Making CapitalForeign investment, export success drive economy
Sky High Texas ignites aerospace, aviation innovation
Ample Harvest Texas agriculture feeds and clothes the world
Wide open for buSineSSTexasBusinessClimate.com/Texas
SponSored by tHe eConoMiC developMent & touriSM div. offiCe of tHe Governor | 2012
Texas Midwest Community Network (TMCN) is a coalition of 27
counties in West-Central Texas that can help
your business grow and prosper. The TMCN
region is centrally located in the state of
Texas and is the geographic center of the
world’s largest free trade zone providing
easy access to east and west coasts, the
industrial Midwest and northeast, and the
large emerging markets in Mexico.
Our region’s low cost of doing business,
along with an educated, eager and
abundant workforce, create the perfect
environment for success. Join the industry
leaders in health care, alternative energy, oil
and gas, agriculture, metal fabrication, and
global manufacturing in
making the Texas
Midwest home. Put our
resources to work for your
company, and see for yourself
the benefits of doing business in
the Texas Midwest.
Texas Midwest Economic Development AllianceCommunities working together to accomplish what one community cannot do alone.(325) 795-8626 www.texasmidwest.org
TMCN ECoNoMiC DEvElopMENT AlliANCE MEMbErsDevelopment Corporation of Abilene www.developabilene.com
Aspermont Economic Development Corporation www.aspermonttexas.com
City of Ballinger, Community Development www.ballingertx.org
Brady Economic Development Corporation www.bradytx.com
Brownwood Economic Development Corporation www.brownwoodbusiness.com
Cisco Development Corporation www.ciscodc.com
Comanche Texas Economic Development Corporation www.tupresentscomanche.com/edc
De Leon Industrial Development Corporation www.cityofdeleon.org
Economic Development Corporation of Early Texas www.earlyecondev.com
Eastland Economic Development Corporation www.eastlandtexas.com
Eden Economic Development Corporation www.edentexas.com
Mitchell County Board of Economic Development www.mitchellcountyeconomicdevelopment.org
San Angelo Chamber of Commerce/ Economic Development www.sanangelo.org/uptown.php
Development Corporation of Snyder www.developsnyder.com
Stamford Economic Development Corporation www.stamfordtx.com
Sweetwater Enterprise for Economic Development Inc. www.sweetwatertexas.net
GROWING STRONGER … TOGETHER
BUSINESS CLIMATESkilled Workforce and Customized Traaining • Low Cost of Real Estate
Low Cost of Living • Pro-Business Attitude • Natural Resources
Thriving and Diversified Industries • Safe and Clean Environment
Quality of Life • Good Climate – Year Round
INDUSTRIESAlternative Energy • Wind and Solar • Oil and Gas
Information Technology • Education and Health Sciences
Light and Heavy Manufacturing • Metal Fabrication
Logistics and Distribution Centers • Agriculture
Leisure and Hospitality • Professional and Business Services
Local, State and Federal Government
HOME TODyess Air Force Base • Goodfellow Air Force Base
Texas Tech University College of Pharmacy and College of Nursing
Angelo State University • Texas State Technical College
Abilene Christian University • McMurry University
Hardin-Simmons University • Howard Payne University
Four Two-Year Community Colleges
Texas Midwest Community Network (TMCN) is a coalition of 27
counties in West-Central Texas that can help
your business grow and prosper. The TMCN
region is centrally located in the state of
Texas and is the geographic center of the
world’s largest free trade zone providing
easy access to east and west coasts, the
industrial Midwest and northeast, and the
large emerging markets in Mexico.
Our region’s low cost of doing business,
along with an educated, eager and
abundant workforce, create the perfect
environment for success. Join the industry
leaders in health care, alternative energy, oil
and gas, agriculture, metal fabrication, and
global manufacturing in
making the Texas
Midwest home. Put our
resources to work for your
company, and see for yourself
the benefits of doing business in
the Texas Midwest.
Texas Midwest Economic Development AllianceCommunities working together to accomplish what one community cannot do alone.(325) 795-8626 www.texasmidwest.org
TMCN ECoNoMiC DEvElopMENT AlliANCE MEMbErsDevelopment Corporation of Abilene www.developabilene.com
Aspermont Economic Development Corporation www.aspermonttexas.com
City of Ballinger, Community Development www.ballingertx.org
Brady Economic Development Corporation www.bradytx.com
Brownwood Economic Development Corporation www.brownwoodbusiness.com
Cisco Development Corporation www.ciscodc.com
Comanche Texas Economic Development Corporation www.tupresentscomanche.com/edc
De Leon Industrial Development Corporation www.cityofdeleon.org
Economic Development Corporation of Early Texas www.earlyecondev.com
Eastland Economic Development Corporation www.eastlandtexas.com
Eden Economic Development Corporation www.edentexas.com
Mitchell County Board of Economic Development www.mitchellcountyeconomicdevelopment.org
San Angelo Chamber of Commerce/ Economic Development www.sanangelo.org/uptown.php
Development Corporation of Snyder www.developsnyder.com
Stamford Economic Development Corporation www.stamfordtx.com
Sweetwater Enterprise for Economic Development Inc. www.sweetwatertexas.net
GROWING STRONGER … TOGETHER
BUSINESS CLIMATESkilled Workforce and Customized Traaining • Low Cost of Real Estate
Low Cost of Living • Pro-Business Attitude • Natural Resources
Thriving and Diversified Industries • Safe and Clean Environment
Quality of Life • Good Climate – Year Round
INDUSTRIESAlternative Energy • Wind and Solar • Oil and Gas
Information Technology • Education and Health Sciences
Light and Heavy Manufacturing • Metal Fabrication
Logistics and Distribution Centers • Agriculture
Leisure and Hospitality • Professional and Business Services
Local, State and Federal Government
HOME TODyess Air Force Base • Goodfellow Air Force Base
Texas Tech University College of Pharmacy and College of Nursing
Angelo State University • Texas State Technical College
Abilene Christian University • McMurry University
Hardin-Simmons University • Howard Payne University
Four Two-Year Community Colleges
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 9
Workstylelone Star Attraction 42Texas is home to film, television, video game development
deep pockets 48Two major shale plays fuel Texas energy sector
international flavor 56Foreign investment, export success drive economy
under the Microscope 64Texas biotech and life sciences industry breeds innovation
Heads in the Cloud 72New avenues open up for Texas technology
Sky High 78Texas ignites aerospace, aviation innovation
built for Success 86Manufacturing sector ramps up job production in Texas
Ample Harvest 94Texas agriculture feeds and clothes the world
Zoned in on Jobs 102Enterprise program helps communities promote investment
let nature take its Course 110In Texas, adventure is waiting just outside
Table of Contents continued on page 11
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on tHe Cover the texas State Capitol in Austin Photo by brian mccord
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 9
CAMERON INDUSTRIAL [email protected] • (254) 697- 4979
www.cameronindustrialfoundation.com
Where Quality of Life Meets Opportunity
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 11
insightoverview 21
business Almanac 25
business Climate 33
energy 118
technology 129
transportation 136
Health 147
education 156
livability 164
Gallery 175
economic development 183
economic profile 187
86 164
102
78
All or part of this magazine is printed with soy ink on recycled paper containing 10% post-consumer waste.
Please recycle this magazine
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 11
2012 Edition, volumE 3
dirEctor of contEnt BIll McMEEkIN ProofrEading managEr RavEN PETTycontEnt coordinator JEssIca WalkERStaff WritEr kEvIN lITWINcontributing WritErS PaMEla coylE, caRy EsTEs, JohN FullER, M.v. GREENE, MElaNIE kIlGoRE-hIll, JohN McBRydE, BETsy WIllIaMsSEnior graPhic dESignErS sTacEy allIs, lauRa GallaGhER, kRIs sExToN, JakE shoREs, vIkkI WIllIaMsgraPhic dESignErS ERIca laMPlEy, kaRa lEIBy,kacEy PassMoRESEnior PhotograPhErS JEFF adkINs, BRIaN MccoRdStaff PhotograPhErS Todd BENNETTcolor imaging tEchnician alIsoN huNTERintEgratEd mEdia managEr scoTT voNcaNNoN, MaTT McWhoRTER
ad Production managEr kaTIE MIddENdoRFad traffic aSSiStantS kRysTIN lEMMoN, PaTRIcIa MoIsaN
chairman GREG ThuRMaNPrESidEnt/PubliShEr BoB schWaRTzMaNExEcutivE vicE PrESidEnt Ray laNGENSEnior v.P./SalES Todd PoTTERSEnior v.P./oPErationS casEy hEsTERSEnior v.P./cliEnt dEvEloPmEnt JEFF hEEFNERSEnior v.P./agribuSinESS PubliShing kIM holMBERGv.P./buSinESS dEvEloPmEnt clay PERRyv.P./ExtErnal communicationS TEREE caRuThERsv.P./viSual contEnt MaRk FoREsTERv.P./contEnt oPErationS NaTasha loRENsv.P./travEl PubliShing susaN chaPPEllv.P./SalES RhoNda GRahaM, hERB haRPER, JaREk sWEkoskycontrollEr chRIs dudlEySEnior accountant lIsa oWENsaccountS PayablE coordinator MaRIa McFaRlaNdaccountS rEcEivablE coordinator dIaNa GuzMaNSalES SuPPort coordinator alEx MaRksSalES SuPPort ProjEct managEr saRa quINTit dirEctor daNIEl caNTREllWEb crEativE dirEctor allIsoN davIsWEb contEnt managEr JohN hoodWEb dESignEr ii RIchaRd sTEvENsWEb dEvEloPmEnt lEad yaMEl hallWEb dEvEloPEr i NEls NosEWoRThyPhotograPhy dirEctor JEFFREy s. oTTocrEativE SErvicES dirEctor chRIsTINa caRdENcrEativE tEchnology analySt BEcca aRyaudiEncE dEvEloPmEnt dirEctor dEaNNa NElsoNnEW mEdia aSSiStant alyssa dIcIccodiStribution dirEctor GaRy sMIThExEcutivE SEcrEtary kRIsTy duNcaNhuman rESourcES managEr PEGGy BlakErEcEPtioniSt lINda BIshoP
Texas Wide Open for Business is published annually by Journal communications Inc. and is distributed through the Economic development & Tourism div. office of the Governor. For advertising information or to direct questions or comments about the magazine, contact Journal communications Inc. at (615) 771-0080 or by email at [email protected].
for More inforMAtion, ContACt:office of the Governor Economic development & Tourism division P.o. Box 12428austin, Texas 78711-2428(512) 936-0100 [email protected]
for morE information on articlES in thiS Publication, go to buSinESSclimatE.com/tExaS.
©copyright 2012 Journal communications Inc., 725 cool springs Blvd., suite 400, Franklin, TN 37067, (615) 771-0080. all rights reserved. No portion of this magazine may be reproduced in whole or in part without written consent.
Member The association of Magazine Media
Member custom content council
Member Texas one
Wolfforth Economic Development Corporation
P.O. Box 36 • Wolfforth, TX 79382 (806) 855-4120 tel • (806) 855-4121 fax
email: [email protected] www.wolfforthtx.us • www.wolfforthedc.org
Digital Edition
Share with a friendeasily share an interesting article, stunning photo or advertisement of your business on facebook, twitter or via email.
haVe a BLOG Or weBSite?embed the digital magazine into your site to add compelling information about the successful businesses located here, what it’s like to work here and why it’s a great place to live.
dO MOre than JUSt read aBOUt ithear from decision-makers at leading companies, see video of the region’s success stories and find links to useful demographic information and information sources.
BusinessClimate.com/Texas
Story by Betsy Williams
T exas has a talent for creating jobs. Since 2008, the Lone Star State has led the nation in total jobs added, and the state’s aggressive incentives package has played an integral role in
that economic success.One of the key incentives offered is the Texas Enterprise Zone
Program, which encourages local communities to partner with the state in job creation efforts and capital investment, particularly in economically distressed areas. Approved projects are eligible to apply for state sales and use tax refunds on qualified expenditures.
Since its inception in 1988, 802 qualified businesses have received an enterprise project designation, which generated commitments of $48.1 billion in capital investment, created 139,148 new, permanent jobs and retained 144,476 existing jobs, says Joe H. Morin, manager of business incentives with the Texas Office of the Governor, Economic Development & Tourism Division.
The incentive supports projects such as the expansion of the Nacogdoches Medical Center in Nacogdoches County. The savings in sales and use taxes supported the upgrade of rooms, addition of nursing stations and installation of an energy-efficient roof.
B U S I N E S S C L I M A T E . C O M / T E X A S 103
Zoned In on Jobs Texas Enterprise Zone helps
communities promote investment
102 T E X A S W I D E O P E N F O R B U S I N E S S
Visit us online at www.jasperedc.com
Listings include: Color photos and aerial views of properties
Distances to airports, highways and waterways
Key utility information
Searching for space to relocate or expand a business?
Tap in to our database of office, industrial and retail properties, and available acreage to find the right spot.
Our online Site Guide tool provides detailed information on properties of all types, from Class A office buildings to industrial buildings to greenfield space – all searchable by property type, size, price and location.
FinD the Right Site
Search for properties at texassitesearch.com
Karnes CityPreparing for the Future!
Karnes City Chamber of CommerCe
Cathy Passmore, office manager 210 E. Calvert • P.O. Box 55
Karnes City, TX 78118 (830) 780-3112 • [email protected]
KenedyThe Junction Where Good Friends Meet!
Kenedy Chamber of CommerCe
Carolyn mcdonald, executive director 205 S. 2nd St. • Kenedy, TX 78119
(830) 583-3223 [email protected]
Located 55 miles from downtown San Antonio,
Karnes County is centrally located in South Texas,
providing easy access to the Texas Coast, Hill Country,
and the Mexican border and is at the HEART of the
activity in the Eagle Ford Play.
Karnes CoUnty eConomiC and CommUnity deVeLoPment CorPoration
Ray Kroll, Executive Director491 N. Sunset Strip • Ste. 108 • P.O. Box 295 • Kenedy, TX 78119
Phone: (830) 583-3957 • Fax: (830) 583-3967 [email protected]
www.karnescountyedc.com
San Antonio . . . 55 miles
Corpus Christi . . 90 miles
Austin . . . . . . . . 100 miles
Laredo . . . . . . . . 150 miles
Houston . . . . . . . 160 miles
Kenedy • Karnes City • Runge • Falls City
ConneCtionS
lifestyleFind out what it’s like to live here and what makes the state such a special place to be.
ONLINEl IFEsT y lE | WoRksT y lE | d IGGING dEEPER | v IdEo | l INk To u s | advERT IsE | c oNTac T u s | s ITE M aP
Workstylea spotlight on innovative companies that call the state home
See the videoour award-winning photographers give you a virtual tour of unique spaces, places and faces.
Site Guide >>
Find available commercial
and industrial properties with
our searchable database.
SuCCeSS
breedS SuCCeSS >>
Meet the people who set the
pace for business innovation.
diG deeper >>
Plug into the state with links
to local websites and
resources to give you a big
picture of the region.
deMoGrApHiCS >>
a wealth of demographic and
statistical information puts
the entire state at your
fingertips.
Guide to ServiCeS >>
links to a cross section
of goods and services
special to the state
diGitAl MAGAZine >>
Read the magazine on your computer, zoom in on articles and link to advertiser websites.
Go online
buSineSSCliMAte.CoM/texAS
buSineSSCliMAte.CoM/texAS
Making CapitalForeign investment, export success drive economy
Sky High Texas ignites aerospace, aviation innovation
Ample Harvest Texas agriculture feeds and clothes the world
Wide open for buSineSSTexasBusinessClimate.com/Texas
SponSored by tHe eConoMiC developMent & touriSM div. offiCe of tHe Governor | 2012
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 21
Overview
texas: A State of ‘limitless possibility’ for Job Growth and opportunityA letter from texAs Gov. rick Perry
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Amarillo
Lubbock
Waco
Ft. WorthAbilene
Wichita Falls
Amarillo
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MidlandOdessaEl Paso
San Antonio
Laredo
McAllen
Brownsville
Corpus Christi
Austin HoustonBeaumont
Port Arthur
Dallas
TylerLongview
Midland
Odessa
IRION
WARD
REAGAN
CRANE UPTON
TOM GREEN
ANDREWS
ARMSTRONG
BAILEY
BORDEN
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COLLINGSWORTH
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DICKENS
DONLEY
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GAINES
GARZA
GLASSCOCK
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HALL
HANSFORD
HARTLEY HEMPHILL
HOCKLEY
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HUTCHINSON
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KING
LAMB
LIPSCOMB
LYNN
MARTIN
MIDLAND
MITCHELL
MOORE
MOTLEY
NOLAN
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CENTRAL TEXASWEST TEXAS
UPPER RIO GRANDE
HIGH PLAINS
NORTHWEST TEXASMETROPLEX
NORTHEAST TEXAS
SOUTHEAST TEXAS
GULF COAST
SOUTH TEXAS
POTTER
RANDALL
ROBERTS
SCURRY
SHERMAN
STERLING
STONEWALL
TERRY
WHEELER
WINKLER
YOAKUM
LUBBOCK
SWISHER
HALE
62
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as governor of Texas, I am dedicated to supporting an environment of job growth, opportunity, and prosperity for the people of the lone star state.
Texas’ pro-business climate continues to bring quality jobs to the state.
our state offers companies an unparalleled competitive edge, with the lowest per capita tax rates in the nation, no personal income tax, proximity to strategic markets, cutting-edge infrastructure, excellent schools and a skilled workforce.
Texas provides businesses with the tools they need to grow and prosper including the innovative,
“deal-closing” Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF) and the Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF). as of July 31, 2012, the TEF has invested more than $470 million and closed the deal on projects generating more than 63,400 new jobs and more than $22.3 billion in capital investment in the state.
The TETF has allocated more than $194 million in funds to 136 early-stage companies, and more than $194 million in grant matching and research superiority funds to Texas universities.
Texas is recognized around the world for our pro-business climate, which is demonstrated every day by statistics like these:• Texas received a 2012 Gold
shovel award from Area Development magazine in recognition of our significant project investments and high-value job creation in 2011. Texas has been awarded either a Gold shovel or silver shovel every year since the program’s debut in 2006.
• Texas has been ranked as the top state for exporting for 10 consecutive years. Exports in 2011 reached $250.01 billion, up 20.8 percent from 2010.
• Texas was the only state or province with two cities – houston and austin – on fDi Magazine’s “Top 10 overall american cities of the Future (and North american cities of the Future) 2011/12” list.
• Texas was named america’s Top state for Business in 2012 by cNBc, which evaluated states on 51 measures of competitiveness in 10 categories. Texas is a place of limitless
possibility, and we will continue to make every effort to ensure that business and industry thrive in our great state.
I invite you to come to Texas, where we’re ready to work with you. No matter the industry, the lone star state is committed to doing what it takes to keep Texas Wide open for Business.
sincerely,
Rick PerryGovernor of Texas
For more information, contact:
office of the Governor economic development & tourism division p.o. box 12428 Austin, texas 78711 (512) 936-0100 texaswideopenforbusiness.com
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 21
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 23
10 reasons to live and Work in texaslone stAr stAte shines briGhtly As A PlAce to invest
1. texas is where the world does business: The state was home to 52 Fortune 500 corporate headquarters in 2012. Foreign-owned companies in the state employ more than 409,000 Texas workers. For 10 consecutive years, Texas has been ranked as the top state for exporting. Exports in 2011 reached $250.01 billion, up 20.8 percent from 2010.
2. texas has a powerhouse economy: The Texas gross domestic product for 2011 was estimated at $1.3 trillion, making the lone star state the 14th-largest economy in the world if it were a stand-alone nation.
3. it’s cheaper to do business: Texas has one of the lowest tax burdens in the united states, including no personal income tax. Texas also has no state tax on property used for pollution control, on goods in transit or on machinery and equipment utilized in manufacturing.
4. texas invests in business: The state offers a number of competitive incentive programs that help businesses grow, expand and add jobs, including the Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF) and the Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF), the largest “deal-closing” fund of its kind in the nation.
5. texas has connections: With 12 deep-water ports of more than 30-foot channel depth, 14,361 miles of freight rail, 310,850 miles of highway, 27 commercial airports and 29 u.s. ports of entry, Texas offers superior transportation and logistical advantages.
6. it’s a state of innovation: The lone star state is home to many world-renowned higher education institutions, including The university of Texas, Texas a&M university and Texas Tech university, that are
centers of innovation. Texas residents were granted more than 8,000 patents in 2011.
7. texas is one of the most affordable places to live: The cost of living composite index for most Texas metros is lower than the national composite index of 100.
8. texas is a health-care leader: The world comes to Texas for the latest innovations in medical treatment, technology and expertise. The state’s vast health-care resources include such renowned facilities as the Md anderson cancer
center, one of 52 institutions affiliated with Texas Medical center in houston.
9. texas offers abundant outdoor recreation opportunities: The lone star state includes 13 national parks, more than 90 state parks, 18 wildlife refuges, more than 900 golf courses and 624 miles of Texas coastline.
10. it’s a great place to live: With its beautiful landscape, warm weather, excellent schools, and southern hospitality, Texas remains a popular choice for people looking to relocate.
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b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 25
Almanac
WHere proSperity liveSTexas is well represented in the latest edition of a highly regarded ranking of top-performing cities put out by the Milken Institute, a nonpartisan think tank.
The institute’s 2011 Best-Performing cities Index, which ranked communities according to their success at creating and sustaining jobs and economic growth, included Texas cities in four of the top five spots.
The san antonio and El Paso metro areas ranked first and second, respectively, and the austin-Round Rock and Temple-killeen-Fort hood metros placed fourth and fifth. In addition to these four communities, five other Texas metros were ranked in the top 25 spots on the index.
components that factored into the rankings included jobs, wages and salary, and technology growth. For more on the rankings, visit bestcities.milkeninstitute.org.
CoSt effeCtive plACeS to liveone of the lone Star State’s key advantages is its low cost of living, a differentiator reinforced by statistics from the 2011 accra cost of living index.
five texas cities earned places on the 2011 list of top 10 least Expensive urban areas, prepared by the council for community and Economic research. the rankings measure the cost of housing, utilities, grocery items, transportation, health care, and miscellaneous goods and services.
Earning the top spot in 2011 was harlingen, with a composite index score of 81, meaning its overall cost of living was 81 percent of the u.S. average. mcallen was third on the list with a composite score of 85.4, followed by temple with a composite score of 85.6. other texas communities in the top 10 were Waco (86.3) and Sherman-denison (86.4).
more on the rankings can be found at www.coli.org.
A fulfillinG developMentWith its superior transportation assets and proximity to major markets, Texas is a natural center for distribution.
When kohl’s department stores was searching for a distribution center location to fulfill orders for its kohls.com website, it decided on the dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.
The retailer announced in early 2012 that it would build a 951,000-square-foot distribution complex in desoto. kohl’s strategically selected the location off Interstate 35 to serve its customer bases in its central and Midwest u.s. regions. kohl’s says its online sales increased more than 50 percent in 2010 and projects they will reach $1 billion in 2012. The desoto distribution center is expected to deliver about 400 jobs to the dallas-Fort Worth area over a three-year period. Find out more at www.kohls.com.
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 25
CityWallerof
1110 Farr St. • P.O. Box 888 • Waller, TX 77484
(936) 931-5151 www.WallerEDC.org
GlOBal OIl & GaS BuSInESSES
Sim-Tex – Oil Country Tubular Goods
Cameron Surface Systems
Emerson Process Management – Bettis Valve Actuators
RECREaTIOn
Houston Oaks Country Club & Family Sports Retreat
Waller ISD
Exemplary Schools
ManuFaCTuRERS OPEnInG 2011 & 2012
Alpha Foods • Florida Chemicals (FC Pro)
White Star Pumps • Green Span Profile
PetroQuip
lOCaTIOn
Houston – 40 miles
Bryan/College Station – 50 miles
Austin – 120 miles
San Antonio – 180 miles
Dallas/Fort Worth – 220 miles
100,000 employee labor shed within commute of 25 minutes (20 miles)
No congestion – your employees will enjoy driving against the traffic to your Waller facility
Flagship Travel Center – Opening in 2013
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 27
Almanac
deStinAtion texASFor the seventh straight year, Texas took the No. 1 spot for inbound migration on allied van line’s annual Magnet states report in 2011.
Texas realized the highest net relocation gain – inbound moves minus outbound moves – performed by allied van lines, one of the world’s largest moving companies.
In 2011, 1,556 more families were moved to Texas by allied than were moved out, nearly double the total of second- place Florida.
For more, go to www.allied.com/2011Magnetreport.aspx.
biG SHoe orderS to fillJustin Brands Inc. is a company with a lot of sole.
Fort Worth-based Justin, owned by Berkshire hathaway, makes and markets western boots as well as work, safety and sports footwear under the Justin Boot, Nocona Boot, chippewa Boot and Tony lama brands, offering 3,500 different styles in all.
The company’s western boots come in a variety of exotic leathers including lizard and ostrich. Justin Brands sells its footwear through department stores, shoe chains, specialty stores, catalogs and online.
The company, which dates to 1879, is also a leader in footwear technology including such breakthroughs as Grip-on-demand, Justin Gel cushioning gel and its patented J-Flex Flexible comfort system. For more on the company, go to www.justinbrands.com.
WHere ServiCe SoArStwo texas airports are sharing high honors with a select group around the world.
dallas/fort Worth international airport and austin-bergstrom international airport were inducted into the director general’s roll of Excellence by airport council international, a recognition for airports that have ranked among the top five in airport Service Quality (aSQ) for five consecutive years.
the texas airports were the lone airports from the united States and two of just four in north america to receive the recognition in november 2011. the aSQ program benchmarks a total of 34 service items of a passenger’s airport experience including flight information screens, signage, walking distances, restaurants, shopping facilities, restrooms, security, cleanliness and baggage delivery.
dfW is the world’s fourth busiest airport, offering nearly 1,750 flights per day and serving 57 million passengers a year. austin-bergstrom international serves more than 9.5 million customers annually, with more than 125 commercial flights departing or arriving daily.
for more, go to www.airportservicequalityawards.com.
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b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 29
Almanac
finAnCinG foreiGn trAdeThe Export-Import Bank of the united states says more than $512 million in export credit was authorized for Texas small businesses for fiscal year 2011, making Texas the top state in the country for all Ex-Im small business financing.
The Ex-Im Bank provides financing mechanisms including working capital guarantees, export-credit insurance and financing to help foreign buyers purchase u.s. goods and services. In 2011, the Ex-Im arranged $6 billion in small business financing, up 70 percent from just five years earlier.
assistance from the Ex-Im Bank has helped air Tractor Inc. in olney, Texas, export an estimated $40 million of its agricultural and forest fire-bombing aircraft to private-sector buyers in argentina and Brazil.
The company has used Ex-Im Bank’s medium-term insurance for 15 years to provide supplier credits. For more, go to www.exim.gov.
HoMe on tHe rAnGeWith roots dating to the 1850s, king Ranch has been a part of Texas almost as long as Texas has been a part of the united states.
king Ranch is a massive 825,000-acre spread in the coastal Texas region that includes parts of kleberg, kenedy, Brooks, Jim Wells and Nueces counties.
captain Richard king was a riverboat captain who created king Ranch when he traveled into the region, known at the time as the Wild horse desert, and was captivated by its natural beauty. he purchased a 15,500-acre Mexican land grant with his business partner, Gideon lewis, and established what is now called king Ranch.
Today, king Ranch raises cattle and quarter horses and controls about 60,000 acres of farm land and the young Pecan shelling operations, one of the largest pecan shellers in the world. For more information, go to www.king-ranch.com.
rinGinG up biG Job GAinS in retAilEven during the height of the last recession, Texas remained a job generator. That was no less true in its retail sector.
according to a study by bizjournals.com, lone star state retailers added 30,100 jobs between November 2006 and November 2011, one of only six states to see a net increase in jobs in the sector during that period.
Texas had nearly 1.2 million retail jobs at the end of 2011, up about 2.6 percent from five years earlier.
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Almanac
A Worker’S WonderlAnda dozen companies headquartered in Texas have something they can brag about – inclusion on Fortune magazine’s 2012 list of 100 Best companies to Work For.
Fortune, in partnership with the global research and consulting firm Great Place to Work Institute, compiled the list based on more than 246,000 employee surveys from 280 companies that ask questions about management credibility, job satisfaction and camaraderie, hiring practices, internal communications, training, diversity efforts, and recognition programs.
a number of household names, including Google (which ranked No. 1) and starbucks were joined on the list by 12 Texas-based companies: Balfour Beatty construction (dallas), camden Property Trust (houston), EoG Resources (houston), Men’s Wearhouse (houston), National Instruments (austin), Nustar Energy (san antonio), Rackspace hosting (san antonio), TdI Industries (dallas-Fort Worth), The container store (coppell), usaa (san antonio) and Whole Foods Market (austin).
Go to www.money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/best-companies for more information.
brinGinG SMAll buSineSSeS biG reSourCeSstartup Texas, an initiative aimed at helping jump start the creation and growth of entrepreneurial companies, has launched in austin, seeking to connect entrepreneurs with the resources needed to build their businesses.
The Texas program is an offshoot of the startup america Partnership, a national effort by state and regional organizations to support entrepreneurs and small businesses with the ultimate goal of creating new jobs.
startup Texas provides a number of services to help entrepreneurs statewide including assisting with scaling to meet market demands, identifying sources of investment capital, and helping recruit and train a high quality workforce. The program also helps place mentors with companies and connects entrepreneurs with key private- and public-sector players.
Texas is the seventh state to join startup america, and the effort in the lone star state is being spearheaded by the Greater austin chamber of commerce. To learn more, go to http://tx.s.co.
tHAt’S A lot of CouCHeSNebraska Furniture Mart, the largest home furnishings store in North america, has picked a site in the dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex for a store that will measure 1.8 million square feet – big, even by Texas standards.
The store in The colony will include 1.2 million square feet of distribution space, 546,000 square feet of showroom space and 25,000 square feet for a regional corporate office.
With a projected first phase opening in May 2015, the complex is expected to create about 1,700 jobs. other developments, including hotels, restaurants, shops and a theme park, are being considered for the site that could bring the total investment to $1.5 billion.
The omaha-based furniture retailer projects as many as 8 million annual visitors. visit www.nfm.com for more.
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Business Climate
texas leads the nation in all the rankings that count
t he business climate in Texas is red hot. The state continues to set the pace
in job creation, attracting new investment and staying at the top of numerous business rankings. Among them: Best State for Business by Chief Executive Magazine; No. 1 Business Climate by Site Selection magazine and No. 1 State for Doing Business by Area Development magazine, which also named the state winner of its 2012 Gold Shovel award for new investments and job creation in 2011. Texas has been recognized each year since the magazine began the awards in 2006.
“Our combination of low taxes, predictable regulations, fair courts and a world-class workforce has helped create an economic stronghold that’s been the envy of the nation the last decade and a boon for any company seeking to grow, particularly innovative young companies seeking firm footing during their early years,” says Gov. Rick Perry. “We’ve taken steps over the past 10 years to
rolling up big numbers
story by Betsy Williams
already a major presence in austin, apple plans a new $304 million campus.
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nurture that segment of our economy – first, by maintaining our business climate, and secondly, through programs like our Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF).”
fundS Spur JobS, inveStMentJoining the TETF as one of the most
effective tools in the state’s economic strongbox is the Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF), the largest deal-closing fund of its kind in the nation, used as a final incentive tool when a single Texas site is competing with another viable out-of-state option. Since its inception in 2003
through the end of April 2012, TEF has invested more than $465.4 million and closed the deal on projects committed to generate more than 63,000 new jobs and over $21.4 billion in capital investment.
“The TEF forms a one-two punch with the Texas Emerging Technology Fund, which helps ensure innovative ideas that are born in Texas stay in Texas, all the way from the laboratory to the marketplace,” Gov. Perry says. “Keeping our innovators in the state, and bringing in new ones as well, is vital to the future of Texas, as our increasingly diverse
What’s Online learn more about business in the lone Star State at businessclimate.com/texas.
BRIaN Mc c oRd
TexaS expOrT infO
TexaS named TOp STaTe fOr expOrT ValueS fOr 10Th cOnSecuTiVe year
2011 expOrT Value: $250.01 billion, up 20% from 2010
TOp expOrT caTegOrieS: petroleum and coal products, chemicals, computer and electronic products, nonelectrical machinery, transportation equipment and agricultural products
TOp expOrT deSTinaTiOnS: Mexico, canada, china, Brazil and the Netherlands
TexaS Share Of all u.S. expOrTS: 17%
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 35
economy reinvents itself in preparation for the decades to come.”
Job CreAtion leAdS nAtionThe powerhouse Texas economy
created a staggering number of jobs in a five-year span from 2006 to 2011 – 430,700 of them – besting the next highest state almost eight times over. That explosion of job growth is set to continue, and the Texas population is projected to double from 25 million to 50 million over the next 30 years.
The state’s Gross Domestic Product hit an astounding $1.3 trillion in 2011, 8.3 percent of the U.S. total. Texas is a global leader in numerous industry sectors, from aerospace and aviation to energy
1.5 trillion
8.3% texas’ Gross domestic product reached $1.3 trillion in 2011, 8.3 percent of the u.S. total.
TexaS grOSS dOmeSTic prOducT (currenT-dOllar gdp)
1.25 trillion
0
The Tomball Economic Development Corporation (TEDC) provides financial assistance to qualifying companies that are looking to expand or relocate to Tomball.
A growing economy, sound workforce and a first-rate living environment are just some of the reasons to do businessin Tomball! AreA resources:George Bush IntercontinentalPort of HoustonBNSF Railway ServiceLone Star College System TombAll offers:Relocation & Expansion IncentivesLow Property TaxesCustomizable Workforce TrainingWorld-Class Health CareLow Cost of Living
(281) 401-4086 (888) 401-7322
www.tomballtxedc.org
Texas-sized opportunities
TOMBALLin
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 39
and renewables and life sciences, manufacturing and logistics.
A Who’s Who of companies – 52 Fortune 500 companies are headquartered in the state – is keeping the new investment and expansion pipeline f lowing. Apple, with an already impressive presence in Texas, recently committed to investing $304 million in a new Austin campus and creating 3,600 jobs over the next decade, more than doubling the size of the company’s Texas workforce. Other companies, including Direct Energy (Houston), Waste Connections Inc. (The Woodlands) and Copart
(Farmers Branch), are setting up corporate headquarters in the Lone Star State.
Houston, Austin, McAllen-Edinburg, El Paso and San Antonio took five of the top 10 slots for metro areas creating the most private sector jobs between February 2008 and February 2012, according to bizjournals.com.
Skilled WorkerS, no inCoMe tAxThe state’s highly favorable
economic climate, Gov. Perry says, is supported by a business friendly environment that includes a deep pool of highly skilled workers, a favorable tax structure (no
corporate or personal income taxes), a fair legal system and a roster of incentive programs, such as TEF and TETF, designed to encourage expansion, investment and job growth.
The Lone Star State is an export juggernaut, sending goods valued at $250.01 billion in 2011, making Texas the top exporting state in the nation for the 10th consecutive year.
“For a full decade now, Texas has been the nation’s epicenter for international trade, thanks to the continued strength of our state economy and the opportunities created by our business climate,” Perry says.
Texas is one of just two states in the top 20 to add jobs during the three-year period from december 2008 to december 2011:
JOb One
flOrida: -174,000
geOrgia: -112,900
nOrTh carOlina: -129,100
neW yOrk: +4,600
pennSylVania: -28,300
OhiO: -158,600
michigan: -88,700
illinOiS: -175,600califOrnia: -473,400
TexaS: +64,500
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Fortune 500
texas is a location of choice for fortune 500 companies
t exas is a premier address for business. The Lone Star State is home to
the corporate headquarters for 52 companies on the 2012 Fortune 500, the second-highest concentration among the states. The annual list compiled and published by Fortune magazine ranks the top 500 U.S. public corporations, according to revenues produced.
Included on the list are a roster of high-profile brands that call Texas home, including Dell, JCPenney, Kimberly-Clark, Southwest Airlines, Texas Instruments, Whole Foods, Game Stop and Dr Pepper Snapple Group.
A Texas-based company headed the Fortune 500 list in 2012. With revenues of nearly $453 billion, Irving-based Exxon Mobil was the largest public company in the United States.
The strength of the Texas energy industry is reinforced by the presence of seven energy-related companies among the 10 largest public companies based in the state, including ConocoPhillips, Valero and Enterprise Products Partners.
Twenty-five Fortune 500 companies in 2012 called the Houston area home, led by ConocoPhillips, ranked fourth nationally in revenue. Other top Houston-based corporations on the rankings list included Enterprise Products Partners (62nd nationally), Sysco (69th) and Plains All American Pipeline (87th).
Eighteen Fortune 500 companies are headquartered in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Following ExxonMobil are AT&T, ranked 11th nationally with $127 billion in revenue for 2012.
The top five Texas firms, their location, revenue and Fortune 500 ranking were:
1. ExxonMobil, Irving, $452.9 billion (1)
2. ConocoPhillips, Houston, $237.3 billion (4)
3. AT&T, Dallas, $126.7 billion (11)
4. Valero Energy, San Antonio, $125 billion (12)
5. Dell, Round Rock, $62 billion (44)
To see a complete list of the 2012 Fortune 500 go to money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune.
A Headquarters place
story by Kevin Litwin
TOp 10 TexaS fOrTune 500 cOmpanieS
1. exxonMobil
2. Conocophillips
3. At&t
4. valero energy
5. dell
6. enterprise products partners
7. Sysco
8. plains All American pipeline
9. tesoro
10. Halliburton
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a staple of PBs programming virtually since its debut in 1974, Austin City Limits is a showcase for a variety of musical genres for some of the country’s most popular and respected musicians.
From Willie Nelson (who was the feature performer on the pilot episode) to B.B. king to Foo Fighters, the Friday night program has attracted a wide cross-section of talent and cemented a reputation that includes being the lone television show to have been awarded the Presidential Medal of the arts.
austin city limits Festival, a three-day annual event in austin, features more than 130 musicians and bands on eight stages. The festival, which debuted in 2002, now attracts more than 70,000 people.
auSTin ciTy limiTS
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lone Star Attractiontexas takes center stage as location for film, television, video game development
story by Jessica Walker
texas has emerged as a major player across a gamut of media-related entertainment – from film and television to commercials, animated
productions and video game development.Though it is no stranger to the big screen – the
first film to shoot in Texas was made in 1910 – the industry is f lourishing in the Lone Star State thanks to its diverse shooting locales, ample supply of skilled crew, a range of production support services and highly competitive state incentives.
“Texas has captivated the imagination of moviegoers for decades,” says Evan Fitzmaurice, former director of the Texas Film Commission. “It’s an iconic state, and it’s a place where the people and the terrain help tell a story.”
The Texas Film Commission, established in 1971 by Texas Gov. Preston Smith, works to draw media professionals to the state. The commission offers location assistance to producers and directors searching for a place to serve as the setting for their film or television show, and also provides an online Texas Production Directory that includes crew personnel and media-related companies and organizations.
“People are amazed and impressed with the professionalism and efficiency here,” Fitzmaurice says.
texAS MediA inCentiveSWhile the state’s natural assets attract industry
professionals, the Texas Moving Image Industry Incentive Program is also a major draw. The
Austin City Limits has been showcasing some of the nation’s most popular performers since 1974.
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incentive, enacted in 2005 and funded for the first time in 2007, enables qualifying film, television, commercial and video game productions to obtain a payment of 5 to 17.5 percent of eligible Texas spending, or 8 to 29.25 percent of eligible wages paid to Texas residents.
“From June 2007 through February 2012, production companies accepted into the incentive program have been slated to spend more than $630 million, bringing in over 66,000 job opportunities,” Fitzmaurice says.
In addition, film, television, commercial, and video game productions are exempt from paying sales tax on the majority of rentals and purchases used directly in production. The state also waives occupancy taxes after an individual occupies a hotel room for 30 consecutive days, and a refund of taxes paid on gasoline is available.
MovieS, televiSion SHoWS CHooSe texASThe incentives are certainly drawing more
attention to Texas, but the state has been attracting filmmakers for more than 100 years. To date, more
left: The popular television show Friday Night Lights was filmed in Texas. below: lockhart, where parts of films such as The Faculty, Where the Heart Is and Secondhand Lions were filmed B
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recenT mOVie and TV prOJecTS filmed in TexaS Films:BernieThe Tree of LifeTrue GritSpy Kids 4: All The Time in the World 4DOpen Season 3PredatorsExistsPrince Avalanche Television shows:DallasThe Lying GameFriday Night LightsPrison BreakTop ChefThe Good GuysChaseLone StarMy Generation
than 1,800 projects have been filmed in Texas including Wings, which won the inaugural Academy Award for Best Picture in 1928.
Austin and Dallas are popular locations for shooting movies and television shows, but the Texas Film Commission has designated more than 60 communities Film Friendly Texas Certified Communities. Smithville, (Tree of Life and Hope Floats) made the cut, as did Marfa (There Will Be Blood and No Country For Old Men.)
Additional film commissions throughout the state also work to help filmmakers find a city or area that meets their specifications.
“We try to make sure things run smoothly,” says Ronald Hollomon, executive director of the Northeast Texas Regional Film Commission. “We also help with location scouting and serve as a liaison between filmmakers and local businesses.”
Texas’ large number of production companies – more than 130 – also contributes to the state’s appeal. Many of those companies are putting down roots
in Austin including Arts+Labor, a full-service production company that creates feature films, marketing videos and more, and has worked with notable television networks such as PBS, CNN and The Weather Channel.
“There’s a lot of young talent in Austin,” says Alan Berg, president and co-founder of Arts+Labor. “It’s an excellent place for a production company because the city encourages creatives and is open, welcome, and tolerant.”
AniMAted About texASThe breadth of production in Texas
can be seen not only behind the camera but in front of the computer. Some 160 game development companies and 55 animation and visual effects studios have a presence in Texas.
DNA Productions, located in Dallas, is responsible for the animation and production of The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and The Ant Bully, while Austin-based Troublemaker Studios created many postproduction and visual effects for a number of the Spy Kids movies.
south Padre Island is a popular place to film movies and Tv shows. several productions have been shot in the region including
The President’s Man, Spring Breakdown and Prison Break.
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video game production company Robot Entertainment is based in dallas. PhoTo c ouRTEsy oF RoB oT ENTERTa INMENT
The video game Brothers in Arms: Furious 4 was created by Gearbox, which is based in dallas.
The video game development industry is thriving in Austin, which is quickly becoming known as the U.S. video game capital. Twisted Pixel – the video game developer responsible for games such as The Gunstringer and Splosion Man – relocated from Madison, Ind., to Austin in late 2008.
In addition, Electronic Arts announced plans to expand its Austin operations in 2011, creating 300 jobs in the area. More than 5,000 people are employed in video game development in Texas.
“Austin had a few things going for it when we decided to relocate,” says Jay Stuckwisch, marketing director/2D artist at Twisted Pixel. “First off, the tax incentives for independent game studios was a big factor. Austin really wants to help foster the entertainment industries here, which is great! The weather and central location played a big factor, too.”
What’s Online learn more about the entertainment industry in texas at businessclimate.com/texas. P
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The Texas health-care industry includes more than 580 hospitals.
48 t e x A S W i d e o p e n f o r b u S i n e S S
deep pocketstwo major shale plays fuel texas energy sector
story by Pamela Coyle
Source: IHS Global Insight 2009, America’s Natural Gas Alliance
naTural gaS direcT emplOymenTA process that started 300 million years ago helped pull the Lone Star State through
the recession and continues to draw new companies, employ thousands and attract billions of dollars in investment to the state.
This big shot to an already-abundant energy sector began with the demise of tiny, prehistoric sea creatures deep below the surface of what is now Texas. Natural gas formed above that ancient f loor, and new technology means access to the buried bounty.
Shale gas is invigorating a world-class energy industry in Texas that includes robust oil and gas, and power generation from renewables, coal and nuclear generates an annual economic impact of $172 billion.
TexaS 249,0492
lOuiSiana: 62,5811
OklahOma: 44,165
4
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califOrnia: 43,943
5
cOlOradO: 30,758
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texas’ vast energy sector includes 26 refineries with refining capacity of 4.7 million barrels of crude oil per day. S taff Ph oto
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“The oil and natural gas industry is credited with helping Texas to weather the economic downturn in recent years better than other states,” says Debbie Hastings, executive vice president of the Texas Oil & Gas Association.
bArnett, eAGle ford SHAleTexas is home to two major
shale plays – Barnett Shale in north central Texas and Eagle Ford in south Texas – whose formations contain vast amounts of natural gas deposits.
The Barnett Shale, which lies under 17 north Texas counties, has generated $65 billion in economic activity since 2001 and supports 100,000 jobs, according to a 2011 study by economist Ray Perryman of the Perryman Group in Waco. Other studies say it accounts for 8 percent of gross product, 8 percent of personal income and 9 percent of employment in the region.
Shale TaleS
$65.4 billionbarnett Shale economic impact in
north texas since 2001
100,000+Jobs supported by barnett Shale
$25 billioneconomic impact of eagle ford
Shale in 2011
47,000Jobs supported by eagle ford Shale
Source: Perryman Group,
University of Texas San Antonio
eagle ford Shale
Eagle Ford is a huge deposit of oil as well as natural gas that extends 400 miles across south Texas. In 2011 alone, Eagle Ford contributed $25 billion in total economic output, according to a University of Texas San Antonio study, and supported approximately 47,000 full-time jobs. And it has changed the face of many small towns.
Alice, Texas, has an official population of 19,104, but Juan Navejar, executive director of the Alice Chamber of Commerce, estimates the working population at 60,000 to 80,000.
“Our sales tax has been phenomenal,” he says. “For one recent month, we collected $1.6 million, 52 percent higher than 2011. The city has a surplus and we are building an auditorium, amphitheater and convention
barnett Shale
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Texas is one of just two states in the top 20 to add jobs during the three-year period from december 2008 to december 2011:
TexaS naTural gaS prOducTiOn
2007 2008 2009 2010 20116
7
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7.80
7.65
7.59
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center without having to borrow.”The city is at the junction of
Texas Highway 44 and U.S. 281, and its roads can handle the truck traffic better than smaller communities closer to drilling sites.
“We have the infrastructure,” Navejar says. “What we need now is permanent housing.”
SHAle A lonG-terM reSourCeAlice is not alone. Sales tax
revenue increases in communities affected by Eagle Ford are in the stratosphere.
First-quarter 2011 tax revenues increased by a range of 91 percent in Encinal to 1,132 percent in Dimmit County, compared with the first quarter of 2010. The statewide increase for the same period was 22 percent.
Statewide, sales tax revenues increased 11 percent from first quarter 2011 to first quarter 2012. In the Eagle Ford play, communities saw increases of 31 percent to 168 percent.
“The f lurry of production has transformed parts of our state from sleepy small towns to thriving economic centers that are f lush with jobs, increased tax revenues and local commerce,” Hastings says.
The impact will not be short term, especially as technology evolves. Accessing the trapped gas wasn’t possible until the 2000s, when horizontal drilling and other advanced techniques allowed companies to tap reserves.
Chesapeake Energy Corp., a major player, estimates it already has extracted 4.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas from Barnett Shale and another 40 trillion cubic feet remain.
Energy companies can’t build pipelines fast enough, and industry groups estimate both Eagle Ford and Barnett Shale can produce for another 20 to 30 years. But if you visit Alice, don’t expect lunch.
“Traffic is heavy,” Navejar says. “If you try to have lunch, you won’t find a seat.” JE
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Highly refinedtexAs is toPs in U.s. for PetroleUm ProdUction, oil refininG And chemicAl mAnUfActUrinG
Texas accounts for more than a quarter of the nation’s oil refining capacity. closely related, Texas chemical manufacturers turn out more than 50 percent of the total u.s. chemical production and about 50 percent of the nation’s petrochemical production.
The numbers themselves are Texas-sized. The state’s 26 refineries lead the nation with a refining capacity of 4.7 million barrels of crude oil a day. Texas is also the top state for crude oil production, pumping out an average of 44.8 million barrels per month from deep below the state’s surface, with alaska a distant second at 17.4 million barrels a month.
ExxonMobil, conocoPhillips, valero Energy, Marathon oil, Tesoro and Western Refining are among the big players. Major chemical production
interests include celanese, chevron Phillips chemical, ExxonMobil chemical, dow chemical, huntsman, lyondell chemical and BasF.
The Texas Gulf coast is home to more than 400 chemical plants and refineries that employ about 33,000 people. The concentration is considered the largest petrochemical complex in the world, and is connected by thousands of miles of pipeline in a network dubbed the spaghetti Bowl.
In this, houston is the epicenter. It hosts more than 40 percent of the country’s base manufacturing capacity of petrochemicals, 3,700 energy-related establishments and 16 of the top 20 u.s. pipeline companies.
That’s a highly refined industry, which is how Texas likes it.
– Pamela Coyle
top: a conocoPhillips Eagle Ford operation above: conocoPhillips headquarters
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international flavor foreign investment, export
success drive texas economy
texas is all over the map – the global map, that is.
A major exporter, Texas led all states for the 10th consecutive year in total export volume in 2011, with values exceeding $250 billion. That figure was up 20.8 percent from 2010.
Texas ships its products across the world including everything from petroleum, chemicals, and computer and electronic products
to machinery and transportation equipment.
The global map is also all over Texas, whose impressive roster of global companies with major operations in the state includes Alcatel-Lucent, Bayer, Toyota, Siemens, Royal Dutch Shell and Samsung.
Foreign direct investment in Texas is spread across a range of industry sectors including
software, energy and industrial machinery.
So-called “greenfield” projects – a capital investment to build a new plant, factory or other business – totaled $6.2 billion in 2011 and created more than 6,300 jobs.
story by Betsy Williams
56 t e x A S W i d e o p e n f o r b u S i n e S S
the Port of houston spans 25 miles and is one of the world’s busiest ports. annually, it sees more than 200 million tons of cargo. Ph oto c ou r t E Sy of t hom a S b . ShE a
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All RoAds leAd to HendeRson
For more information, contact: Sue Henderson (903) 657-9146
Land Available Now!(will trade property for jobs)
Job Creation Incentives Tax Abatements(both city and county)
Competitive Low Electrical Rates
Low Taxes Railroad Access
… A Texas Main Street City in Rusk County,
with a network of highways radiating
from Henderson makes it one of the most
important highway centers in the East
Texas Region.A City on the “GROW!”
HendeRson economic development coRpoRAtion
www.hendersontx.us
vernon darko is the founder and owner of EquIPxP, which is based in houston.
fOreign direcT inVeSTmenT in Tx
409,500texans employed by u.S. subsidiaries of foreign companies
2rank among states in jobs at u.S. subsidiaries of global companies
37%Jobs at u.S. subsidiaries in texas in the manufacturing sector
$6.2binvestments to build a new factory, plant or other business in texas by u.S. subsidiaries in 2011
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All RoAds leAd to HendeRson
For more information, contact: Sue Henderson (903) 657-9146
Land Available Now!(will trade property for jobs)
Job Creation Incentives Tax Abatements(both city and county)
Competitive Low Electrical Rates
Low Taxes Railroad Access
… A Texas Main Street City in Rusk County,
with a network of highways radiating
from Henderson makes it one of the most
important highway centers in the East
Texas Region.A City on the “GROW!”
HendeRson economic development coRpoRAtion
www.hendersontx.us
According to the Organization for International Investment, Texas ranks second among all states in the number of U.S. jobs at foreign subsidiaries and second in the number of manufacturing industry jobs at U.S. subsidiaries.
The Lone Star State is home to more than 2,000 multinational operations that, at last count, employ more than 409,000. Major recent successes include:• Samsung’s decision to invest $3.6
billion in an expansion of its Fab 2 semiconductor manufacturing plant in Austin, which produces the dual-core A5 processor used in the iPhone and iPad.
• Alcon Labs adding 750 jobs in Forth Worth in an $11 million expansion project to create a Finance Service Center for the company’s North American operations.
• Atento, the world’s second-largest call center company and a unit of the world’s second-largest telecommunications
TOp expOrT deSTinaTiOnS
Country 2011 values
Mexico $87.4 billion
canada $22.1 billion
china $10.9 billion
Brazil $10.1 billion
Netherlands $8.8 billion
south korea $7.4 billion
singapore $6.5 billion
colombia $5.1 billion
Japan $4.4 billion
Source: WISERTrade
Education • Qualityeducation:Pre-Kthrough12thgrade
• TEArecognizedprimary,elementaryandjunior highschools
• Lowtaxrate,zerobondedindebtedness
• Highereducationinstitutionsjust30milesaway
BusinEss • Strongregionallaborforce
• Healthyandvibranteconomy
• Aggressiveeconomicdevelopmentprogram
• HometoAmericanCottonGrowers
• HometoLowe’sCorporateOffice
HEaltH carE • 75-bedgeneralacute-carehospital
• 24-hourphysician-staffedER
• Accesstomajormedicalfacilities30milesaway
• Ruralhealthclinicstaffedbyfamily-practicephysicians
location • TwomajorhighwaysintersectLittlefield,Hwy.84 andHwy.385
• CentrallylocatedontheBNSFmainlineforrailshipping
• Accesstomajortransportationcorridors, Port-to-Plainscorridor
agriculturE • Variousagriculturalproductsgrown:cotton,alfalfa, grain,etc.
• Irrigationsystemmanufacturingcompanies
• Chemicalfertilizerproducingcompanies
littlefield Economic development corporation • (806) 385-5161 • (806) 385-0014 Fax • www.littlefieldtexas.org
The Place to be for BusinessShining Star on the Horizon
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firm, expanding its San Antonio call center to 2,000 workers in 2012, up from fewer than 400.
texAS export SuCCeSSVernon Darko, founder and
owner of EQUIPXP of Houston, wrote the book on successful exporting, literally. He is the author of Think, Act, Breathe Global and Grow Your Business, which educates readers on how to expand business globally. EQUIPXP specializes in the sale, finance and transport of quality new and used heavy equipment and parts for emerging markets.
“Texas is good for us because the state supports international business, and Houston is such a great port city,” Darko says. “Also the cost of living is very comfortable, and Texas offers diversity in the business community, which we value as an international business.”
EQUIPXP was named Minority Exporter of the Year by the Greater Houston Procurement Forum and was a 2010 recipient of the Presidential E-Star Award for excellence in global exporting.
Another Texas company recognized for its success in global exporting is Flexible Innovation Ltd. of Fort Worth. President Fred Antonini envisions his company’s egrips and digiclean products will be as globally ubiquitous as the Velcro and Post-It brands.
texAS proMoteS buSineSSEgrips is a non-skid and non-
slip product used on items ranging from cell phones to portable DVD players to golf clubs. Digiclean, just launched in 2011, is a micro-fiber screen cleaner for cell phones, computer screens, eyeglasses and more. Flexible Innovations is working with private companies in Africa, Australia, China, India, Japan, Russia, Greece, Germany and elsewhere to market and sell its products and its brand.
Antonini was named Exporter of the Year in 2010 by the Small Business Administration’s Dallas-Fort Worth
District. He says Texas offers a business-friendly regulatory environment for companies like his and the state’s transportation assets, including the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and trucking access to Mexico, help companies get products distributed.
“We can take a pallet load of our products to Dallas/Fort Worth and put it on a truck in the trade zone at the airport and it can travel to Mexico City to the airport where they can clear it for distribution,” Antonini says. “The total shipping and product cost can be reduced by 10 percent, which is significant.”
TOp TexaS expOrT caTegOrieS and Value Of expOrTS (2011)
peTrOleum and cOal prOducTS: $51.7 billiOn
chemicalS: $46.6 billiOn
cOmpuTer and elecTrOnic prOducTS: $42.1 billiOn
machinery, excepT elecTrical $27.6 billiOn
TranSpOrTaTiOn equipmenT: $22.1 billiOn
Egrips iPhone case
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one State, Many flagsforeiGn-owned comPAnies mAke mAjor investment in texAs
Texas is the destination of choice not only for u.s. companies but international companies as well.
The Texas economy is diverse, with major concentrations in industries such as technology, energy, life sciences and advanced manufacturing. It’s also diverse in the geographic range of companies that have chosen the state as a business location.
data from consulting firm FdI Intelligence shows just how significant foreign direct investment has been for the lone star state. Between 2007 and 2011, Texas attracted 473 FdI projects from 43 different nations.
drawn by a strong economy, competitive business climate and central location within North america, more than 2,000 foreign multinational companies have established operations in Texas.
u.s. subsidiaries of foreign companies are major contributors to the national economy, and Texas is a large reason why.
according to a report released in May 2012 by the organization for International Investment, Texas is one of six states where direct and supply chain jobs from foreign-owned companies top 1 million.
The report showed Texas ranked second among states in direct u.s. subsidiary jobs from foreign companies, with more than 409,000 workers at foreign-owned operations.
The study pegged the number of direct and supply chain jobs in the state connected to foreign company operations at more than 2.2 million, producing an annual payroll of $133.5 billion.
“overall, for every direct job at u.s. subsidiaries, there are an additional 3 jobs in the u.s. economy as a result of supply chain and paycheck economic activity,” the report noted. “The supply chain and paycheck
impacts in certain sectors are much larger. In the manufacturing sector, there are an additional five jobs for every u.s. subsidiary employee.”
Even during the global economic downdraft, Texas remained a magnet for foreign investment and job creation.
The office of the Governor report noted that during a two year period in 2009-2010, more FdI projects
were recorded in Texas than in all four previous years combined.
The scope and diversity of the Texas economy can be seen in this statistic: Three Texas cities - houston, dallas and austin - are among the top 10 FdI destinations nationally and Texas is the only state to have three locations in the top 10.
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under the Microscopetexas biotech and life sciences industry breeds innovation
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story by Melanie Kilgore-Hill
texas is at the crossroads of science and technology, a destination for world-
class biomedical research, biotechnology firms, medical device manufacturing and life science startups that deliver an impressive $75 billion annual economic impact statewide.
Spearheading the innovation and growth are organizations such as the Texas Biomedical Research Institute. From its 200-acre campus in San Antonio, the institute unites hundreds of researchers and institutions around the world to focus on advances in the treatment and prevention of a host of diseases.
Kenneth Trevett, the institute’s president and CEO, attributes the success of the Texas biotech industry to its roster of prized institutions with an outstanding tradition of innovation.
The biotechnology industry in Texas is diverse and growing, employing more than 88,000 workers at 3,400 firms.B
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TexaS medical deVice manufacTuring
800Medical device firms in texas
15,200number of employees in the texas medical device sector
$4.3btotal value of texas medical equipment shipments in 2010
Source: TexasWideOpenforBusiness.comPh
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“The bedrock of any vibrant biomedical sector is the creation of intellectual property in academic organizations, research institutes and research hospitals,” Trevett says. “New ideas generate new companies, well-paid jobs, and even patients from other parts of the country who want to be at a place where the most modern medical care is provided.”
texAS: MediCAl deviCe leAderThat success has caught the
attention of companies across a range of biotech and life sciences specialties.
Medical device manufacturer Hanger Inc., for one, relocated its prosthetic and orthopedic manufacturing company to Austin from Maryland in 2010.
“We were drawn to the entrepreneurial spirit of Texas and especially of Austin,” says Hanger CEO Tom Kirk. “Our company has been in existence for nearly 150 years, but we still operate with the same values of entrepreneurial spirit, f lexible operations and innovation that drove the founding of our company ... These same values are also evident in central Texas and that is why this metro area is one of the most dynamic regions in the world.”
Kirk says Austin has provided ample networking and partnership opportunities, space for future growth, improved operational efficiency and an enhanced quality of life for corporate employees. In addition, Austin’s central U.S. location improved communication with Hanger’s national footprint of more than 700 patient-care clinics and supporting operational locations.
The medical device sector of the Texas biotech industry has seen rapid growth. Surgical sutures, syringes, eye-care products, cardiac catheters and medication delivery systems are just some of the products made by the 800 medical device firms in the Lone Star State.
In 2012, wound care and therapeutic support system manufacturer Kinetic Concepts
Above: a researcher works in the genetics lab at the Texas Biomedical Research Institute in san antonio. top left: hanger orthopedic Group, which manufactures orthotic and prosthetic-care devices, relocated to austin in 2010.
moved into a new, 100,000- square-foot global headquarters building in San Antonio. The 30-year-old medical technology company, which employs 2,000 people in San Antonio and more than 7,000 around the world, develops and manufactures high-technology therapies and products for the wound care, tissue regeneration and therapeutic support system markets.
And Kinetic Concepts is in good company. Dallas-based Celanese is a specialty materials manufacturer whose products are
used in a variety of applications including medical products. In 2011, the Fortune 500 company expanded its headquarters in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, in part because of the availability of the skilled workforce it needed.
Dallas-based Kimberly-Clark, a Fortune 500 consumer products giant, manufactures a cross-section of professional health-care and personal-care products around the globe.
In Fort Worth, Alcon Laboratories manufactures and markets surgical equipment and
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devices, pharmaceuticals and vision-care products. The company, a subsidiary of French health-care company Novartis, employs more than 3,200 people in Fort Worth, where it has its research facilities. The company is undertaking an $11 million renovation and expansion of its Fort Worth campus that would add 750 jobs.
Support for texAS bioMedSWith more than 88,500
employees in over 3,400 companies statewide, Texas’ biomedical and life sciences industry is backed by a number of industry-specific networking and support organizations.
The state undergirds biotech growth and innovation on a number of fronts. The Texas Emerging Technology Fund, created by the Texas Legislature in 2005 to promote growth of technology-oriented companies, has invested more than $233 million in biotechnology projects.
In the Bryan-College Station area, home of Texas A&M University’s f lagship campus, the Research Valley Partnership oversees an active bio corridor with ample services in place to support innovation.
Texas A&M has built a global reputation for advances across a broad spectrum of life sciences. In 2012, the university was awarded one of three national biodefense contracts to develop vaccines to rapidly respond to and protect against inf luenza pandemics and conduct research and training for responding to chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats.
In Georgetown, the Texas Life Sciences Collaboration Center (TLCC) helps take companies with commercially viable biotechnology and life-sciences products to the next level.
Founded in 2007, the center is now one of the most successful
life science incubators in the state, and works closely with the Texas Healthcare Bioscience Institute, Southwestern University in Georgetown and Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine in Round Rock.
“As companies grow, we help nurture and give them every kind of assistance we can,” says Russ Peterman, TLCC executive director.
In 2012, Peterman also helped launch the I-35 Texas Bio Corridor Alliance. Founded by a group of life science leaders from Interstate 35’s 275-mile stretch from San Antonio to Dallas, the alliance is helping accelerate commercial success and promote the corridor as a recognized global leader in the health-care industry.
“This is an industry where collaboration is the norm, and we’re all in the same boat trying to recruit companies to Texas,” he says. “It’s a very exciting time for the state.”
TexaS biOTech
88,500number of employees in the texas biotech sector
3,400biotechnology-related manufacturing, research or testing firms in texas
$74,000Average annual salary for biotech worker in texas
$75 billionestimated annual economic impact from texas biotech industry
Source: TexasWideOpenforBusiness.com
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left and above: The Texas life sciences collaboration center, located in Georgetown, offers a number of services that help innovative companies launch and grow.
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AvailableLandandBuildings
45MilesEastofHouston
45MilesWestofBeaumont
City-OwnedUtilities
MunicipalAirport
TrinityValleyExpositionRodeoArena andFairgrounds
MunicipalParkwithSandVolleyball, Soccer,Softball/BaseballFields, PlaygroundsandWaterPark
MagnoliaRidgeGolfCourse
CulturalCenterandLibrary
ExpeditedPermittingandZoning
1829SamHoustonLiberty,TX77575
(936)336-3684Fax(936)336-9846
www.cityofliberty.org
lab leaderworld-chAnGinG medicine beGins At the texAs biomedicAl reseArch institUte
san antonio-based Texas Biomedical Research Institute, a leader in its field, is advancing global health through innovative research.
“Texas Biomed preceded by decades the appearance of a medical school, dental school or graduate programs in biomedical disciplines in this city,” says kenneth Trevett, institute president. “In many ways, it was the fountainhead of what has now become an international powerhouse of businesses, clinics, hospitals, universities and research institutions.”
located on a 200-acre campus in northwest san antonio, Texas Biomed is home to 75 doctoral-level biomedical scientists including 28 principal investigators. Their 200-plus projects relate to genetics, virology and immunology, and nonhuman primates as models of disease.
Resources include the southwest National Primate Research Institute, which houses the largest baboon colony in the world, and the aT&T Genomics computing center, host to 8,000 processors. Texas Biomed also conducts human population studies across the globe, and has one of only four level Four biocontainment laboratories in the united states, allowing researchers to study the deadliest of pathogens.
“all of these resources, together with the skills of our scientists, are available to third parties in government, academia and the private sector,” Trevett says.
among Texas Biomed’s many accomplishments are development of a high-frequency ventilator to rescue premature babies, codevelopment of the current hepatitis B vaccine, identification of genes that influence heart disease, diabetes and other common health problems, and development of vaccines, antibodies and antitoxins for deadly bioterrorism agents.
– Melanie Kilgore-Hill
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Heads in the Cloudnew avenues open up for texas technology
Winddata plans a $70 million facility in Pflugerville.
With a rich legacy that includes the birthplace of the integrated circuit,
Texas stands as a global leader in technology-related enterprise.
The state’s advantages in skilled workforce, energy prices, reliable power and low business costs have attracted domestic and international technology interests.
Just as it was with advancements in the early years of component development and during the telecommunications boom, Texas is ahead of the pack in
data center development and cloud services innovation.
biG nAMeS, biG buSineSSComputer and communications
stalwarts with a substantial presence in Texas include Dell, Texas Instruments, HP Enterprise Services, Cisco, Alcatel USA, Nokia, Fujitsu Network Communications, AT&T, Verizon, Amazon.com, Google, Freescale Semiconductor and Ericsson.
Apple is expanding its Texas footprint with a $304 million investment in a new campus in
Austin that will create upwards of 3,600 new jobs and more than double the company’s Texas workforce over the next decade.
In total, Texas is home to nearly 28,000 high-tech establishments that employ more than 456,000 technology workers, second among all states. Payroll in 2010 was $38.7 billion, a number that will grow with new ventures and expansion of existing ones.
In October 2011, Facebook doubled its office space in Austin, which had opened less than 18
story by Pamela CoyleP
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san antonio-based Rackspace has invested more than $200 million since 2011 to add 12,000 servers for its customers.
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months before. It is now Facebook’s largest North American operation outside of headquarters in California.
Just a few months earlier, eBay announced that it would expand its 250-employee operations in Austin, including those of its PayPal subsidiary. The $5.2 million investment is anticipated to create more than 1,000 jobs over a 10-year period. eBay executives cited investments from the Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF) and the City of Austin as being instrumental in its decision.
Austin-based WindData plans to build a $70 million data center powered by renewable energy in Pflugerville within the next three years. The venture is part of a $210 million investment in a planned five-building, 50-acre data center campus.
Cloud forMAtionSSan Antonio has a highly
developed cluster of data centers that includes Microsoft and Rackspace. Microsoft invested more than $550 million for a massive data center that opened there in 2008 to support its consumer and business services.
Richardson in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex is at the forefront of cloud services, the network-based sharing of resources, software and information of which data centers are the backbone.
Richardson’s Telecom Corridor already is home to players such as AT&T, Verizon Business, Digital Realty Trust and SunGard.
VCE, a company formed by Cisco and EMC that has become a major player in cloud computing, established its headquarters in Richardson in 2011. Texas helped make the company’s $35 million capital investment possible with a $2.45 million TEF investment.
“VCE is very pleased with its decision to locate its headquarters in Texas,” says Rick LaCroix,
left: Rackspace provides data hosting services to businesses. right: vcE picked Richardson for its headquarters.
Rackspace’s san antonio facility
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VCE’s director of corporate communications. “We expanded throughout 2011 and continued to do so into 2012. Richardson provides us with a large and experienced employee base, an international travel hub and room to expand.”
San Antonio-based Rackspace is expanding in Richardson with leased space in Datacenter Park, a Digital Realty Trust property. Since 2011, Rackspace, a leading player in the market for cloud computing services, has invested more than $200 million to add more than 12,000 servers at its data centers to accommodate new cloud customers.
The new space in Richardson, which was scheduled to open in September 2012, includes a private, 100-megawatt substation that provides wholesale rates, fiber-optic infrastructure and the availability of more space as Rackspace grows, says Jacques Greyling, COO of Rackspace.
The company’s first center in the Metroplex, in Grapevine, is still operating.
Reliable power and proximity are crucial for Rackspace customers. “It is nice to be in an area where power reliability is not a concern,” Greyling says.
“Richardson has a very robust infrastructure when it comes to power,” says John Jacobs, vice president of the Richardson Economic Development Partnership.
The region was on the forefront of the telecom boom 20 years ago, trademarking itself as the Telecom Corridor.
The area already has 10 data centers, with three more under construction.
“All of our technologies are very aligned with cloud computing. That is what has us on fire today,” Jacobs says. “I tell people I don’t know what will be next, but I know it will be here in Richardson.”
top: vEc in Richardson above: Rackspace’s san antonio facility
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Lynda Anderson Economic Development Director City of Whitesboro P.O. Box 340 • 111 W. Main St. Whitesboro, TX 76273 903.564.4000 903.564.6105 Fax [email protected]
A new prescription for technologytexAs comPAnies leAd in heAlth informAtion innovAtion
Even before federal health-care reform and nearly $20 billion in incentives set aside by the federal government as part of the 2009 stimulus package, health-care information technology (hIT) was already big business in austin.
e-Mds, which started in 1996, develops software that offers an integrated suite of clinical and financial information management programs for physician practices and groups. The austin-based company acquired a new 200,000 -square-foot facility in 2006, and today, more than 2,250 u.s. medical practices use the e-Mds software.
dell also has invested heavily in expanding its hIT business, and is now the largest player in the field, according to global analyst firm Gartner Inc.
“It is an area where dell can address long-standing gaps in the marketplace by making information easier to access and use,” says James coffin, vice president and general manager of dell healthcare and life sciences.
In 2009, dell acquired global information technology services provider Perot systems, which had a major presence in serving health-care clients. In 2010, it announced it was acquiring cloud-based medical archiving leader Insite one Inc. Both acquisitions boosted dell’s hIT portfolio, letting it tap into cloud computing to simplify information access and management, coffin says.
about 11,000 dell employees worldwide are dedicated to the company’s health-care business lines, and dell customers range from small physician practices to the largest health systems and pharmaceutical companies.
as of december 2010, 71 percent of hospitals with the most advanced electronic medical record (EMR) adoption were dell customers, coffin says.
RNcos, a market research company, forecasts that the u.s. hIT market will grow 24 percent a year through 2014, creating demand for qualified workers, as well as services.
To answer the need, Texas universities banded together to create the PuRE hIT consortium, which aims to increase the ranks of university-trained information
technology professionals in health care.
The PuRE-hIT consortium is led by Texas state university-san Marcos in collaboration with the university of Texas at austin college of Natural sciences and university of Texas health science center at houston school of Biomedical Informatics.
– Pamela Coyle
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Sky Hightexas ignites aerospace, aviation innovation
story by M.V. Greene
from the earliest efforts to get men off the ground, and then launch them into space,
aviation and aerospace innovation has been synonymous with Texas.
The state’s vast aviation and aerospace sector supports an ever-broadening range of activities that encompass military and civilian sectors, general defense and homeland security, commercial aviation, manufacturing and space.
Airplane and aerospace component manufacturing, pilot training, aircraft maintenance, military aircraft development and top-level aerospace research are all part of the landscape that numbers 1,665 establishments in Texas.
The industry employs more than 200,000 workers at an average annual salary of over
$62,700, according to the Office of the Governor’s Texas Aerospace & Aviation Industry Report. Air transportation and aircraft manufacturing alone employ 58,000 and 36,800 workers, respectively.
The legacy of the Lone Star State in military air defense dates to 1910, when the first-ever military f lights took place at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio.
Today, Lockheed Martin, L-3 Communications, Bell Helicopter Textron, Boeing and Raytheon are among the globally known aerospace and defense companies with major Texas operations.
At its Texas facilities, Lockheed Martin makes an array of military and defense products including the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, F-35
Simulator, F-22 Raptor, Orion spacecraft and missiles. The company employs 20,000 workers in Texas, the largest concentration of Lockheed workers in any state.
Fort Worth-based Bell Helicopter employs nearly 7,000 workers at operations in Fort Worth, Arlington, Grand Prairie and Amarillo. Its product roster includes the V-22 Ospry, made in partnership with Boeing. Sikorsky Aircraft repairs and maintains its UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters in Corpus Christi and Beeville and is designing its newest version of the CH-53K helicopter in Fort Worth.
Grand Prairie is the headquarters and major manufacturing center for American Eurocopter, the U.S. affiliate of Eurocopter, the world’s largest helicopter manufacturer.
left and above: spacex, which has extensive rocket development and testing operations in the Waco area, launched the first commercial spacecraft to successfully dock with the International space station.
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American Eurocopter employs nearly 700 people in Grand Prairie. The company’s rotary-wing helicopters are used by customers ranging from law enforcement to emergency medical service providers to tour operators and major companies.
neW inveStMent SoArSBoeing Co., which has more
than 6,000 employees in Texas, announced plans in January 2012 to add up to 400 additional jobs to its San Antonio-based operations for aircraft maintenance, modification and support on executive jets, including Air Force One – the Boeing 747s that ferry the president, vice president and other government officials.
San Antonio is where the company’s aircraft maintenance and modification work is
performed on the C-17 Airlifter, KC-135 Refueling Tanker and C-130 transport aircraft. The site also is involved in work on Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner aircraft. Boeing has more than 1,300 suppliers in Texas, with purchases of more than $1.9 billion annually. The company also has facilities in the Houston area supporting NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
Bell Helicopter plans to build its next state-of-the-art commercial helicopter in Amarillo. Known as Magellan, the project is reportedly a $500 million investment designed to produce craft for long-range transport of 200 nautical miles out to sea.
Spearheading industry efforts is the state’s Office of Aerospace, Aviation and Defense, which Gov. Rick Perry – a former Air Force
Above: Bell helicopter’s ah-1z helicopter right from top: lockheed Martin’s F-35; Interior of Boeing’s 787 dreamliner
TexaS aerOSpace & aViaTiOn induSTry facTS• texas has 1,665 aerospace and
aviation industry establishments
• Workforce for the sector totals 200,000 in the state
• lockheed Martin, the state’s largest aerospace company, employs 20,000 workers in texas
• Average annual income for an aerospace and aviation industry employee in texas is $62,700
• the history of military aviation began in texas in 1910, when the first-ever military flights occurred at fort Sam Houston in San Antonio.
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pilot – created in 2003 to support the growing cluster and work with industry decision makers and other governmental agencies to coordinate development.
AttrACtinG federAl ContrACtSThe strength and depth of the
aerospace industry in Texas has helped draw a range of federal contracts. In 2009, the federal government supported contracts totaling more than $4.4 billion to companies conducting aerospace-related R&D in Texas.
Department of Defense contract dollars in the Lone Star State during fiscal year 2010 were more than $30.8 billion, nearly 6 percent of all defense contract spending nationwide.
neW ventureS in SpACeTexas is also attracting a
number of new ventures related to
commercial space travel.Armadillo Aerospace in
Heath, east of Dallas, develops reusable rocket-powered vehicles. It is developing a manned suborbital spacecraft for space tourism and will eventually offer orbital space f light.
Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, as it is known, designs and manufactures advanced rockets and space capsules. The company, headquartered in Hawthorne, Calif., has extensive rocket development and testing operations in the Waco area. The company in spring 2012 launched the first commercial spacecraft, the SpaceX Dragon, to dock successfully with the International Space Station.
In July 2012, XCOR Aerospace, which develops and produces reusable launch vehicles, rocket
engines and rocket propulsion systems, picked Midland International Airport as the headquarters location for its new Commercial Space Research and Development Center.
The center’s work will focus on development of the suborbital Lynx vehicle, a two-seat vehicle that takes off and lands like a conventional aircraft.
JoHnSon SpACe CenterA crown jewel in Texas’
aerospace and aviation sector is the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston. Since its establishment in 1961, the center has been at the crossroads of discoveries that have opened new frontiers in space exploration.
NASA estimates the JSC and local aerospace contractors directly employ more than 18,000
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TOp 15 TexaS aerOSpace & aViaTiOn emplOyerS by nuMber of eMployeeS
20,000
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7,000
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6,000
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lockheed Martin
l3 Communications
bell Helicopter/textron
AMr Corp.
boeing Co.
Southwest Airlines Co.
American Airlines inc.
raytheon
united Continental
triumph Aerostructures
pratt & Whitney engine Services
bAe Systems
Gulfstream Aerospace
Weber Aircraft; bombardier Aerospace
federal express Corp.
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For more information, contact: Economic Development Department
CITY OF CEDAR PARK | 450 Cypress Creek Rd. | Cedar Park, Texas 78613
phone: 512 401 5014 | fax: 512 250 8602 | www.cedarparktx.us
civil service and contract workers, with an estimated gross payroll totaling $1.7 billion.
bAyteCH: neW opportunitieSWhile the end of the Space
Shuttle program meant rollbacks at the Johnson Space Center, an effort is under way to tap the expertise of more than 3,500 former space program personnel.
Kim Morris, director of the Bay Area Houston Advanced Technology Consortium, or BayTech, a nonprofit group that links business and academic participants to create technology solutions for federal agencies and the private sector, says preserving the aura of space exploration in Texas is a priority.
“These people are highly trained professionals – ‘superstar’ technologists – possessing the intellectual capability to develop breakthrough technologies in energy, life science, IT, the privatization of space and in other arenas,” she says.
BayTech has received $500,000 to fund the Texas Innovation Program, which will help link these highly skilled aerospace workers with private-sector partners to create new companies, expand existing businesses, add jobs and keep that expertise in the state.
“These men and women, and the groundbreaking technology they have developed, are important resources for the Houston area and our state,” Perry said in announcing the award. “We want to keep them here, and the opportunities created by this partnership will help link these men and women with innovative companies that can bring more technologies to market.”
Morris says the consortium will seek to “create collaborative partnerships designed to discover new technology solutions which will, ultimately, lead to new commercial products and services.”
left: lockheed Martin in Fort Worth
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Preserving the Past …Promoting the Future!
830.331.9070 • www.kendallcountyedc.com
Kendall County provides a thriving business environment with an unmatched quality of life.
Growth targets for Kendall County include: • Health & Medical • Clean Industry • Corporate Headquarters • Retail & Service • Resort & Conferences • Higher Education • Existing Business & Industry Expansion
Come and see all that Kendall County has to
offer your business!• Business-Friendly Attitudes • Resources to Support Business Growth • Highly Educated Workforce • San Antonio Amenities 25 Minutes Away • Texas Hill Country Lifestyle
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flight AssistedtexAs schools stock AviAtion, AerosPAce tAlent Pool
Texas’ burgeoning aviation and aerospace cluster is bolstered by equally robust education and training.
home to nearly 1,500 Federal aviation administration-approved airports and the headquarters for southwest airlines and american airlines, Texas is ideal for students interested in the sector.
Twenty-three college- and university-level aeronautical programs are offered in Texas, while 36 public high schools offer aeronautical courses. The Faa has approved 13 maintenance technology schools in the state.
AGGreSSive Job MArketJames Rowland, director of the
aerospace division at Texas state Technical college (TsTc) in Waco, the state’s largest provider of aerospace programs, says educational institutions are responding to an aggressive job market that covets highly skilled and trained workers.
TsTc provides hands-on training in aircraft pilot training, air traffic control, aircraft dispatch, maintenance and avionics. courses, which include use of training aircraft and flight simulators, are Faa-approved and taught by Faa-certified staff with industry support.
“our role is to be responsive to the workforce and train the workforce for the aviation community,” Rowland says.
top-level reSeArCHamong major institutions, the
university of Texas at austin spends about $10.8 million annually to support aviation and aerospace research, Texas a&M university about $4 million, the university of Texas at arlington $3.6 million and Rice university almost $2.5 million, according to the office of the Governor’s Texas aerospace & aviation Industry Report.
at uT-arlington, for instance, the Mechanical and aerospace Engineering department conducts research in disciplines such as transonic, supersonic and hypersonic aerodynamics.
profeSSionAliSM, diSCiplineRowland, a pilot for more than 40
years, says institutions stress that aviation and aerospace careers
bring with them great responsibility – an “esprit de corps.”
“Whether you are maintaining an aircraft, flying an aircraft or controlling an aircraft, a mistake in our industry can very easily end up in a fatality. There is professionalism and a discipline about aviation that we impart to the students who are here,” Rowland says.
– M.V. Greene
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built for Successmanufacturing sector ramps up job production in texas
story by M.V. Greene
in Texas, the manufacturing sector thrives on muscle and smarts.The Lone Star State has built
an impressive industrial sector humming with investment and new jobs across a gamut of manufacturing, from cars and trucks to heavy machinery and aerospace products, furniture, medical equipment, sophisticated electronics and computers. Across the state, state-of-the-art processes and leading-edge technology are being harnessed by manufacturers to improve efficiency and productivity. That’s no surprise
in a state whose legacy of manufacturing innovation includes the birthplace of the integrated circuit at Texas Instruments.
MAnufACturinG MeAnS Good JobSManufacturing is in a comeback
mode, and nowhere is that more true than Texas. Manufacturers gained 23,300 jobs here from February 2011 to February 2012, according to Texas A&M University research. More than 854,000 workers were employed in the sector as of May 2012, up from about 754,000 in 2009.
Forbes magazine in December
continental automotive is expanding its seguin facility and plans to create 300 new jobs. BR
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2011 ranked Houston No. 1, San Antonio No. 4 and Dallas No. 15 on its Best Cities for Manufacturing list, which was based on job growth in heavy manufacturing segments such as automobiles, farm and energy equipment, and aerospace.
Forbes noted that Houston was just one of four metros to show net job growth in manufacturing over the past decade. Its manufacturing clout is fueling Texas’ robust growth in exports, where it has led all states in export volume for 10 straight years.
GenerAl MotorS, toyotAThe automobile industry
highlights the state’s manufacturing muscle. The auto industry corridor, which runs along Interstate 35 from Mexico at Laredo through
Dallas-Fort Worth, developed in part from activity stemming from the North American Free Trade Agreement. The presence includes a roster of auto-related components manufacturers and major assembly operations for General Motors and Toyota, and truck manufacturers such as Navistar in Garland and Peterbilt in Denton.
GM has operated a sprawling assembly operation in Arlington for more than 58 years. The 3.75 million-square-foot plant, which turns out sport utility vehicles including the Chevrolet Suburban, GMC Yukon and Cadillac Escalade, will soon include a state-of-the-art stamping facility to produce metal body parts, adding 180 new jobs to the 2,400-worker payroll.
top to bottom counterclockwise: Toyota began making full-size pickups in san antonio in 2006; The new GE Manufacturing solutions facility in Fort Worth will span nearly 1 million square feet; an employee works in the body shop at GM’s arlington complex. P
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manufacTuring JObS by STaTe (SeaSOnally adJuSTed, aS Of may 2012)
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
califOrnia: 1.25 milliOn
TexaS: 854,000
WiScOnSin: 451,600
nOrTh carOlina: 435,800
illinOiS: 594,000
michigan: 523,500
indiana: 484,700
neW yOrk: 458,500
pennSylVania: 568,000OhiO: 658,000
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fOrbeS’ beST ciTieS fOr manufacTuring
nuMber 1Houston
nuMber 4San Antonio
nuMber 15dallas
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Toyota came to San Antonio in 2006. In 2010, the automaker announced a $100 million expansion and the addition of 1,000 jobs. The plant now employs 2,800 workers who make Tundra and Tacoma pickup trucks.
In total, the state’s 479 automotive-related manufacturers employed 32,662 workers through the fall of 2011, with an average annual wage of $52,566.
buSineSS friendlyA host of automotive-related
companies are finding the climate in Texas ideal for expansion. Specialty vehicle equipment company Continental Automotive is undergoing a $113 million expansion to its Seguin manufacturing facility, adding more than 300 jobs for a new automotive sensor production line. The company’s power train line in Seguin employs 1,400 workers.
“Texas is a very business-friendly state. It creates a very positive environment for business. We have great people. The values that are found in this region means you have a good formula for success for business,” says Scott Williams, plant manager at the Seguin facility, which opened in 1972.
Engines of another sort are helping to drive manufacturing growth in Fort Worth. General Electric Transportation will invest more than $190 million on two projects in the city. One is a 900,000-square-foot manufacturing complex that will create jobs for 500 workers to build locomotive engines. The other is a 236,000 -square-foot plant that will build electric-drive wheel systems for huge off-road vehicles used in mining and other industries, creating 130 jobs.
A GE Transportation spokeswoman says the company
left: continental automotive in seguin above: GE Manufacturing solutions, a wholly owned entity of General Electric co., will manufacture Evolution® series locomotives at its new facility in Fort Worth, which is scheduled to open in late 2012.
Among most desired U.S. relocation destinations
Rail, highway and power 15 minutes to I-45
50 minutes to Houston Intercontinental Airport
A city working for you
Come home to Magnolia!
City of Magnolia Economic Development Corporation
18111 Buddy Riley Blvd. Magnolia, TX 77353
(281) 356-2266 www.cityofmagnolia.com
Host City of Texas Renaissance Festival
Magnolia
Magnolia
Magnolia
Sites and office space
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Uvalde area development FoUndation
The following sites (with utilities included) are now available at our industrial park:
1.772 acres
1.00 acres
2.25 acres
9.28 acres
We have an additional expansion site that
is approximately 30 acres.
Contact: Joe Cardenas City of Uvalde P.O. Box 799
Uvalde, TX 78802 (830) 278-3315
[email protected] www.uvaldetx.com
believes Fort Worth “offers top talent with the skill sets and depth of experience necessary” to operate the high-tech facilities.
Innovation is part of the city’s fabric in Austin. In December 2011, Superconductor Technologies Inc., which produces high temperature superconducting materials and associated technologies, announced it would relocate its corporate headquarters from Santa Barbara, Calif., to Austin.
Global heavy equipment powerhouse Caterpillar has several Texas manufacturing operations, including in Seguin
and the Waco area. In Waco, Caterpillar operates some 2.1 million square feet of space spread among four facilities for global and regional logistics, and tool and equipment manufacturing.
“We like to say we are still a market where we make things. There are a lot of really advanced products from pharmaceuticals to transportation equipment to aerospace made here in Waco. We continue to nurture that part of our economy,” says Sarah Roberts, senior vice president, Economic Development, Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce.
left and above: caterpillar operates four facilities in Waco for global and regional logistics and distribution work, as well as tool and equipment manufacturing. The company’s Waco facilities are responsible for approximately 500 jobs in the area.
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Ample Harvesttexas agriculture feeds and clothes the world
texas agriculture is feeding and clothing the world with its rich harvest of resources.
With an annual economic impact exceeding $100 billion, agriculture is the second-largest resource-based industry in the state. Additionally, the major portion of Texas land is used for agricultural production.
Texas counts 247,500 farms and ranches that cover 130.4 million acres – leading the nation in both categories.
nAture, netWork And nurtureWith a long growing season,
varied climate and diverse soil varieties, an excellent transportation system, supportive state and local governments and a skilled workforce, the Texas agriculture industry has all the ingredients for success.
Along with growing crops and raising livestock, Texas also is home to an immense food processing industry, comprised of 1,700 different companies employing nearly 90,000 workers.
Among major food companies in the state are Frito-Lay, Cargill, Pilgrim’s Pride, Dean Foods and Tyson.
Texas is home to 247,000 farms and ranches. Ph
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story by John Fuller
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“Something we often overlook is the role agriculture plays in our state and national economies,” says Texas Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples. “This industry is a powerhouse of productivity and part of the foundation of our economy. Our farmers and ranchers work hard every day to stimulate that economy at both the state and national levels.”
Texas leads the nation in the production of cattle, cotton, sheep and wool, goats and mohair. Cotton is the state’s most valuable cash crop, generating more than 13 percent of its total agricultural receipts and 41 percent of the nation’s cotton revenues.
TexaS agriculTure facTS
$100 billiontotal annual economic impact of texas agriculture
247,000number of farms and ranches
527Average farm size in acres
130 millionAcres of agricultural land
The 130 million acres of agricultural land in Texas contribute toward an annual economic impact of $100 billion from the industry in the state.
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Other important crops are greenhouse and nursery products, corn for grain, hay and wheat. Texas is also a leading producer of vegetables, sorghum grain, peanuts, rice and sugarcane. It ranks in the top three of pecan-producing states annually and also is a major producer of watermelons, grapefruit and cantaloupes.
texAS CAttle leAd tHe nAtionTexas also leads the nation for
total livestock and livestock product receipts. Beef cattle are the largest source of agricultural revenue in Texas, accounting for 37 percent of the state’s agricultural income. Texas is home to 13 percent of the nation’s cattle and ranks first in the country in the value of cattle raised.
Other important livestock-related products include broilers and dairy products.
agriculTure & liVeSTOck prOducTiOn in TexaS (2010 ValueS)
$7.6 billionCattle & Calves
$2.6 billionCotton
$2.2 billionpoultry & eggs
$1.5 billionMilk & dairy products
$542 millionWheat
$454 millionGrain Sorghum
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Beef exports totaled $4.6 billion in Texas in 2011.
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“Texas has so many diverse resources to meet the world’s demand for food,” says Mark Welch, Texas Agrilife Extension economist at Texas A&M University. “I believe the long-term prospects for the Texas farmer and rancher are very bright.”
Cattle ranching is the biggest segment of Texas agriculture. David Anderson, Texas Agrilife Extension economist at Texas A&M in livestock marketing, says the Lone Star State has a solid infrastructure to support the cattle industry, with feedlots and processing plants located near farming areas.
While Texas has been challenged in recent years by severe drought conditions, farmers and ranchers supported by institutions like Texas A&M have learned to adapt.
One example has been the development of more drought-resistant strains of corn and sorghum. “The Texas farmer and rancher has always been an early adapter of technology and this recent challenge with the drought is no exception,” says James Sartwelle, director of public policy for the Texas Farm Bureau.
buMper Crop in exportS Agricultural economists are
particularly optimistic about exports of products from the state. Texas agricultural exports totaled upward of $8.2 billion in 2011, more than double what they were in 2009.
Texas agriculture is particularly benefiting from recent trade agreements with South Korea, Panama and Columbia.
Beef exports from Texas totaled $4.6 billion in 2011, up 34 percent from 2010. The leading export partners of Texas beef are Mexico, Canada, Japan and South Korea. Economists forecast shipments of beef overseas will climb as the standard of living in many countries, particularly in Asia, continues to increase.
Texas is a leader in agriculture and food processing. The lone star state’s food and beverage companies include such well-known names as dean Foods, Frito-lay and dr Pepper snapple Group. some 1,700 food-related companies employing nearly 90,000 workers operate in Texas and turned out products valued at $39.3 billion in 2011.
blue bellBased in Brenham, Blue
Bell has been in operation since 1907. The company sells its ice cream and novelties such as frozen fruit bars at retail and grocery locations in 20 states including Texas.
campbell SOup cO. The iconic soup maker
has a location in Paris in East Texas, where it operates a processing and production facility for its soup, juice and prepared sauce lines.
Ocean SprayIn sulphur springs, ocean
spray’s beverage plant operates around the clock in 210,000 square feet of manufacturing and warehouse space. ocean spray produces up to 18 million cases of its beverages each year in sulphur springs.
TySOn fOOdSThe meat, pork and
poultry processor and food production company has 10 locations in Texas including beef processing, poultry processing, prepared foods and animal nutrition operations.
a full menu
Texas is a major producer of crops, including corn, cotton and sorghum.
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Zoned in on Jobs texas enterprise Zone helps
communities promote investment
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story by Betsy Williams
t exas has a talent for creating jobs. Since 2008, the Lone Star State has led the nation in total jobs added, and the state’s aggressive incentives package has played an integral role in
that economic success.One of the key incentives offered is the Texas Enterprise Zone
Program, which encourages local communities to partner with the state in job creation efforts and capital investment, particularly in economically distressed areas. Approved projects are eligible to apply for state sales and use tax refunds on qualified expenditures.
Since its inception in 1988, 802 qualified businesses have received an enterprise project designation, which generated commitments of $48.1 billion in capital investment, created 139,148 new, permanent jobs and retained 144,476 existing jobs, says Joe H. Morin, manager of business incentives with the Texas Office of the Governor, Economic Development & Tourism Division.
The incentive supports projects such as the expansion of the Nacogdoches Medical Center in Nacogdoches County. The savings in sales and use taxes supported the upgrade of rooms, addition of nursing stations and installation of an energy-efficient roof.
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below and right: The kelly aviation center, a joint venture of Rolls-Royce, lockheed Martin and GE aviation in san antonio, underwent a
$20 million expansion that was eligible for Texas Enterprise zone program assistance.
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“Without this incentive, we would probably have to kick a few of these projects down the road. On the technology side, we will always stay on the forefront of the medical technology, but in terms of upgrading our facility, this allows us to do that cost effectively,” says Clay Farell, director of business development.
San Antonio has also utilized the program in the past 24 months for projects including:
Baptist Health System’s $85 million expansion at its Mission Trail Baptist Hospital, which will create 700 jobs.
Holt Texas LTD, an authorized Caterpillar dealer, which is investing $10 million to expand its headquarters and office operations and retain 500 full-time jobs.
Kelly Aviation Center, a joint venture between Lockheed Martin, GE Aviation and Rolls-Royce, which is investing $20 million in its aerospace facility at Port San Antonio to expand operations and retain 476 jobs.
Projects receive funds based on investment and jobs created and/or retained. Kelly Aviation Center, for example, qualifies for up to
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$1.1 million in state sales and use tax refunds.
The requirement that companies fill from 25 percent to 35 percent of the jobs with local residents who are economically disadvantaged provides an extra economic boost to communities and the state.
“The Enterprise Zone Program creates opportunities for local communities, Texas-based businesses and the state of Texas to create partnerships that foster job creation and economic growth,” Morin says. “TEZ provides tax incentives to businesses that locate in economically distressed areas and employ economically disadvantaged individuals, and local communities benefit from increased tax revenues.”
Local Texas Enterprise Zone administrators reported that for fiscal year 2011, participating communities received $59.4 million in net revenue from participating businesses in the form of local sales taxes, local property taxes and other taxes.
Brenda Clear, program specialist in the Office of the Governor, Economic Development & Tourism Division, points to a recent TEZ designation for General Motors Co. in Arlington, which is home to a plant that manufactures the Chevy Tahoe, Cadillac Escalade and GMC Yukon. GM is investing $331 million over the next five years to upgrade the facility and add 133,000 square feet.
The project means the retention of more than 2,300 jobs and the creation of 110 new ones. Specifically, GM will upgrade and replace machinery, equipment and special tooling at the Arlington plant and add space to install equipment for its Next Generation Full Size SUV line.
“It’s important to note that this program focuses on creating new jobs and retaining existing jobs,” Clear says.
The Texas Enterprise zone program aided an $85 million expansion at Mission Trail Baptist hospital in san antonio.
TexaS enTerpriSe ZOne aT a glanceThe Texas Enterprise zone Program is an economic
development tool for local communities to partner with the state to promote job creation and capital investment in economically distressed areas of Texas. communities may nominate projects for a designation period of up to five years. Projects that qualify for designation are eligible for a refund of state sales and use taxes of up to $3.75 million over five years based on investment and the creation or retention of jobs. Texas awards a maximum of 105 project designations every two-year period.
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Recognized Go Texan Hard Working Community
P.O. Box 494 • Nocona, TX 76255940.825.3150 • [email protected]
www.nocona.org
Available, Developable Land
One Hour from Houston
County, City Tax Abatements
Available Workforce
Major U.S. Highways
Competitive Power Rates
Rail
Quality of Life
Friendly People
POLk COUnTy ECOnOMiC & inDUSTRiAL DEvELOPMEnT CORPORATiOn(936) 327-2710 • [email protected] • www.pcidcorp.net
Wide Open Spaces
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deal Sealerskey incentives AttrAct jobs, investment to texAs
The competition is fierce when it comes to attracting companies the caliber of eBay, caterpillar, Td ameritrade, Facebook and samsung, and with incentives like the Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF) and Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF), the lone star state is in it to win it.
The largest deal-closing fund of its kind in the nation, TEF is a cash grant for projects that create jobs and result in substantial capital investment. TEF comes into play to tip the scale when a company is choosing between a single site in Texas and a viable out-of-state option.
In March 2012, a TEF award of $21 million sealed the deal with apple Inc. to invest $304 million in a new campus in austin and add over 3,600 workers over the next decade. a cash grant of $2.8 million helped lure eBay to austin with a commitment of 1,050 jobs.
Texas awarded more than $465 million in cash grants through TEF as of april 2012 to create more than 62,000 new jobs and bring in more than $21.4 billion in capital investment.
creating jobs in technology fields is a high priority in Texas, and the TETF grants help make that happen by focusing on three key areas:
commercialization for early stage investments in new, technology-based, private entrepreneurial entities that collaborate with public or private institutions of higher education in Texas; matching funds to help secure money flowing from outside the state; and money to assist higher education institutions recruit top researchers.
More than $1.3 billion of outside investment in technology companies and university research has been attracted to Texas because of TETF, says Jonathan Taylor, the fund’s director.
– Betsy Williams
TexaS emerging TechnOlOgy fund aWardS percenTage by induSTry SecTOrsource: http://governor.state.tx.us
47%biotechnology & life Science
18%Computers & info technology
16%energy
15%Advanced technology & Manufacturing 4%
Aerospace & defense
52number of world-class researchers who came to texas higher
education institutions because of the tetf
167total number of tetf awards since 2005
$370+ milliontotal amount awarded to tetf winners since 2005
$1.35+ billionAdditional amount of private and public funding raised
by tetf award winners since 2005
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let nature take its Coursein texas, adventure is waiting just outside
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t exas is an outdoor playground filled with adventure, scenic splendor and boundless opportunities to hike, bike, hunt, fish, boat,
swim or just beach it.Spectacular outdoor attractions are
commonplace in the state, where mountains, canyons, rock formations, caves, forests, rivers and beaches are just some of the natural sites.
Texas offers 90 state parks and treasures such as Sam Houston and Sabine national forests, as well as Palo Duro Canyon near Amarillo, Devil’s River State Natural Area in southwestern Texas and the Hueco Tanks State Historic Site in El Paso County.
More than 225,000 people visit Fredericksburg annually to explore the formations at Enchanted Rock State Natural Area.
hueco tanks State Park & historic Site in El Paso features a series of mythological designs and human
and animal figures etched on some 5,000 rocks.
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Tx recreaTiOn: by The numberS
624Miles of coastline in texas
90number of state parks in texas
191Miles of rivers and streams in texas for freshwater fishing
70+Working and guest ranches in texas
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Clockwise from left: diablo East section of lake amistad National Recreation area; lake amistad National Recreation area; dinosaur track at dinosaur valley state Park; devil’s River state Natural area
“It is the third-largest natural rock formation in the United States, and many people travel here to climb to its summit,” says Sara Gutierrez, Enchanted Rock State Natural Area office manager. “In addition, there is hiking and primitive camping, and being a natural area, we don’t alter nature in any way. We don’t kill snakes or bugs, or cut down trees. It’s a beautiful attraction in the Texas Hill Country.”
dinoSAur trACkSDinosaur Valley State Park near
Glen Rose contains some of the best preserved dinosaur tracks in the world, and visitors can camp, hike and mountain bike. There are also two huge fiberglass dinosaur models on display.
“Three sets of actual dinosaur tracks are easily visible along the riverbed,” says Nathanael Gold, Dinosaur Valley State Park assistant ranger.
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Big Bend National Park is designated as an international biosphere reserve, with backpacking, mountain biking, fishing, boating and hiking in a primitive setting. Natural Bridge Caverns near New Braunfels and Cascade Caverns in Boerne are both subterranean wonders that each accommodate underground tours.
For specific summer getaways, Garner State Park in Concan is one of the most popular outdoor venues in Texas, with swimming, fishing, paddling and tubing, as well as hiking, nature trails and bird watching. Another warm-weather destination is Lake Amistad in Del Rio, with a variety of water sports on the upper stretches of the Rio Grande River.
Clockwise from bottom left: lake amistad National Recreation area; Garner state Park in concan; cascade caverns, which features a 100-foot waterfall
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birdS And SeA turtleSPadre Island National Seashore
spans 70 miles south from Corpus Christi along the Gulf of Mexico, with some of the most remote seashore to be found anywhere.
“A majority of people who visit are probably attracted to the solitude, thanks to the long expanse of undeveloped beach property,” says William Botts, Padre Island National Seashore education coordinator. “It is protected by the National Parks Service, and about 500,000 tourists a year visit the seashore. Many people utilize the site multiple times, especially fishermen.”
Botts says Padre Island is not only excellent for recreation, but is a critical wildlife habitat.
“Nearly 400 species of birds annually inhabit Padre Island National Seashore, which is almost half of all bird species that have been documented in North America,” he says. “We also oversee a Sea Turtle Science and Recovery Program that is part of an overall global effort to help recover populations of threatened and endangered sea turtles in the Gulf of Mexico. Families – especially with little kids – love seeing the little turtles that f lourish here.”
top: south Padre Island features a barrier reef that spans more than 30 miles and offers kiteboarding, windsurfing and more. bottom: Waterskiing at coleto creek Park and Reservoir in victoria, which provides 61 miles of shoreline.
Photo courtesy of Padre island national seashore
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Muleshoe econoMic
DevelopMent corporation
215 S. First Muleshoe, TX 79347
(806) [email protected]
Muleshoe, texas
“Where Progress is Routine”
BuSineSS Friendly CoMMuniTy
• Atmosphere that welcomes growth and innovation
• Access to three major highways and railroad
AgriCulTure
• Beef cattle
• dairy cattle
• Crop production
• established businesses to support industry
CoMMuniTy
• new water park
• golf course
• disc golf
• recognized school district
riCh in heriTAge & PreServATion
• Muleshoe heritage Center
• Muleshoe Wildlife refuge
• “old Pete”– only national memorial to the mule
Cowpokes WelcomeworkinG rAnches let yoU hArness yoUr inner cowboy
Texas has more than 70 working ranches, and many welcome visitors to enjoy vacations in their rustic, outdoor settings. The ranches offer an authentic experience and the chance to see Texas longhorns, horses, sheep and beautiful scenery, plus watch real cowboys tend to the stock.
one popular destination is Beaumont Ranch in Grandview, which actually has the old chisholm Trail running through the middle of its acreage.
“We are a kind of resort for couples or families who like a rustic nature experience,” says donna Martin, Beaumont Ranch spokesperson. “Guests can watch cowboys work the horses and cattle, and visitors will also enjoy our spa and salon, a cafe, aTv rides and the longest zip line in Texas.”
Hey, dudeone of most recognized destination cities in Texas for a working ranch
experience is Bandera, known as the cowboy capital of the World.one of its venues, dixie dude Ranch, has welcomed visitors from all
over the world for more than 50 years. Guests have access to horseback riding, western meals and comfortable lodging, while watching cowboys work the longhorn cattle, spanish goats and pigs.
The 725-acre expanse is a popular destination for school trips, summer family vacations and even Texas hill country honeymoons.
fiSH A SHAded riveralso in Bandera is Twin Elm Guest Ranch, where visitors ride
trails on horseback with a horse best suited to their age and ability – including youngsters.
visitors to Twin Elm can fish a shaded river, swim in a private pool, play basketball, or go indoors to play air hockey or ping pong. other activities include tubing, hiking trails, birding and even a Friday Night Rodeo.
For more information on the ranch experience in Texas, go to www.traveltex.com.
– Kevin Litwin
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Energy
texas wind capacity generates more manufacturing
t hough a state with deep roots in traditional energy, Texas’ commitment to a diversified energy portfolio has led it to become a global
leader in renewable energy research and production.The Lone Star State already has installed more
wind power than any other state and all but five countries, and growth in wind-related manufacturing adds to its portfolio as a powerhouse in this sector.
The state is also an emerging player in solar
power generation, with a solar power potential that is top-ranked nationally. But wind keeps making waves.
In March 2012, General Dynamics, for example, announced it will move into the Texas market with its SATCOM Technologies Inc. business unit and manufacture 500-kilowatt wind turbines in Longview and Kilgore. The company will produce turbines for North American, South American, African, U.S. territory and military markets.
More than Hot Air
story by Pamela Coyle
118 t e x A S W i d e o p e n f o r b u S i n e S S
texas is far and away the leader among states in wind energy capacity
staff photo
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CAliforniA: 3,927 MW
texAS: 10,337 MW
ioWA: 4,322 MW
illinoiS: 2,743 MW
Wind leAdS tHe WAyMartifer-Hirschfeld Energy
Systems LLC is making 80-meter wind towers in San Angelo to fill both domestic and international orders, says Richard Phillips, president of Hirschfeld Industries.
The partnership of the Martifer Group, based in Portugal, and Hirschfeld Wind Energy Solutions has grown to a staff of nearly 190.
“We are working almost 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and that is good,” Phillips says.
The legion of manufacturing and service companies connected to the wind energy business in Texas supported more than 8,000 direct and indirect jobs in 2010, and brought in $110 million in annual property tax payments, plus $30 million in annual land lease payments.
Wind is one slice of a robust clean energy sector that ranked second among all states in the percentage growth of clean energy jobs in a 10-year period from 1997 to 2008. Statewide, more than 4,800 companies engaged in wind, solar, biofuel and other renewable energy sources employ more than 55,600 workers. That presence will surely grow. Martifer-hirschfeld Energy systems llc in san angelo
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Wind energy capaciTy by STaTe – ThrOugh q4 2011
MinneSotA: 2,733 MW
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top and bottom: Employees complete research at the Texas Wind Energy Institute at Texas Tech university (TTu).
The Texas Wind Energy Workforce Assessment, a 309-page report released in December 2011, found wind-related companies “very bullish about the market,” says Andy Swift, director of the Texas Wind Energy Institute at Texas Tech University (TTU) in Lubbock.
Among the 50 companies that responded, 64 percent intend to expand their workforce between now and 2016, he says. Both onshore and offshore activity will expand and fuel a projected 35 percent increase in wind-related employment, the study found.
Wind WorkforCe in plACeTexas Tech is bullish on wind,
too. At its Wind Science and Engineering (WiSE) Research Center, students and faculty are engaged in top-level research on harvesting wind energy efficiently and mitigating wind-related damage.
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Rural Workforce Network
West Texas is a key player in renewable energy in Texas, nationally and worldwide.
We are the workforce experts for renewable energy in West Texas. We work closely with our education, economic and community development partners to:
meet the needs of employers in the energy sector; and,
train today’s and tomorrow’s workforce for careers in renewable energy.
Electrical Lineman Training, Western Texas College, Snyder, Texas
Wind Energy Technician Training, Texas State Technical College,
Sweetwater, Texas
The Workforce Development Boards and Workforce Solutions Offices are equal opportunity employers/programs. Auxiliary aids and services are available upon request to individuals with disabilities.
For additional information, visit our website: http://www.ruralworkforcenetwork.org/pages/Energy.html
The Rural Workforce Network Boards include Workforce Solutions of Concho Valley, Permian
Basin, South Plains, West Central Texas and North Texas. Join our efforts to
Build a sustainable/renewable energy infrastructure.
Projects include a 200-meter meteorological tower to document wind properties and study low-level jets and other atmospheric events. Two state-of-the-art mobile radar stations observe fine-scale atmospheric motions, and The West Texas Mesonet, a network of atmospheric monitoring stations, provides real-time weather reports for agricultural, wind energy and other needs.
TTU also has workforce training covered. Approved in August 2011, the bachelor of science in wind energy program already has 70 students as declared majors. The degree includes broad coursework from education on the characteristics of wind to instruction on project development and management.
Another 20 students are on the Ph.D. track in wind science and engineering, Swift says. Both degrees are the first such U.S. offerings, he adds. “The program has really taken off.”
maJOr TexaS Wind energy generaTiOn prOJecTSName • location county • Installed capacity in Megawatts
Source: American Wind Energy Association, Wind Today, as of 1/12
Roscoe Wind Farm • Nolan, Mitchell, scurry, Fisher • 782
horse hollow Wind Energy center • Taylor, Nolan • 736
capricorn Ridge • sterling, cooke • 663
sweetwater • Nolan • 585
Buffalo Gap • Nolan, Taylor • 523
Panther creek • howard • 458
Peñascal Wind Farm • kenedy • 404
lone star Wind Farm • shackelford • callahan • 400
Papalote creek Wind Farm • san Patricio • 380
sherbino Wind Farm • Pecos • 300
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approximately 23 million texas residents are served by the texas interconnection power grid, which is operated by the Electric reliability council of texas.
The TexaS inTercOnnecTiOn tHe lone StAr StAte iS buZZinG WitH eleCtriCity
Texas is the only state in the nation with its own power grid. The Texas Interconnection is operated by the Electric Reliability council of Texas (ERcoT), which manages the flow of electric power to 23 million Texas customers – 85 percent of the state’s electric load. This grid connects 40,500 miles of transmission lines and more than 550 generation
units – and ERcoT schedules all power delivery. The membership-based, nonprofit entity also handles financial settlement for the competitive wholesale bulk-power market and administers retail switching for 6.6 million locations. Both the Public utility commission of Texas and the Texas legislature provide oversight.
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Technology
san Antonio is epicenter of cyber safety innovation
t exas is indeed a border state, but one of the biggest national security issues has
nothing to do with lines on a map and everything to do with technology that makes such traditional borders irrelevant.
The war on cyber terror is big business in Texas, and San Antonio is its epicenter.
Academic, military and private-sector enterprises have formed a growing cyber security cluster that is not only sophisticated, but significant in terms of regional
economic impact. San Antonio is recognized as a national leader in the field, second only to Washington D.C., in the number of cyber security professionals.
Air forCe Cyber CoMMAndIn San Antonio alone, the
economic impact of IT and cyber security is estimated at $10 billion, a figure expected to reach $15 billion by 2015. The sector employs at least 20,000 people. An even more telling figure: 7,500 people in the San Antonio area have TS/SCI
clearance from the federal government – Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information.
The U.S. Air Force’s Cyber Command is at San Antonio’s Lackland Air Force Base, where it has a military and civilian staff of more than 400 that monitor all USAF computer and satellite assets. Related military programs in the region include the National Security Agency/Central Security Service Texas Cryptologic Center; Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and
Secure location
story by Pamela Coyle
The Institute for cyber security at the university of Texas at san antonio was established in 2007. Photo courtesy of utsa
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Reconnaissance Agency; and Air Force Electronic Warfare School.
“This area is going very well, with NSA investments and the Air Force Cyber Command. They are growing and going to attract many private contracting operations,” says Mario Hernandez, president of the San Antonio Economic Development Foundation.
San Antonio already is home to about 80 private companies dedicated to cyber and IT security including Science Application International, Denim Group, GlobalScape, LMI, Booz Allen Hamilton and General Dynamics.
“Business develops here because there are market opportunities,” Hernandez says. “We also are making an investment in education to produce the workforce needed in the future as the need grows.”
ACAdeMiC reSourCeSLocal higher education
institutions have strong cyber security programs. For example, Our Lady of the Lake, a private
university, offers a master’s degree in computer information systems and security.
Housed at the University of Texas at San Antonio are two major research centers related to cybersecurity – the Center for Infrastructure Assurance & Security (CIAS) and the Institute for Cyber Security (ICS).
CIAS created the Dark Screen cybersecurity exercise, the first in nation to evaluate a city’s ability to respond to a cyber attack.
In 2007, a $3.5 million competitive grant through the Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF) led to the formation of the ICS. Professor Ravi Sandhu, a world-renowned cyber-security researcher and entrepreneur, became the institute’s founding executive director.
The ICS has built two world-class academic research laboratories dedicated to studying current and emerging cyber security issues and has attracted a staff with deep cyber security expertise and
San anTOniO and cyber SecuriTy
2rank in the u.S. in concentration of data centers (including Microsoft regional Mega Center)
900number of department of labor-designated it companies
80+Companies in the San Antonio defense technology Cluster
56,000+Science and technology workers
20,000it-related jobs
7,500personnel with top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented information clearance
lackland air Force Base in san antonio is headquarters for the air Force cyber command. a staff of 400 military and civilian personnel monitors air Force computers.
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experience in business, government and academics.
Among the institute’s research sponsors are the National Science Foundation, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Air Force Research Laboratory, Office of Naval Research and Department of Homeland Security.
The center is a leading-edge innovator in cyber security research. Its FlexCloud is one of the first dedicated academic research environments focused on security challenges surrounding cloud computing, the online network of shared applications and software.
An Internet-connected research environment known as FlexFarm gives researchers a dedicated platform to study malware programs and methods for improving detection, response times to infections and effective removal techniques.
top: lackland air Force Base is among the many military and defense assets in san antonio with cyber security-related missions. bottom: at work at the university of Texas at san antonio’s Institute for cyber security
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The CIAS looks at near-term operational issues, from now to five years out. It trains city, county and state governments across the country how to create their own cyber security model and community response.
Director Greg White uses scenarios to get stakeholders thinking about potential threats, the chain of notification and the appropriate response. In one exercise, a suspicious vehicle is spotted driving around the same city block 20 times.
The driver had computer equipment trying to hack into a wireless connection point. “What would you expect the (police) officer to do?” White asks. “Who should be notified? What is on that block?”
left and above: The university of Texas at san antonio’s Institute for cyber security
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texas transportation assets provide access for people, goods
All Access pass
n o matter what it is or where it has to go, Texas can get it there, thanks to a world-class
transportation infrastructure that has few rivals.
With its sophisticated and integrated system of interstates and highways, deep-water ports, rail service and commercial airports, the Lone Star State provides timely movement of people, goods and services to national and international markets.
The state is a global logistics and distribution leader, with more
than 231,000 workers employed in the sector.
lone StAr loGiStiCS leAderSMaster-planned logistic
complexes in Fort Worth and San Antonio, for example, have effectively coordinated high-capacity industrial airports, rail service and interstate highways to support a host of global businesses.
Fort Worth Alliance Airport is a public-use airport located in the AllianceTexas master-planned community. Alliance Airport is
the world’s first purely industrial airport, covering nearly 1,200 acres and accommodating air cargo, corporate aviation and military needs.
The entire AllianceTexas complex, developed by Dallas-based Hillwood, a Perot company, is home to 265 companies and more than 30,000 employees. The Foreign Trade Zone at Alliance Airport is the top general purpose FTZ in the United States in terms of the value of foreign goods admitted.
Port San Antonio industrial
story by John Fuller
above and to the right: dallas/Fort Worth International airport served more than 57.8 million passengers in 2011.
Transportation
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Photos courtesy of dallas/fort worth international airPort
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airport at Kelly Field is a master-planned, 1,900-acre industrial complex and international logistics center.
Created from the former Kelly Air Force Base, the port’s strategic location makes it an ideal logistics platform for U.S., Mexican and South American markets.
With an 11,500-foot runway and more than 7.7 million square feet of industrial space, Port San Antonio has drawn a roster of companies including global aerospace leaders such as Boeing, Lockheed Martin, StandardAero and Pratt & Whitney.
About 14,000 employees work at Port San Antonio, which has a customer base centered on industries that are robust and show promising growth, both regionally and
internationally, says Bruce E. Miller, president and chief executive officer of Port San Antonio.
“Just as importantly, the port has been working closely with our aerospace customers for years to support their pressing workforce needs,” he says.
For example, Port San Antonio has formed partnerships with Alamo Colleges, a five-member system of community colleges in the region, to provide educational and career training programs for local residents.
In April 2012, for example, Port San Antonio and Alamo Colleges announced a $5 million training partnership that expands programs at Alamo’s St. Philip’s College Southwest Campus adjacent to
TexaS air by The numberS
380number of airports in texas
26Airports offering commercial service
57.8 milliontotal passengers handled at dallas/fort Worth international Airport in 2011
10,500employees in texas for dallas-based Southwest Airlines, out of a total of about 35,000
Port san antonio, which features an airport with a runway that extends 11,500 feet, can be accessed by two class I rail carriers and three interstate highways. Photo by brian mccord
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WHERE BUSINESS KNOWS NO BOUNDS
BIG SPRING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTwww.bigspringtx.com • (432) 264-6032 • [email protected]
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the port complex. The college is acquiring a 40,000-square-foot building and 30 acres from Port San Antonio for $5.1 million. The partnership allows Alamo Colleges to pay cash for the property or pay in the form of cash credits for placing graduates with aerospace companies located at the port.
Texas continues to be a magnet for transportation and logistics, drawing new investment and jobs.
In spring 2012, LinkAmerica, a regional asset-based transportation and logistics services provider, established its headquarters in Fort Worth, opening a 24,000-square-foot corporate office and training center and creating 140 jobs.
“The Dallas-Fort Worth area is one of the largest logistics hubs in the nation, and LinkAmerica must have a presence in this market in order to enhance our position in the industry,” says John Simone, chief executive officer of LinkAmerica. “Close proximity to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and immediate access to major interstates strengthen our ability to pursue, and achieve, our long-term
strategic growth plan.”Indeed, Texas is blanketed by a network
of airports, 380 total, including 26 with commercial service, giving the state the second-largest airport system in the nation.
DFW was the world’s eighth-busiest airport in passenger traffic and fourth-busiest in total movements in 2010. The airport handled 57.8 million passengers in 2011. Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport was the world’s sixth-busiest airport in total movements and 21st busiest in the world in passenger traffic in 2010, handling nearly 40.5 million total passengers.
Two of the world’s largest airlines are headquartered in Texas. Dallas-based Southwest Airlines, a pioneer in low-cost air travel, employs more than 10,500 people in the state as part of its 35,000-member workforce. American Airlines moved its headquarters to Fort Worth in 1979, and now occupies more than 1.4 million square feet of space in the city, employing more than 4,300 workers there.
TOp u.S. pOrTS(by cargo volume handled in 2010, in tons)
1. Port of South Louisiana, LA
236,262,0692. Port of Houston, TX
227,133,2313. Port of New York and New Jersey
139,198,2154. Port of Beaumont, TX
76,958,592 5. Port of Long Beach, CA
75,434,788 6. Port of Corpus Christi, TX
41,654,9897. Port of New Orleans, LA
72,410,7308. Port of Hampton Roads, VA
62,408,6009. Port of Los Angeles, CA
62,386,603 10. Port of Huntington-Tristate, WV
61,521,94211. Port of Texas City, TX
56,590,85612. Port of Plaquemines, LA
55,836,687Source: American Association of Ports Authorities
The Port of houston spans 25 miles and is one of the busiest ports in the world.P
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Midland international airport9506 laForce Blvd. p. o. Box 60305 Midland, tX 79711 (432) 560-2200
www.flymaf.com
With commercial service to six major hubs, Midland international airport is positioned to help your business take off. american eagle, Continental/United express and Southwest airlines provide first-class aviation service to the permian Basin.
✈ easy access to interstate 20
✈ More than 19 acres of shovel-ready land available for development
✈ Uncongested airspace
✈ air traffic control tower
✈ Free-standing hangar space with air carrier strength apron, may be built to suit
✈ industrial building: 40,000 sq. ft. expandable to 80,000 sq. ft. with proximity to MaF/Hangars
✈ Midland international airport is a designated Foreign trade Zone
✈ U.S. Customs on site
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portS CreAte export dynAMoTexas ports are a major economic
engine for the state, with a significant national impact as well. The state’s port facilities include 12 deep-water ports with channel depths of more than 30 feet.
The Port of Houston comprises eight public terminals operated by the Port of Houston Authority, with roughly 150 private terminals also located on the 52-mile-long Houston Ship Channel.
The Port of Houston includes the largest petrochemical complex in the nation. The port handles 25 percent of the U.S. oil supply, half of its refined products and one-eighth of its gasoline.
Cargo handled by the Port of Houston ranges from steel to wind turbines and generators to consumer goods. The port handles nearly 70 percent of the containers that move through the Gulf of Mexico.
Some $3 billion in capital improvements have been targeted over the next 15 years at the Port of Houston, which, along with other Texas ports, will benefit from the widening and expansion of the Panama Canal to handle larger ships.
Along with the Port of Houston, ports in Beaumont, Corpus Christi and Texas City are among the top dozen ports in total cargo volume in the United States.
Another important asset for the state is the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway (GIWW), a man-made waterway connecting ports from St. Marks, Fla., to Brownsville. A 423-mile section of the waterway borders Texas and handles 58 percent of the annual waterborne traffic on the GIWW.
310,850Miles of highway, no. 1 in the nation
47number of rail carriers, including three Class i
carriers, that serve texas
9number of interstate highways that cross texas (i-10, i-20, i-27, i-30,
i-35, i-37, i-40, i-44 and i-45)
TexaS TranSpOrTaTiOn facTS
Texas is served by 47 rail carriers, including three class I railroads.
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Set Your Sights on Canton
Mercy L. Rushing, CEDC Executive Director 119 N. Buffalo • Canton, TX 75103
(903) 567-1851 • [email protected]
Business & CommerCe • Home & Family • industry & development
Explore our community and discover why Canton is the perfect place to WoRK, PLaY and LIVE!
Canton Economic Development Corporation can assist you every step of the way with business relocation or expansion.
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Home to one of the top tourist attractions in the state – First Monday Trade Days – with an average of 250,000 people monthly. We are the largest retail entrepreneurship incubator in the State of Texas, where you can fulfill your dream of having your own business and watching it grow.
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roAdS And rAilNine interstate highways cross
Texas, part of the nation-leading 310,850 miles of highway in the state that link it to major markets.
Three Class I rail carriers – Fort Worth-based BNSF Railway, Union Pacific and Kansas City Southern – are among the 47 railroads operating on the 14,361 miles of track in the state. BNSF alone handles nearly 6 million carloads of freight in Texas annually. Its 7,500-member state workforce generates an annual payroll of $785 million.
Its shared border with Mexico makes Texas a major international border point of entry. More than 3.3 million trucks and nearly 7,200 trains entered or exited Texas at official ports of border crossing in 2011.
With 14,361 miles of track and 47 carriers, Texas offers a major advantage in freight rail service.
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STAMP OUT BREAST CANCERWITH YOUR FEET.
Every step you take in the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure® helps raise vital funds for the fight against breast cancer. But don’t let your journey stop there. Take a step toward improving your own health by educating yourself about the disease and getting regular screenings. Step by step, this Race will be won.
Learn more about the Komen Race for the Cure by visiting www.komen.org or calling 1-877 GO KOMEN.
This space is provided as a public service. ©2008 Susan G. Komen for the Cure®
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Health
top research, expertise lead way for texas health care
Setting the bar
W hether it’s establishing new frontiers in the treatment of cancer,
collaborating with Chinese physicians to improve eye care or maintaining the world’s largest
collection of mouse genes, the health-care industry in Texas is upholding its reputation as a world leader in the field.
In just about any section of the state, remarkable progress is
being made in research, education, treatments and procedures. Hospitals, institutions and academic centers are continuously making strides to improve health care on a global scale.
story by John McBryde
texas children’s hospital in houston photo Courtesy of allen Kramer
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deliverinG SpeCiAl CAreThey are now doing it one
baby at a time at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, a teaching hospital for Baylor College of Medicine that opened in 1953. Already recognized as a national leader in providing high-risk maternal care and diagnosing and treating abnormalities in unborn and newborn infants, Texas Children’s enhanced its reputation with completion of a 15-story, $575 million Pavilion for Women. The 1.3-million-square-foot Pavilion facility opened for outpatient services in November 2011 and delivered its first baby six months later.
“We know that the Pavilion’s combination of world-class expertise, leading-edge technology
TexaS healTh care: by The numberS
580+Hospitals
25,060primary care physicians
1,191Certified nursing facilities
61,600+Hospital beds
Texas children’s hospital is a globally known leader in children’s health research and treatment. Photo courtesy of Paul Vincent kuntZ
and best practices in family-centered care will result in better outcomes for mothers and babies,” says Cris Daskevich, senior vice president for the hospital. “The Pavilion is staffed and equipped to provide in-utero procedures and treatments available in very few places in the world.”
The Texas Children’s Maternal and Fetal Center housed at the Pavilion is one of just a handful of medical facilities in the world to offer this full spectrum of specialized care. Comprehensive services include management of complex pregnancies, genetic counseling, fetal diagnostic procedures and specialized fetal surgeries for a number of congenital malformations.
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a doctor examines a patient at Texas children’s hospital.
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texAS MediCAl CenterTexas Children’s is one of 52
institutions of the Houston-based Texas Medical Center, a colossus in health-care research and delivery that conducts more than $1.2 billion in research annually. With more than 34,500 full-time medical students and 92,500 employees, Texas Medical Center treats some 7.1 million patients each year, including 16,000 from outside the United States.
Texas Medical Center hospitals have been at the leading edge of the advancing field known as personalized medicine in which treatment is tailored to each patient’s unique clinical, genetic, genomic and environmental information.
The Institute for Personalized Cancer Therapy at the renowned MD Anderson Cancer Center, for example, supports research and clinical trials in which a patient’s tumor biopsy is analyzed for abnormal genes and therapies are selected utilizing agents that target the product of those particular abnormal genes.
foCuS on leArninGTop-level health-care research
and treatment extends well beyond Houston. In College Station, the Texas A&M Institute for Genomic Medicine (TIGM) has grown in a short time to become the world’s largest library of mouse knockout embryonic stem cells. The 34,000-square-foot facility opened on the Texas A&M campus in August 2010, and it has already worked with more than 400 institutions in 26 countries.
“I’m very proud of what we’re doing,” says Dr. Ben Morpurgo, executive director of TIGM. “I think we serve the (genome) community very well.”
Scott & White Healthcare, established in Temple in 1897, encompasses one of the nation’s largest multispecialty group practices. Through research and education, it is known for its
The Texas health-care industry includes more than 580 hospitals.B
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located on Texas a&M university’s main campus in college station since 2010, the Texas a&M Institute for Genomic Medicine (TIGM) can accommodate more than 40,000 mice, as well as 8,000 micro isolator cages.
In addition, the 34,000-square-foot space is home to molecular biology core facilities; tissue culture
facilities; a microinjection suite; a laboratory devoted to cryo-preservation of stem cells, embryos and sperm; and a bioinformatics platform.
TIGM also provides services such as blastocyst or pronuclear injections; rederivation of transgenic lines; embryo transfer; and colony maintenance and expansion.
To learn more about TIGM, go to www.tigm.org.
TexaS a&m inSTiTuTe fOr genOmic medicine tiGM offerS plenty of rooM for reSeArCH
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advances in cancer, orthopedics, neuroscience, pediatrics and cardiovascular care.
Dr. Robert Rosa, vice chair of research for the Department of Ophthalmology at the Scott & White Eye Institute, has collaborated with the Eye Hospital of the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing in research, education and long-distance clinical consultation.
Rosa hopes to learn more about using traditional Chinese medicine (including acupuncture and herbal mixtures) in the treatment of diseases of the eye and to teach
Western opthalmic techniques to visiting Chinese physicians.
“Our research collaborations reach throughout the state of Texas, across the nation and around the world,” says Charlette Stallworth, Scott & White’s associate vice president for business development.
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Houston–120milesAustin–175miles
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What’s Online To learn more about Texas Wide Open For Business’ variety of health and wellness offerings, head to BUSINESSCLIMATE.COM/TEXAS.
left: Texas a&M Institute for Genomic Medicine (TIGM) is located on the campus of Texas a&M university in college station. Above: dr. deeann Wallis schultz conducts genome research at the TIGM.
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Above: Trinity Mother Frances health system’s helicopter lands in Tyler. bottom: chRIsTus st. Michael health system, one of the top large community hospitals in the nation, is located in Texarkana.
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prognosis positiveseverAl texAs hosPitAls eArn nAtionAl recoGnition, mAke thomson reUters toP 100 list
Texas hospitals made a strong showing on Thomson Reuters annual 100 Top hospitals list in 2012.
The annual ranking utilizes research and independent public data to recognize the best u.s. hospitals. The study evaluates medical centers on measures of overall organizational performance, which includes patient care, operational efficiency and financial stability.
Recognized among the top major teaching hospitals category were Baylor university Medical center at dallas, scott & White hospital in Temple and Methodist hospital in houston. Memorial hermann hospital system in houston and Baptist st. anthony’s health system in amarillo were named among the top teaching hospitals.
among the top large community hospitals in the country for 2012 were st. david’s Medical center and st. david’s North austin Medical center
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in austin, Trinity Mother Frances hospital in Tyler, Memorial hermann Memorial city in houston and chRIsTus st. Michael health system in Texarkana.
For medium community hospitals, recognition went to st. david’s Round Rock Medical, while small community hospitals recognized by Thomson Reuters were Baylor Medical center at Waxahachie, hill country Memorial hospital in Fredericksburg and Memorial hermann sugar land.
US News ranked the top cardiac care hospitals in the united states, with Texas heart Institute at st. luke’s Episcopal hospital in houston making the list at No. 6. Texas heart Institute celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2012, and is considered one of the world’s leading research facilities in the battle against cardiovascular disease.
– Kevin Litwin
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trinity university, located in San antonio, educates more than 2,500 undergraduate and graduate students. Brian mCCord
Education
Private universities in texas known for academics, research
i ts public university systems are the envy of the nation, but Texas also lays claim to
some of the country’s best private higher education institutions, which have established reputations that extend far beyond state boundaries and the United States.
Rice University in Houston was rated No. 17 among national universities on the US News 2012 Best Colleges rankings. And Rice, along with Baylor University in Waco, Southern Methodist University in Dallas and Trinity University in San Antonio were named by Kiplinger’s magazine on its list of Best Values in Private Colleges in fall 2011.
While their enrollment may not be as large as some of their public university counterparts, the academic programs and research initiatives of these private institutions are no less impressive.
Rice University, with an enrollment of about 6,200, is
Head of the Class
story by Kevin Litwin
degreeSdegrees awarded by Texas two- and four-year colleges and universities in 2011 and 2010SOURCE: Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board
81,31474,190
PuBlIc 2-yEaR
2011 2010
28,390 28,152
INdEPENdENT 4-yEaR
2011 2010
120,938115,263
PuBlIc 4-yEaR
2011 2010
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Huntsville, texas
Allwe’re
missing is
YOU.
Your business is your life,
and the City of Huntsville
is the ideal place to make
the most of it.
City of Huntsville, TX 1212 Ave. M – Huntsville, TX 77340
(936) 291-5400 – www.huntsvilletx.gov www.shsu.edu
www.tdcj.state.tx.us www.huntsvillememorial.com
Just look at our city today. Sam Houston State University, with
a student population over 17,000, not only creates jobs in the community
but also provides a ready labor force through education and training. The
Texas Department of Criminal Justice protects public safety while also
creating a wide range of employment opportunities in the Huntsville area
and around the state. And if you need proof that Huntsville Memorial
Hospital is a top-rate employer, look at the Houston Chronicle’s list of
the Top 100 Workplaces of 2011 in the Houston area. HMH came in at
number six.
Add our natural beauty, our strategic location between Dallas/Fort
Worth, Houston and Austin, and our state-recognized cultural district,
and you’ve got the perfect combination for your business and your life.
Come see what Huntsville can do for you. b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 159
home to the Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, where research focuses on advancements in areas such as energy, water, environment and disease.
One of the projects, known as Lab-on-a-chip, is developing technology that will allow blood or saliva to be analyzed instantaneously instead of having to wait for lab results. A key goal with Lab-on-a-chip is to have it be low cost, and perhaps eventually become a home device so people can quickly diagnose their own ailments.
“We just opened a National Space Biomedical Research Institute, working on highly portable medical diagnostic devices that are important in sending astronauts into space. However, research there will also ultimately help to change many aspects of health care in the United States, to hopefully reduce costs,” says David Leebron,
president of Rice University. Leebron says Rice is able to
attract top researchers in part because the university’s 300-acre campus is close to major companies based in Houston, many of them in growth industries including energy technology and life sciences.
“Our medical and energy research will hopefully lead to solutions for solving some of the problems facing Houston, Texas and America,” Leebron says.
beSt vAlueS liStSouthern Methodist University
is one of 96 universities classified as High Research Activity Institutions by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
“One of our many interesting current projects is developing artificial limbs that ‘feel,’ which involves the development of two-way, fiber-optic communication between the human brain and
artificial limbs,” says Kent Best, SMU executive director of news and communications.
The university, with an enrollment of about 11,000, drew more than $25.6 million in external funding for research and sponsored projects in the 2009-10 academic year. Its researchers have advanced treatment for a number of diseases including Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, diabetes, childhood obesity and African sleeping sickness.
A CollAborAtive ApproACHAt Baylor University, research is
true teamwork. The university embarked upon the Baylor Research & Innovation Collaborative, or BRIC, to have talented students from different institutions boost research efforts to an even higher level.
The university is converting a 300,000-square-foot former tire manufacturing plant in Waco into laboratory and collaborative
Students at rice university in houston
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space. The building will anchor what eventually will become the Central Texas Technology and Research Park, a 21-acre development for academic entities and private-sector companies from Texas and beyond.
produCtive ColliSionSTrinity University offers 41
academic majors and five master’s programs. Trinity bolstered its research efforts with construction of a 288,000-square-foot Center for the Sciences and Innovation. One wing of the new building opened in January 2012, and the remainder will open in 2014.
The center allows different science departments to be near one another, which encourages collaboration between researchers, says Sharon Jones Schweitzer, Trinity’s assistant vice president for communications.
“This facility will bring about many productive collusions, not only with our students doing research projects, but also with our research faculty members,” she says.
enrOllmenT aT TexaS uniVerSiTieSEnrollment at Texas colleges and universities was higher during the fall 2010 semester compared to the fall 2009 semester.Source: Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board
2010 2011
PuBlIc uNIvERsITIEs
557,550
119,554
743,262
568,938 +2.0%
121,172 +1.3%
752,986 +1.3%
INdEPENdENT collEGE oR uNIvERsITy
PuBlIc 2-yEaR
collEGE
Baylor university, chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, is one of the oldest universities in the state.
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All Systems GostronG PUblic Universities Are A texAs AdvAntAGe
six major Texas university systems have been class acts for many decades. all have large academic systems in place, with multiple campuses and other offerings.
texAS A&M univerSity SySteMTexas a&M is a public research
university in college station that was founded in 1871, and today has the sixth-largest enrollment in the united states with nearly 50,000 students. The Texas a&M university system statewide network consists of 11 universities, seven state agencies and a health science center, and a&M has a physical presence in 250 of the state’s 254 counties. In 2011, research expenditures from the university topped $780 million, contributing greatly to Texas’ economy.
texAS StAte univerSity SySteMThe Texas state system includes
eight institutions located throughout the state: lamar university, sam
houston state university, sul Ross state university, Texas state university, lamar Institute of Technology, lamar state college-orange, lamar state college-Port arthur, and sul Ross state university Rio Grande college. Enrollment for the system totaled more than 78,000 in fall 2011.
texAS teCH univerSity SySteMTexas Tech is also a research
university, established in lubbock in 1923. It has awarded more than 200,000 degrees since 1927, and today, its enrollment is 32,000 students. The Texas Tech university system consists of TTu, Texas Tech university health sciences center and angelo state university, totaling more than 15 campuses and academic sites. The system conducted more than $200 million in research during 2011, and has an annual operating budget of $1.4 billion.
univerSity of HouStonuniversity of houston is a research
university founded in 1927, and today, its flagship campus accommodates 40,000 students. uh conducts $130 million in annual research, and operates 40 research centers and institutes on its main campus. uh also operates three other campuses in clear lake, downtown houston and victoria, and has five teaching centers.
univerSity of nortH texAS SySteM
The system includes the flagship university of North Texas in denton, as well as uNT dallas and uNT health science center at Fort Worth, which has a highly regarded physician training program. Total enrollment in undergraduate, graduate and professional programs is more than 36,000.
univerSity of texAS SySteMThe university of Texas at austin
was founded in 1883 and has the fifth-largest enrollment in the nation, with more than 52,000 students. The uT system is a major center for academic research, thanks to an endowment of $14 billion. The university of Texas system oversees nine academic universities and six health institutions within the state. The overall enrollment throughout the system is 190,000 students, and uT academic institutions account for nearly 50 percent of all undergraduate degrees awarded in Texas each year. – Kevin Litwin
TexaS a&m uniVerSiTy
uniVerSiTy Of hOuSTOn
uniVerSiTy Of TexaS
TexaS Tech uniVerSiTy
Amarillo
lubbock
dallas
Houston
fort Worth
Austin
Corpus Christi
el paso
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love of sports is a seven-day-a-week passion in texas
t he lights in Texas might shine brightest on Friday nights, but the passion for
sports in the Lone Star State extends far beyond its famous high school football fields.
Baseball, basketball, golf, auto racing and even hockey have enthusiastic followings, making the state a mecca for all manner of sports fans.
It is football, however, that stirs the greatest passion deep within the heart of Texans. The NFL’s Dallas Cowboys are so popular they are known as America’s Team. Dozens of college football teams, led by the University of Texas Longhorns, have devoted fan bases that f lock to stadiums on Saturdays in the fall. Schools including Texas A&M University,
Texas Tech, Baylor and Texas Christian University also have standout football programs.
But perhaps the purest form of football fervor can be found on the high school level, a long-standing Texas tradition made nationally famous by the Friday Night Lights book, movie and television show.
“When you think about Texas,
beyond friday nightsstory by Cary Estes
The lufkin high school Panthers take the field before a Friday night football game.
Livability
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• alamo stadium in san antonio is the state’s largest high school football stadium, accommodating 23,000 people.
• Memorial stadium, located on the campus of West Mesquite high school, holds approximately 20,000 fans.
• Ratliff stadium in odessa accommodates as many as 19,302 people.
• The new $59.6 million Eagle stadium in allen, home of the allen high school football team, seats 18,000.
• san angelo stadium, home to the san angelo central Bobcats and the lake view chiefs, seats 17,500.
biggeST h.S. STadiumS in Tx a statue of Thomas Wade “Tom” landry, legendary head coach of the dallas cowboys from 1960 to 1988, is situated at cowboys stadium in arlington.
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With pristine lakes, rolling terrain and Hill Country charm, Marble Falls has become synonymous
with quality of life. But its central location near Austin and San Antonio, its position as one of the
top sales tax generators per capita in the state of Texas, and its strong commercial climate make
Marble Falls a viable choice for expanding, relocating or starting up your business as well. Marble
Falls offers all the big-city amenities you need in the quaint, small-town atmosphere you want.
Marble FallsA City Where Doing Business is a Pleasure
(830) 798-7079
www.marblefallseconomy.com
b u S i n e S S C l i M A t e . C o M / t e x A S 167
one of the first things that comes to mind is Friday night high school football,” says Brian Brazil, head football coach at Hebron High School in Carrollton and president of the Texas High School Coaches Association. “It’s something that brings the community together. It’s not just about the football. It’s a social gathering. It’s a way of developing a lot of unity within your school and within your town.”
How serious is high school football in Texas? Consider Allen High School in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, which opened a $59.6 million stadium in 2012 that includes 18,000 seats and a video scoreboard. The stadium was funded as part of a $119 million bond package voters approved in 2009.
While the social aspect of these games accounts for part of their popularity, the main attraction remains the quality of play on the field. Brazil says Texas high schools produce more than 300 Division I college football players every year. More than 180 Texas natives played in the NFL in 2011, second only to California.
“You have a bunch of kids who grew up together and made sacrifices to be able to play on that high school football team,” Brazil says. “It’s special to be part of something where kids and the community as a whole come together like that and get excited about what’s taking place on Friday nights.”
More tHAn JuSt footbAllBut Texas is a state for all
sporting seasons. The state’s three NBA teams – the Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets and San Antonio Spurs – have combined to win seven championships since 1994 including the Mavs title run in the 2010-11 season.
The state’s two major league baseball teams (the Houston Astros and Texas Rangers) have combined to make the World Series three times in the past seven years including back-to-back appearances by the Rangers in 2010 and 2011.
And even though Texas is not known for its icy conditions, the NHL’s Dallas Stars have entertained hockey fans since 1993, winning the Stanley Cup championship in 1999. In addition, Dallas and Houston have
The san antonio spurs of the NBa, winners of four league titles since 1999, play at the aT&T center in san antonio.
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teams competing in the growing sport of Major League Soccer.
Auto racing and golf also are extremely popular in Texas. The NASCAR Series makes two stops each year at Texas Motor Speedway (TMS), a sprawling facility near Fort Worth that has nearly 160,000 seats and an infield that can accommodate approximately 53,000 more people. The IndyCar Series also holds an annual event at TMS. And in November 2012, the high-tech Formula One racing series returns to the United States for the first time in six years with the running of the 2012 U.S. Grand Prix at the new Circuit of the Americas in Austin.
As for golf, the state that produced legends such as Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson and Lee Trevino currently plays host to four PGA Tour events each year, as well as two tournaments on the Champions Tour (for golfers age 50 and older) and two stops on the Web.com Tour (formerly the Nationwide Tour.)
Basically, if there is a sport to be played, it is taking place in Texas. Because in this state, even when the Friday night lights are turned off, the love of sports continues to glow. Texas Motor speedway, located in Fort Worth, features a 1.5-mile track.
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colonial country club in fort Worth hosts an annual stop on the Pga tour.
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Ace in the HoletexAs coUrses, toUrnAments keeP Golfers chAllenGed, entertAined
home to more than 1,000 golf courses, Texas is the perfect place for enthusiasts of the sport to tee it up.
according to Golf Digest magazine, dallas National Golf club is the top course in the state. The club also scored a spot on the publication’s list of america’s 100 Greatest Golf courses in 2011, and was named one of Golfweek magazine’s Best Modern courses in 2010. a member-owned, private course, dallas National Golf club was designed by legendary architect Tom Fazio, and includes more than 7,300 yards of challenges. The club also features an expansive driving range that covers 130 yards, as well as a short-game practice area, two putting greens and a 20,000-square-foot clubhouse.
additional highly ranked private courses in Texas noted by Golf Digest include Whispering Pines Golf club in Trinity, colonial country club in Fort Worth and Miramont
country club in Bryan, among others.open to the public, Barton creek Resort
& spa in austin offers four golf courses including the Fazio Foothills, Fazio canyons, crenshaw cliffside and Palmer lakeside. While each course differs, they all feature 18 holes and provide stunning views of the surrounding area.
other Texas public courses that have gained acclaim include The Tribute in dallas, The Rawls course at Texas Tech in lubbock, and Ram Rock Golf course at horseshoe Bay Resort.
Prefer to watch rather than play? No problem. The state hosts four PGa Tour events including the shell houston open in humble, valero Texas open in san antonio, hP Byron Nelson championship in Irving and crowne Plaza Invitational at colonial in Fort Worth, as well as two events on both the champions Tour and the Web.com Tour.
– Jessica Walker
gOlf digeST TOp TexaS gOlf deSTinaTiOnS• Dallas National Golf
Club
• Whispering Pines Golf Club, Trinity
• Champions Golf Club (Cypress Creek), Houston
• Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth
• The Club at Carlton Woods, The Woodlands Resort & Conference Center
Source: Golf Digest
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Gallery
port Corpus Christi Staff photo
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the George bush presidential library and Museum is located at texas A&M university in College Station. Staff photo
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the old Main, the first building at texas State university in San Marcos. photo by brian McCord
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A texas rancher enjoys the landscape near victoria. photo by brian McCord
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A sculpture is located in front of the bank of America building in downtown dallas, which extends 921 feet and is one of the tallest buildings in the state. photo by brian McCord
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At the Caldwell Zoo in tyler. Staff photo
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texas economic development organizationsthe following is a resource to links to select economic development organizations at the local, regional and state level in texas. it is not intended as a complete list of economic development organizations in the state but as a service to the supporters of this publication.
A more comprehensive listing of economic development organizations can be found at texasSiteSearch.com, a data source and clearinghouse for commercial and industrial property listings in texas. the site includes an interactive mapping feature that highlights economic development organizations and their websites, as well as clickable map layers that allow users to explore the geographic assets of texas, including transportation infrastructure, universities, and enterprise Zones.
office of the Governor, Economic development & Tourism www.texaswideopenforbusiness.com
abilene chamber of commerce www.abilenechamber.com
alice/Jim Wells county www.alice-jwcedc.org
amarillo Economic development corp. www.amarilloedc.com
andrews Economic development corp. www.andrewsedc.com
aransas county www.aransascountytx.gov
athens Economic development corp. www.athensedc.com
Bastrop Economic development corp. www.bastropedc.org
Beeville/Bee county www.beedev.com
Belton Economic development corp. www.beltonedc.org
Big spring Economic development corp. www.bigspringtx.com
Bowie Economic development corp. www.cityofbowietx.com
Brooks city-Base www.brookscity-base.com
Buda Economic development corp. www.budaedc.com
Burkburnett development corp. www.burkburnett.org
canton Economic development corp. www.cantontxedc.com
cameron Industrial Foundation www.cameronindustrialfoundation.com
cedar hill Economic development www.cedarhilledc.com
clyde Texas Economic development www.clydeamerica.com
commerce Economic development corp. www.commercetxedc.com
converse Economic development corp. www.converseedc.com
corinth Economic development corp. www.cityofcorinth.com
corporation for the Economic development of Midlothian www.cedmidlothian.org
corpus christi Regional Economic development corp. www.ccredc.com
crockett Economic & Industrial development corp. www.crockett.org
decatur Economic development corp.www.decatur-edc.com
denison development alliance www.denisontx.org
desoto Economic development corp.www.dedc.org
dumas Economic development www.dumasedc.org
East Texas I-20 corridor Regional Economic development www.i20corridor.com
El Paso Regional Economic development corp. www.elpasoredco.org
Fort stockton www.fortstocktonedc.com
Friona Economic development corp. www.frionachamber.com
Garland Economic development Partnership www.garlandchamber.com
Georgetown Economic development www.invest.georgetown.org
Greater austin chamber of commerce www.austinchamber.com
Greater Fort Bend Economic development council www.fortbendcounty.com
Greater Waco chamber of commerce www.wacochamber.com
Greenville Economic development corp. www.greenvilletxedc.com
harlingen Economic development corp. www.harlingenedc.com
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henderson Economic development corp. www.hendersontx.us
hereford Economic development corp.www.hereford-tx.gov/hedc.htm
Jacksboro Economic & development corp. www.jacksboroedc.com
Jacksonville development corp. www.jacksonvilleedc.com
Jasper Economic development corp. www.jasperedc.com
Johnson county Economic development commission www.jc-edc.com
karnes county Economic development corp. www.karnescountyedc.com
kendall county Economic development corp. www.kendallcountyedc.com
kilgore Economic development corp.kilgore-edc.com
kingsville/kleberg county www.kingsvilleedc.org
la Marque Economic development corp. www.ci.la-marque.tx.us
lamesa Economic development corp. www.growlamesa.org
laredo development Foundation www.ldfonline.org
levelland Economic development corp. www.levellandtexas.org
liberty Economic development corp.www.cityofliberty.org
littlefield Economic development corp.www.littlefieldtexas.org
lubbock Economic development alliance www.lubbockeda.org
Magnolia Economic development corp.www.cityofmagnolia.com
Mansfield Economic development corp.www.mansfield-texas.com
Marble Falls Economic development corp. www.marblefallseconomy.com
Mcallen Economic development corp.www.medc.org
Mckinney Economic development corp.www.mckinneyedc.com
Mercedes Economic development corp.www.investinmercedes.com
Mexia Economic development corp. www.mexiaedc.com
Midland development corp. www.midlandtxedc.com
Mission Economic development corp.www.missionedc.com
Mount Pleasant Industrial Foundation www.mpedc.org
Navasota Economic development www.navasotatx.gov
Nocona Economic development corporations www.nocona.org
Northeast Partnership for Economic development www.satx-northeastpartnership.com
odessa Economic development www.odessatex.com
Palestine Economic development www.palestinetexas.net
Pampa Economic development corp.www.pampaedc.com
Paris Economic development corp. www.paristexasusa.com
Pearland Economic development corp.www.pearlandedc.com
Perryton community development corp.www.perrytoncdc.com
Pflugerville community development corp. www.pfdevelopment.com
Polk county Economic & Industrial development corp. users.livingston.net/~pcidcorp/
Rio south Texas Economic council www.riosouthtexas.com
Rising star Economic development corp. www.risingstartexas.com
Robstown area development commission www.robstownadc.com
Rockport-Fulton www.rockport-fulton.org
Rockwall Economic development corp. www.rockwalledc.com
Round Rock Economic development www.roundrocktexas.gov
san angelo Economic development www.sanangelo.org
san antonio Economic development Foundation www.sanantonioedf.com
san Patricio Economic development corp. www.sanpatricioedc.com
seagoville Economic development corp. www.seagovilleedc.com
seguin Economic development corp. www.seguintexas.gov/economic_development
seminole Economic development www.seminoleedc.org
sherman Economic development corp. www.sedco.org
sugar land Economic development council www.sugarlandecodev.com
sulphur springs Economic development corp. www.ss-edc.com
sweetwater chamber of commerce www.sweetwatertexas.org
Taylor Economic development corp. www.tayloredc.org
Temple Economic development corp. www.choosetemple.com
The city of Muleshoe Economic development corp. www.muleshoeedc.com
The colony Economic development corp. www.thecolonyedc.org
Terrell Economic development corp. www.terrelltexasedc.com
Texas city, Tx www.texas-city-tx.org/econdev/economicdevelopment.htm
Texas Midwest Economic development alliance www.texasmidwest.org
Tomball Economic development corp. www.tomballtxedc.org
Tye Industrial development corp. www.cityoftyeedc.org
uvalde area development Foundation www.uvaldetx.com
victoria Economic development corp. www.victoriaedc.com
Whitesboro Economic development www.whitesborotexas.com
Wolfforth Economic development corp. www.wolfforthtx.us
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PAID ADVERTISEMENT
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buSineSS SnApSHotTexas has one of the lowest tax burdens in the united states including no personal income tax. The state also has no state tax on property used for pollution control, goods in transit, and machinery and equipment utilized in manufacturing.
eConoMiC profile
populAtion
2011: 25,674,681
2000: 20,851,818
change since 2000: 23.1%
eConoMy
$1.3 trillion Gross domestic product (2011)
$251 billionTexas export values (2011)
eMployMent
10.8 million Nonfarm employment (June 2012)
9 millionPrivate employment (June 2012)
exportS
Top Texas export markets, by export values, 2011:
mexico: $87.4 billion
canada: $22.1 billion
china: $10.9 billion
brazil: $10. 1 billion
netherlands: $8.8 billionSource: WISERTrade
HouSeHold SnApSHot
34 Median age
8.54 millionTotal households (2010)
64% home ownership rate (2010)
$123,500Median housing value (2010)
key induStrieS
advanced Technology & Manufacturing
aerospace, aviation & defense
Biotech & life sciences
Information & computer Technology
Petroleum Refining & chemical Products
Energy
What’s online for more demographic, statistical and community information on texas, go to businessclimate.com/texas and click on “facts & stats,” then “demographics”.
thiS SEction iS SPonSorEd by
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eMployMent SeCtorS by % of WorkforCe
17.3%Government
16.7%Trade
14.2%Education & health services
13.5%Professional & Business servces
11.0%leisure & hospitality
8.3%Manufacturing
6.4%Financial activities
Source:Texas Workforce Commission, June 2012
inCoMe
$1 trillionTotal personal income (4q 2011)
$39,593Per capita personal income (2011)
$49,646Median household income (2010)
Job CreAtion
Between devember 2008 and december 2011, Texas was just one of two of the top 20 states in population to add jobs, gaining nearly 60,000 more jobs than the next-highest job-gaining state.
64,500Number of job additions in Texas between december 2008 and december 2011
MAJor populAtion CenterS
Texas is home to six of the 20 largest u.s. cities as of July 2011:
#4 houston (2,145,146)
#7 san antonio (1,359,758)
#9 dallas (1,223,229)
#13 austin (820,611)
#16 Fort Worth (758,738)
#19 El Paso (665,668)
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Visit OurADVERTISERS
Amarillo Economic Development Corporation www.amarilloedc.com
Atmos Energy www.atmosenergy.com
Belton Economic Development Corporation www.beltonedc.org
Big Spring Texas Economic Development www.bigspringtx.com
Bowie Economic Development Corporation www.cityofbowietx.com
Brooks City-Base www.bc-b.com
Buda Economic Development Corporation www.budaedc.com
Burkburnett Development Corporation www.yourehomenow.org
Cameron Industrial Foundation www.cameronindustrialfoundation.com
Canton Economic Development Corporation www.cantontxedc.com
Capital Farm Credit www.capitalfarmcredit.com
Cedar Hill Economic Development Corporation www.cedarhilledc.com
City of Cedar Park www.cedarparktx.com
City of Fulshear www.fulsheartexas.gov
City of Huntsville www.huntsvilletx.gov
City of Kyle Economic Development www.kyleed.com
City of La Porte www.laportetx.gov
City of Lampasas www.cityoflampasas.com
City of Missouri City Texas www.missouricitytx.gov
City of Plainview www.plainviewtx.org
City of Selma www.ci.selma.tx.us
City of Waller Economic Development Corporation www.walleredc.org
Commerce Economic Development Corporation www.commercetxedc.com
Converse Economic Development Corporation www.converseedc.com
Corporation for the Economic Development of Midlothian www.cedmidlothian.org
Crockett Economic & Industrial Development Corporation www.crockett.org
Decatur Economic Development Corporation www.decatur-edc.com
Denison Development Alliance www.denisontx.org
DeSoto Economic Development Corporation www.dedc.org
El Paso Regional Economic Development Corporation www.elpasoredco.org
Fort Stockton www.fortstocktonedc.com
Friona Economic Development Corporation www.frionachamber.com
Garland Economic Development Partnership www.garlandchamber.com
Greater Fort Bend Economic Development Council www.fortbendcounty.com
Greater Waco Chamber www.wacochamber.com
Greenville Texas Economic Development Corporation www.greenvilletxedc.com
Harlingen Economic Development Corporation www.harlingenedc.com
Henderson Economic Development Corporation www.hendersontx.us
Jacksboro Economic Development Corporation www.jacksboroedc.com
Jacksonville Development Corporation www.jacksonvilleedc.com
Jasper Economic Development Corporation www.jasperedc.com
Karnes County Economic Development Corporation www.karnescountyedc.com
Kendall County Economic Development Corporation www.kendallcountyedc.com
Kilgore Economic Development Corporation www.kilgoreedc.com
La Marque Economic Development Corporation www.ci.la-marque.tx.us
Lamesa Economic Development Corporation www.growlamesa.org
Laredo Development Foundation www.ldfonline.org
Levelland Economic Development Corporation www.levellandtexas.org
Liberty Economic Development Corporation www.cityofliberty.org
Littlefield Economic Development Corporation www.littlefieldtexas.org
Lubbock Economic Development Alliance www.lubbockeda.org
Magnolia Economic Development Corporation www.cityofmagnolia.com
Mansfield Economic Development Corporation www.mansfield-texas.com
Marble Falls Economic Development Corporation www.marblefallseconomy.com
McAllen Economic Development Corporation www.mcallenedc.org
Mercedes Economic Development Corporation www.investinmercedes.com
Mexia Economic Development Corporation www.mexiaedc.com
Midland International Airport www.flymaf.com
Midland/Odessa/Andrews
Mission Economic Development Corporation www.missionedc.com
Mount Pleasant Industrial Foundation www.mpedc.org
Nocona Economic Development Corporations www.nocona.org
Palestine Economic Development www.palestine-tx.org
Pampa Economic Development Corporation www.pampaedc.com
Paris Economic Development Corporation www.paristexasusa.com
Pearland Economic Development Corporation www.pearlandedc.com
Perryton Community Development Corporation www.perrytoncdc.com
Pflugerville Community Development Corporation www.pfdevelopment.com
Polk County Economic & Industrial Development Corporationwww.livingston.net/pcidcorp
Port of Houston Authority www.portofhouston.com
Richardson Chamber of Commerce www.telecomcorridor.com/ed
Rio South Texas Economic Council www.riosouthtexas.com
Round Rock Economic Development Partnership www.roundrockchamber.org
Rural Workforce Network www.ruralworkforcenetwork.org
San Antonio Economic Development Foundation www.sanantonioedf.com
Seagoville Economic Development Corporation www.seagovilleedc.com
Seminole Economic Development Corporation www.seminoleedc.org
Sherman Economic Development Corporation www.sedeo.org
Sugar Land Economic Development www.sugarlandecodev.com
Temple Economic Development Corporation www.choosetemple.com
Terrell Economic Development Corporation www.terrelltexasedc.com
Texas Midwest Economic Development Alliance www.texasmidwest.org
The City of Coppell www.coppelltx.gov
The City of Muleshoe Economic Development Corporation www.muleshoeedc.com
The Colony Economic Development Corporation www.thecolonyedc.org
Tomball Economic Development Corporation www.tomballtxedc.org
Uvalde Area Development Foundation www.uvaldetx.com
Victoria Economic Development Corporation www.victoriaedc.com
Whitesboro Economic Development Corporation www.whitesborotexas.com
Wolfforth Economic Development Corporation www.wolfforthtx.us
Making CapitalForeign investment, export success drive economy
Sky High Texas ignites aerospace, aviation innovation
Ample Harvest Texas agriculture feeds and clothes the world
Wide open for buSineSSTexasBusinessClimate.com/Texas
SponSored by tHe eConoMiC developMent & touriSM div. offiCe of tHe Governor | 2012
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trAnSportAtion
AirportS Texas has 380 airports and the second-largest state airport system in the nation, with 26 commercial airports. Eight airports provide international service. The state’s two largest airports are dallas-Fort Worth International (dFW) and George Bush Intercontinental in houston (Iah).
HiGHWAyS Texas has 310,850 miles of highways, more than any other state. The state has 29 u.s. ports of entry, providing direct access to the markets in Mexico and latin america.
rAilroAdForty-seven freight railroads operate on 14,361 miles of track in the state, carrying more than 365.4 million rail tons a year. Texas has access to Mexico’s industrial north with five gateways into Mexico by rail.
portSTexas has 12 deep-water ports with channels at least 30 feet deep and 16 other seaports that line the Gulf coast. The Port of houston, Port of Beaumont and Port corpus christi rank in the top 10 among all u.s. ports in volume of cargo handled.
pAtentS
Patents granted to Texas residents, all patent types, by year
2011: 8,0452010: 8,0272009: 6,4362008: 6,1842007: 6,228Source: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, 2011 report
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“Connecting the
Pieces”
www.perrytoncdc.com
P.O. Box 849 Perryton, TX 79070
(806) 435-4014
Read our blog at www.perrytonpipeline.com
Pampa EDC106 N. CuylerPampa, TX 79065(806) 665-0800 tel(806) 665-3800 faxwww.pampaedc.com
Introducing Pampa Energy Center, Pampa EDC’s new 4,000 acre, rail-served industrial park.
• Mexiais equidistant betweenSeattle, Washingtonand Miami,Florida.
• Mexiaisthe population centerofTexas. Withintwo hoursof20 millionpeople.
• Amplewaterand abundantpower.
• Shovel-ready greenfieldsites.
• Logisticaleasy–two interstatehighways,railand generalaviationairport
CoSt of livinG CoMpAriSon
100u.s. average
90houston-Baytown
94dallas-Fort Worth
91austin-Round Rock
93san antonio
91El Paso
90corpus christi
86Mcallen-Edinburg
Source: CNBC
touriSM (2010)
$57.5 billionTotal direct travel spending
529,400Travel-supported jobs in Texas
198 millionEstimated number of visitors at Texas destinations
GenerAl inforMAtion
capital:
AustinTime zone:
Centralland area in square miles:
261,232Persons per square mile:
96.3
Can you imagine …a world without children?
We Can’t.Call 1-800-996-4100 to help.
www.stjude.org
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lArGeSt publiC CoMpAnieS (2012)
$452 billionExxonMobil, Irving
$237 billionconocoPhillips, houston
$127 billionaT&T, dallas
$125 billionvalero Energy, san antonio
$62 billiondell, Round Rock
$44 billionEnterprise Products Partners, houston
$39 billionsysco, houston
$34 billionPlains all american Pipeline, houston
$30 billionTesoro, san antonio
reSourCeS
Office of the Governor Economic Development & Tourism DivisionP.o. Box 12428austin, Texas 78711(512) 936-0100texaswideopenforbusiness.com
Office of the GovernorP.o. Box 12428austin, Tx 78711(512) 463-2000governor.state.tx.us
The Official Website of the State of Texastexas.gov
SourCeS:
census.govFortune.comtexaswideopenforbusiness.com
What’s Online businessclimate.com/texas.
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Selma, Texas … wide OPEN FOR BUSINESS!
Fast-growing community with over 600% growth
over the past decade!
Strategically located in
Northeast Region of San Antonio
Easy access to major transportation
corridors like Interstate 35
and Loop 1604
Home to Retama Park Horse Track
Home to one of the largest
outdoor shopping centers
in Texas: The Forum
at Olympia Parkway
Five minutes to
Randolph Air Force Base
20 minutes to downtown
San Antonio
15 minutes to
San Antonio International Airport
Low taxes and ISO Rating
Available real estate
Located near major higher learning institutions
9375 Corporate Dr. • Selma, Texas 78154 • (210) 651-6661 • Fax: (210) 651-0385 • www.ci.selma.tx.us