San Antonio: City Council approves new ‘framework’ plan for future economic development
Published: Fri, 10/21/22
City Council approves new ‘framework’ plan for future economic development
by Shari Biediger
SanAntonioReport

On Thursday, City Council approved a framework created by the City's Economic Development Department that lays out San Antonio's future in relation to jobs, investment and development. Credit: Nick Wagner / San Antonio Report
How the City of San Antonio uses incentives such as tax breaks to attract new businesses will be one the first issues officials will tackle next year based on a new economic development plan city leaders adopted Thursday.
The City Council passed unanimously an ordinance accepting the Strategic Framework and Workplan presented by the City’s Economic Development Department. But not every council member was completely satisfied with the plan or the process.
Developed over the course of nearly a year with the help of Austin-based economic development consultants TIP Strategies, the plan came about after a series of meetings with various stakeholders and council members.
The resulting 68-page document lays out a roadmap for Economic Development Department staff and other city departments to follow in competing with other cities for jobs, investment and development.
You can read the draft plan here.
“We are asking for acceptance today because there are a massive number of policy conversations that need to take place as part of this process,” said Brenda Hicks-Sorensen, director of the Economic Development Department. “The incentive policies are the first ones that we will be taking a look at.”
The framework will serve as the basis for proposed changes to the plan and those will be presented to the council’s Economic and Workforce Development Committee in early 2023, Hicks-Sorensen said.
In addition, the department plans to evaluate the policies of the city’s nine Tax Increment Reinvestment Zones, another incentive mechanism, and how those entities can be better used for economic development opportunities, she said.
The framework outlines four focus areas: industry and innovation, placemaking and real estate, talent and workforce, and the capacity and resources needed to achieve goals.