets the economic development policy for the City, acquires and demolishes
buildings on blighted and underutilized land for redevelopment, and recruit’s new businesses to
locate within Rosemount, among other responsibilities. Many of the programs described within the
Economic Competitiveness Element, such as Downtown Redevelopment and the establishment of
the Rosemount Business Park, have been or are being accomplished through the work of the Port
Authority. The Port Authority is responsible for implementing the Goals and Objectives of the
Economic Competitiveness Section, as well as continuing to monitor the economic health of the
City while recruiting new business and encouraging the growth of existing businesses. Since the last
Comprehensive Plan the Port Authority has taken a more active role in highlighting local businesses
through the City’s website, business appreciation events, and has introduced a Home and Business
Expo.
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DOWNTOWN REDEVLOPMENT
The City of Rosemount originally adopted a redevelopment plan for Downtown Rosemount in 2004
entitled the Development Framework for Downtown Rosemount. That plan was updated and approved in
2018 to reflect changes that have taken
place in Downtown since the plan’s
original adoption. The Framework
covers the properties in the historic
Downtown, roughly described as the
blocks on both sides of South Robert
Trail from 143rd Street West on the
north to approximately 148th Street on
the south. The Framework addresses
seven focus areas within Downtown:
Crossroads North; Crossroads South;
Core Block West; Core Block East;
Legion Block; Genz-Ryan; and
Fluegel’s. The Framework Update
considers expansion of Downtown to
increase the ability for redevelopment on those blocks unaffected by previous public and private
reinvestment. The Update also acknowledges those blocks that have been redeveloped and the
private investment that has occurred on many of the Downtown parcels.
To help spur Downtown redevelopment, in 2004 the City established the Downtown-Brockway
Redevelopment Tax Increment Financing (TIF) district. The TIF district uses increased tax income
(also known as tax increment) from the former Brockway Glass factory redevelopment into the
Harmony residential neighborhood to pay for land acquisition, land clearing, and infrastructure costs
associated with Downtown redevelopment. TIF funds were used for infrastructure and parking
space construction instrumental in the redevelopment of Core Block East, land acquisition at the
former Genz-Ryan site, and land acquisition of the Downtown park and ride transit station. The
funds also assisted in demolition of the Brockway Glass factory, which permitted construction of a
mixed residential neighborhood, Harmony.
Since 2008, the City has received almost
$1.4 million from the Metropolitan
Council’s Livable Community
Demonstration Account (LCDA) grant
for land acquisition costs and
infrastructure improvements for
redevelopment projects such as The
Rosemount Senior Living and
Cambrian Commons senior apartments.
The goal of public inputs into
Downtown redevelopment is to spur
private sector investment in other
Downtown properties. The
Downtown has seen major renovations
of both the First State Bank of Rosemount and Fluegel’s Farm, Garden & Pet, along with
reinvestment in several of the structures within the Downtown area over the past ten years.
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The City has been active in the redevelopment of other blocks with particular attention on the old St
Joe’s church block. Acquisition was prompted by the need to dedicate land for a County library. The
remainder of the site was parceled off for private development of The Rosemount Senior Living
center along with the Steeple Center, a community space dedicated to seniors and the arts, and also
used by a variety of community groups. The City also facilitated installation of the Downtown park
and ride by providing a low-cost lease to MVTA and partnering to obtain federal funding for the
facility. Many of the Downtown projects have been a collaborative effort both through financing
and design with other public and private partners.
Finally, the City has established the Downtown Code Improvement Program that provides grant
funding for improvements to bring the existing Downtown buildings into compliance with the
building code. Program eligibility is for any business or property owner whose building is listed
within the Framework and who is making exterior and façade improvements to the building in
accordance with the Downtown Rosemount Design Guidelines. To encourage the reinvestment in façade
improvements, business and property owners who pay with their own funds for façade
improvements can request public funds to pay for code improvements to their building.
BUSINESS RECRUITMENT , ASSISTANCE, AND RE TENTION
To support small businesses and promote entrepreneurship in Rosemount, Open to Business is
available to provide one-on-one business counseling to current and prospective business owners at
no cost. Consultants provide assistance with business plan development and marketing strategies,
among other things. Additionally, business owners can learn about other resources such as training
programs, governmental services, and networking opportunities. This program is a collaborative
effort between the Dakota County
Community Development Agency
and the City. The City also
partners with the Dakota County
Regional Chamber of Commerce
to connect with businesses and
understand the needs and
concerns of business leaders in
the community. The City’s
website provides online resources
for new business owners and
entrepreneurs. A “virtual
incubator” directs business
owners to other agencies that can
assist with business financing,
networking and other business
advice.
The City works closely with the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic
Development and Greater MSP to respond to requests for information by businesses that are
looking to relocate, particularly those businesses that are looking for greenfield sites on which to
construct new facilities. The City shares data regarding municipal services, site details,
transportation, as well as any other specific information requested. For example, there is a Shovel
Ready site within the Rosemount Business Park that is enrolled in the DEED Shovel Ready
Program. The City has also participated in Xcel Energy’s site certification program. Similar to the
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State’s shovel ready program, the certification provides desired background information for
companies looking to locate in Rosemount. There are currently three sites within the community
highlighted in the Xcel program.
The City’s relationships with the educational institutions within Rosemount, such as Rosemount-
Apple Valley-Eagan School District #196 and Dakota County Technical College, and the greater
region, such as Inver Hills Community College and the University of Minnesota, are important for
business recruitment and the health of the local economy. Another good resource for information
and employee training is the Dakota-Scott Workforce Investment Board. Businesses that are looking
to locate within Rosemount have concerns about whether there is an existing base of well-educated
employees to recruit from. Businesses also seek local educational institutions that have training
programs to create new workers and provide continuing training and education for existing
employees. It is important for Rosemount to work with local educational institutions to ensure that
their training programs will support the needs of existing businesses within Rosemount and
provided a well-educated employee pool for future businesses to draw from.
ROSEMOUNT BUSINESS P ARK
The City established the Rosemount Business Park, which contains about 280 acres of contiguous
land, roughly bounded by County Road 42 to the north, a line one-quarter of a mile north of County
Road 46 to the south, Biscayne Avenue to the east, and the Union Pacific rail line and South Robert
Trail to the west. The Rosemount Business Park was initiated when the City purchased 80 acres of
land and established a TIF district to provide initial infrastructure to the park. The original 80 acres
have since been developed with seven buildings currently housing businesses such as Proto Labs,
Sweet Harvest, and Geometrix. Approximately 35 acres located south of Boulder Trail has been
designated as Shovel Ready by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic
Development. Sites that are certified as Shovel Ready have already undergone the most time-
consuming legal, technical, and regulatory
aspects of the development process. The
Shovel Ready site within the Business
Park has received preliminary plat
approval for future subdivision as well as
a Phase I environmental review.
There are two main landowners within the
larger Business Park area: The Pahl Family
and JJT Financial. The City keeps in
regular contact with both landowners and
works with their representatives in
business attraction and marketing of sites.
The City has worked with the Minnesota
Department of Transportation to define
the road alignment in the area, identifying the location of the next intersection along Hwy 3. The
plan is to have Business Parkway extend to the south and intersect with Hwy 3, across from Canada
Circle, providing necessary access for businesses in the Park from either Hwy 3 or County Road 42.
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RETAIL COMMERCIAL
The City currently has about 130 acres of land developed with retail commercial uses. The retail
businesses are predominately located either in Downtown Rosemount or in a district west of South
Robert Trail and south of County Road 42. The businesses are predominately small service retail
businesses, several restaurants, and two grocery stores. Vacant retail commercial space occurs
through normal turnover in existing retail strip malls, although vacancies for the last several years
have hovered around 5%. This is in part due to the size of the retail sector and the effect of one
larger retail vacancy skewing the overall rate. Often many of the retail centers do not have a vacancy
when reviewed, which occurs generally on a quarterly basis. The City has made a commitment to
attract additional retail and services to the community for the growing residential base. This has led
to contracting with retail attraction companies to aid in drawing new businesses to the City. The City
has also looked to bring a hotel to town and facilitated discussions with several companies,
developers, and landowners to bring the needed service to Rosemount. Twice the City has financed
a hotel market study to draw interest.
Commercial land available for new development is located east of Hwy 3, at the intersection of
County Road 42, and also at the 42/Akron Avenue intersection. These are projected for
development in the next decade as the community continues to grow. Anticipated residential
development within the University of Minnesota’s UMore property will also provide a catalyst for
additional retail and service demand. It is anticipated that some of the 3,000 acres designated for
development will include retail and business opportunities. The City sees the Akron Avenue
commercial area as a key attraction for new residential growth both to the north and south, and also
to serve the established Dakota County Technical College. Additional lands have been designated
for commercial at the Hwy 52/County Road 42 and Hwy 55/County Road 42 intersections. These
areas are projected to develop in the later years of the Comprehensive Plan time horizon. Care must
be taken to maintain these parcels for future commercial uses. Commercial development often
follows residential, so there is a lag in its development. The City should be patient with these
outlying sites to ensure there are valuable opportunities in the future. Current inquiries for these
sites are often commercial entities with little retail or service value for community residents and
often involve significant amounts of outside storage. These uses should be discouraged on the high
visibility, high traffic sites in favor of more traditional retail and service functions.
At present, there are no general merchandise, home improvement, or other types of big box stores
in Rosemount. For this reason, most Rosemount residents leave the City to fulfill their daily or
weekly shopping needs, typically to the communities to the west and north, such as Eagan, Apple
Valley, Burnsville, and Lakeville. Recent efforts to solicit big box businesses to Rosemount have
been unsuccessful for a number of reasons, but businesses most commonly cited the lack of direct
controlled access to major roads and the lack of residential density. Over 6,400 additional
households are expected to be constructed by 2040, which is an increase of 76% over the 8,400
households within Rosemount today. The City continues to build relationships with local and
regional commercial brokers to highlight growth and development within the community. One of
the ways to encourage good quality commercial development is to make sure there is enough land
for commercial/service development with zoning ordinances that are clear about development
expectations. Existing zoning ordinances should be reviewed to address emerging commercial uses.
A recent trend is private recreational and medical uses moving to traditional strip mall locations.
Ordinances should be written to provide the greatest flexibility to development owners so that they
can maintain reasonable occupancy without negatively affecting surrounding land uses.
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OFFICE COMMERCIAL
Rosemount has minimal office space, with the current office supply normally occupied with either
professional offices, such as dentists or insurance agents, or associated with existing manufacturing
or industrial businesses.
As shown in Table 2, there are over 1,300 Rosemount residents who are working in the finance,
insurance, and real estate (FIRE) field, while Rosemount FIRE businesses employ only 120 people.
This deficiency of about 1,200 residents who need to leave Rosemount to work in the FIRE field
would indicate that there is a need for additional office space within Rosemount. Table 2 also shows
a deficiency of over 1,100 residents who leave Rosemount to work in the professional, scientific,
management, and administrative field. Lastly, over 1,100 residents leave the community to work in
educational, health, and social services.
The Comprehensive Plan should designate commercial and corporate campus land to support
independent standalone office buildings, and to ensure as well the ability to provide office space
needed in conjunction with manufacturing and industrial businesses. Zoning ordinances should be
reviewed to make sure they allow services within commercial office areas to increase economic
viability of developments.
INDUSTRIAL
Rosemount has a long history of industrial development, from manufacturing facilities near
Downtown, such as Greif Paper and the former Brockway Glass factory, to heavier industrial on the
east near US Hwy 52, such as Flint Hills Refinery, Spectro Alloys, Endres Processing, and CF
Industries. More recently, industrial development has occurred in the form of office/warehouse and
manufacturing industrial within the Rosemount Business Park and trucking terminals near the
interchange with US Hwy 52 and County Road 42.
While Rosemount is discouraging new heavy industrial or other industrial businesses that require
significant amounts of outdoor storage, Rosemount does encourage new manufacturing,
warehousing, and trade industrial businesses to locate within Rosemount. Consistent with that
policy, the Comprehensive Plan indicates that no additional Heavy Industrial land should be zoned
given the current amount of land dedicated to these uses. These businesses bring jobs that can
support an entire family while providing a significant industrial property tax base. Table 2 shows
that nearly 400 Rosemount residents in the wholesale trade field need to leave Rosemount to work
every day. Continuing to provide sufficient business park and industrial/mixed use land within the
Comprehensive Plan would allow these businesses to locate within Rosemount. The City is
partnering with individual property owners, DEED and Xcel Energy to highlight available vacant
industrial land. Both the University of Minnesota and The Pahl Family Farm have industrial acreage
being marketed through various channels. These sites are also featured as Shovel Ready sites in the
DEED and Xcel programs.
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UMORE PARK
The University of Minnesota owns about 5,000 contiguous acres of land, 3,000 acres of which is
located in southern Rosemount and 2,000 acres of which are located in northern Empire Township.
The University has used the land as a research farm named the University of Minnesota Outreach,
Research and Education (UMore) Park. The 2040 Plan will be the first time land uses have been
assigned to property within the UMore area. The designations are in anticipation of mixed
development occurring, generally along the County Road 42 corridor. There is industrial land
designated east of Dakota County Technical College. These lands have been marketed in response
to several RFP’s for large vacant tracts of land. The AUAR indicated that this area could be a mix of
industrial and commercial uses, which would also be acceptable. Presently the City is designating the
property industrial, given the level of interest for this use. When additional development occurs on
the UMore site, some of the land use boundaries will become more defined.
A mix of residential development, with some ancillary services, is anticipated west of Dakota County
Technical College. Currently the University Board of Regents has approved a purchase agreement
with a master developer; the sale has not as yet occurred. Development within the UMore area will
change the character of the community and care must be taken to ensure that its development
complements existing Rosemount neighborhoods. Although part of the University landholdings, the
site is within Rosemount and should be planned to be harmonious with the community and not a
separate neighborhood unto itself. UMore’s development will also assist in drawing additional
retail/service uses as population and household densities continue to increase. Certainly adding
additional households will bring available workers to future businesses within Rosemount.
FISCAL DISPARITY
In the seven county Twin Cities metropolitan (metro) area, the tax base gained from new
commercial or industrial growth is shared by the entire metro area, not solely by the community in
which the economic development occurs. This commercial and industrial (C/I) tax base sharing
program is called fiscal disparity. Since 1971, forty percent (40%) of the tax base of any new C/I
development is taken from the local community and given to a common metro area pool. This
common pool is then redistributed to all the communities based on their total tax base (commercial,
industrial, residential, and agricultural). Essentially, fiscal disparity takes tax base from communities
that have seen significant economic development since 1971 and gives it to communities where
post-1971 commercial/industrial development is a small percentage of their total tax base. Various
justifications are given for this program, most notably to discourage individual communities from
competing for the same new businesses.
Fiscal disparity has historically taken C/I tax base from the first and second ring suburbs along the
I-494 and I-694 strip that have seen significant growth since 1971 (Bloomington, Minnetonka,
Eagan) and given it to the inner cities who had significant C/I tax base prior to 1971 (Minneapolis
and Saint Paul) or to suburban communities that have lower levels of C/I tax base compared to
their total tax base (Cottage Grove, Apple Valley, Prior Lake). Minneapolis has seen significant
growth in C/I tax base leading to reversal of that trend. Table 6-4, attached to this executive
summary, shows that in 2016 Minneapolis lost $3.3 million while Saint Paul gained $29 million in tax
base due to fiscal disparity. Table 4 also shows that Minnetonka lost $9.7 million in tax base while
Cottage Grove gained $2.9 million in tax base. Rosemount is affected fairly neutrally by fiscal
disparity, receiving only about $37,000 in tax base in 2016.
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Table 6-4: Fiscal Disparity of Select Cities Payable in 2016
Pre-1971 C/I
Tax Base
Post-1971 C/I
Tax Base
Total 2016
Tax Base
2014
Population
Fiscal
Disparity
Tax Base
Adjustment
Post-1971 C/I Tax
Base as a percentage
of Total 2016 Tax
Base
Prior Lake $278,935 $2,924,181 $30,471,969 24,911 $1,253,009 10%
Cottage Grove $537,275 $5,845,969 $30,784,863 35,250 $2,852,812 19%
Lakeville $1,215,214 $14,086,875 $65,746,835 59,361 $1,220,959 21%
Apple Valley $1,113,396 $10,882,278 $50,625,395 50,330 $1,994,871 21%
Rosemount $702,215 $6,634,755 $26,239,489 22,490 $36,956 25%
Saint Paul $25,299,251 $79,262,261 $239,695,221 299,641 $29,541,974 33%
Minneapolis $56,441,944 $181,464,021 $499,641,258 411,273 -$3,310,064 36%
Minnetonka $3,361,788 $38,370,443 $10,4503,721 51,144 -$9,744,736 37%
Eagan $2,654,377 $34,786,939 $91,004,063 66,810 -$5,810,075 38%
Source: Metropolitan Council
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ELEMENT GOALS AND P OLICIES
1. Provide local shopping opportunities for residents to purchase their daily and weekly
needs within Rosemount.
a. Work with the Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce to recruit more
retail commercial businesses to locate within Rosemount.
b. Provide retail commercial land adjacent to planned controlled accesses onto major
roads.
c. Provide retail commercial land near existing and planned households.
d. Continue to use the Downtown Code Improvement Plan, Twin Cities Community
Capital Fund, and similar programs to assist businesses to improve existing retail
commercial buildings.
e. Continue to actively market Rosemount to commercial brokers and retail businesses
through the Rosemount marketing strategy to expand the retail opportunities within
the City.
2. Expand Rosemount’s employment base to provide jobs that can support an
entire household.
a. Provide office commercial land to support businesses in the financial and
professional fields.
b. Provide additional light industrial land to support wholesale trade, warehousing, and
utility businesses.
c. Work cooperatively with Dakota County Technical College, Rosemount School
District #196 and other educational institutions within Dakota County to train
workers with the skills needed for existing and future Rosemount businesses.
d. Pursue outside funding sources to develop or redevelop land for commercial and
industrial uses, such as Metropolitan Council Livable Communities Demonstration
Account and Tax Base Revitalization Account, Dakota County Community
Development Agency, Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic
Development, and other applicable grants.
e. Continue to actively market Rosemount to commercial brokers and
appropriate businesses through the Rosemount marketing strategy to recruit
businesses that provide wages to support an entire household.
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3. Expand Rosemount’s employment base to provide employment opportunities for all
residents.
a. Provide land that would support a variety of commercial and industrial businesses to
ensure a sufficient mix of employment opportunities for all skilled Rosemount
residents.
b. Work cooperatively with the Dakota County Technical College, Rosemount School
District #196 and other educational institutions within Dakota County to train
workers with the skills needed for existing and future Rosemount businesses.
c. Pursue outside funding sources to develop or redevelop land for commercial and
industrial uses, such as Metropolitan Council Livable Communities Demonstration
Account and Tax Base Revitalization Account, Dakota County Community
Development Agency, Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic
Development, and other applicable grants.
d. Continue to actively market Rosemount to commercial brokers and appropriate
businesses through the Rosemount marketing strategy to recruit additional
businesses.
4. Balance economic growth within the overall tax base of Rosemount.
a. Provide land available for a balance of commercial and industrial businesses,
including expanding the retail and office commercial sectors while continuing to
support industrial businesses.
b. Work cooperatively with the Dakota County Technical College, Independent School
District #196 and other educational institutions within Dakota County to train
workers with the skills needed for existing and future Rosemount businesses.
c. Continue to provide for additional residential growth to serve as an expanding
employee pool for Rosemount business, a growing market to attract additional retail
establishments, and balanced tax base when considering the regional Fiscal Disparity
program.
5. Provide for economic development opportunities that create a vibrant Downtown
that maintains a hometown feel.
a. Continue Port Authority involvement in redevelopment projects that implements the
Development Framework for Downtown Rosemount.
b. Pursue outside funding sources to redevelop Downtown properties, such as
Metropolitan Council Livable Communities Demonstration Account and Tax Base
Revitalization Account, Dakota County Community Development Agency,
Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development, and other
applicable grants.
c. Continue to use the Downtown Code Improvement Plan, Twin Cities Community
Capital Fund, and similar programs to assist businesses to improve existing retail
commercial buildings and implement the Development Framework for Downtown
Rosemount and Downtown Design Guidelines.
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IMPLEMENTATION
1. Zoning and Subdivision Ordinances
Allocating sufficient land for commercial, light industrial, and business park uses will
capitalize on the large amount of quality available undeveloped land. A zoning ordinance
that allows for flexibility while also setting high standards for quality development will
encourage the creation of desirable jobs and commercial services.
2. Education and workforce development
Cooperation with Dakota County Technical College and local school districts to develop
curriculum and workforce development programming will support existing and future
Rosemount businesses by providing employees to meet the needs of existing and future
businesses.
3. Outside Funding Sources
The City is willing to support applications for funding sources such as the Livable
Community Demonstration Account and Tax Base Revitalization Account to support
projects that help achieve the City's economic development goals.
4. Tax Increment Financing (TIF) and Tax Abatement
Tax increment financing and tax abatement may be appropriate for developments that help
achieve City goals with regard to tax base enhancement, job creation, head of household job
creation or affordable housing. Site assembly and preparation are two examples of ways
these funds can be used.
5. Collaboration with Economic Development Partners
The City will continue to work with commercial brokers, government agencies such as the
Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development, and Greater MSP, to
actively market developable land and respond to requests for information.