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If warehouses are to dot the RTX land, massive #s of solar panels and wind turbines might be reasonable financial considerations. Hello, RTX, utilities, town and state govt.
They don't even have any large scale manufacturing in Pratt itself.I want to smoke what those on here are smoking while suggesting any new large scale manufacturing could be situated there. Not a chance.
Although it doesn’t own the land, the State of Connecticut should make a call to the most valuable automaker in the country and see if it is interested in planting a flag in the northeast. Tesla is in the process of expanding, with new facilities coming soon in Austin (plus Germany and China) but they don’t yet have US facilities east of Texas, even though the northeast has lots of people, lots of money, and lots of folks who would be into the idea of electric cars. As a bonus, perhaps CT could allow Tesla to use The Rent’s parking lots for free, though I’m not sure exactly how close The Rent’s parking lots are to the parcel that’s for sale. Since most events at The Rent are on weekends or evenings, there should be no issue sharing the parking lots, thus leaving Tesla more room for its facility.
Also, I’d check in with elite medical facilities to see if they’re interested in coming here. The Mayo Clinic is an example. With HQ in Minnesota and their other main facilities in Arizona and Florida, I wonder if they’d be interested in having a branch in the northeast.
Thoughts?
Thought that’s what we were already using Rentschler for on Saturdays.Nice area for a prison.
Now this is the type of out-of-the-box thinking that can change the course of history! To think, all this time we've been assuming the only way to get an on-campus stadium is to build a stadium in Storrs!At least they are working with a known developer and not fly by night scammers.
The best use is to move the UConn campus here, give Storrs to ECSU and the School of Agriculture.
Ok we do need a place to store convicted Yankee fans.Nice area for a prison.
I live near Patriot Place in Foxboro and it is exactly like this. Always busy.I still like the idea of outlets and restaurants and maybe a hotel. A place where we can go see a football game, then do some shopping and have a bite to eat afterwards. Really make a weekend out of it. Plus that brings jobs and more tax revenue to East Hartford and the state.
One thing that has really changed in recent years is the relative cost of housing and office space in CT which is starting to change the way some companies think about locations. Using the Zillow database, here is the comparison of housing costs in Charlotte, NC, Tampa, FL and the state of Connecticut:I don’t think this is a good thing for the state at all…this is the beginning of Raytheon planning their exit from CT and getting something for this land before they devalue it by leaving behind all their facilities here. Many on here may not agree with this, but I worked for UTC/Raytheon for over 15 years and do know a good deal about this. Raytheon has plans to slowly move all these jobs down to North Carolina and Florida. For those of you who will say “but P&W just built a new engineering building and RTRC just built a new R&D building” yes this is true, but I don’t think they care. Long-term (10 years from now) that campus is going to have a football field, Cabelas and a bunch of empty buildings. They’re just grabbing some $$ up front before they leave as the land has more value while they are still there.
I don't think you are telling anybody anything they don't already believe.I don’t think this is a good thing for the state at all…this is the beginning of Raytheon planning their exit from CT and getting something for this land before they devalue it by leaving behind all their facilities here. Many on here may not agree with this,...
The days of Connecticut being a major commercial player are long gone unfortunately. Weicker and years of legislative mismanagement saw to that. The economic and political conditions hold it back and the culture of the state does not attract true innovation. Restaurants and outlet stores cannot replace corporate and professional income taxes. The math just doesn’t work. It’s a shame but no one in Hartford seems to care
It's the perfect place for an In an Out Burger patty-making facility and distribution center. It's right next to the Interstate, less than a half-hour from the airport. Pittsburgh and Buffalo are well within their vaunted 500-mile radius, nevermind DC, Philly, NYC and Boston.
What economic strength ? The only way the state can balance its budget is through strong wall st results which ups individual income taxes. It’s a state that is too dependent now on individual income taxes Why? White collar jobs at Aetna.CVS Gone. UTC gone. GE gone IB/hedgers along the Gold Coast. Fleeing. I cannot think Of one corporate entity at scale that is expanding in CT. There may be but if we’re being honest the white collar brain drain is a net outflow. And CTs traditional advantage is gone with no coherent strategy to get the state back on solid financial groundCan't roll my eyes hard enough at this. CT is a skilled white collar worker state, but not a tech state. You can blame the lack of investment in UConn specifically for that. We aren't competing for industrial manufacturing or low wage retail. It Texas wants to try to compete with Taiwan and South Korea, let them. Maybe they'll be as successful as Wisconsin was with Foxconn.
Our economic strength has always come from economic diversity and proximity to Northeast wealth. Pratt is a shell of it past self. The fact that no one has really noticed is a testament to past leadership not to let themselves be held hostage by a single employer. Any company town eventually folds up shop, governments are fools who actively seek these arrangements are short sighted.
Was there really an exodus of business during the Weicker or years? It seems like it was much more recent than that.The days of Connecticut being a major commercial player are long gone unfortunately. Weicker and years of legislative mismanagement saw to that. The economic and political conditions hold it back and the culture of the state does not attract true innovation. Restaurants and outlet stores cannot replace corporate and professional income taxes. The math just doesn’t work. It’s a shame but no one in Hartford seems to care
I see opportunity.I don't know if there are enough cattle within range to make that feasible.
Not as bad as now. But the economic growth levers have changed since the income tax was passed. More about the knowledge economy now versus manufacturing and Insurance which dominated back thenWas there really an exodus of business during the Weicker or years? It seems like it was much more recent than that.