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Visioning the Upper Delaware River Corridor   
A new alliance for business in Pike

By AMY GRUZESK

Pike County has always been well known for its natural beauty and as a favorite destination of city dwellers looking for summer homes or weekend getaways.

However, in more recent years, this small northeast county has been garnering a lot of attention both locally and nationally for its explosive population growth.

Our proximity to New York City and other metropolitan areas, as well as our more affordable cost of living and enviable natural environment, make it an ideal location for those looking to permanently escape the confines of the city for greener pastures. It is both far enough away from the city’s rising prices and hustle and bustle, and close enough to reach for business or recreation.

The proof is in the numbers. In 2000, Pike County’s population was just over 46,300 people, but that number in itself was a huge 65.6 percent increase over the 1990 census. Since then, the county has grown to just over 56,000, according to an official July, 2005 estimate. By the year 2010, experts believe Pike County’s population will exceed 65,000.

Those figures are both exciting and challenging, as we look to the future and a much more populated county.

One of those challenges is to deal constructively and proactively with this growth as it is occurring. Part of that challenge is attracting more industry and jobs to Pike County so that those individuals who come here can also make a living here.

That has become a primary goal for Pike County’s three economic development organizations: the Pike County Industrial Development Authority, the Pike County Industrial Development Corporation (PIDCO) and the Pike County Chamber of Commerce. These groups have banded together to form a three-tiered partnership, sharing building space, staff and resources to better accomplish this goal.

Our collective efforts have focused on marketing the Pike County Business Park in Blooming Grove Township; partnering with regional economic development agencies to obtain and follow up on leads for businesses that might be interested in relocating to our area; working with small business owners and new business start-ups in their efforts to increase their chances of success; and providing services and benefits to existing businesses to help them in growing and maintaining their businesses.

The ultimate goal is to further enhance the county’s already rich quality of life by working to ensure that residents can find gainful quality employment and business opportunities within our borders instead of having to commute to outlying areas, and across state borders each day, as many of them currently do.

More businesses within our borders would also mean more revenue to our county and its municipalities in the form of tax revenue, that would help alleviate the financial stresses on our infrastructure and schools.

As these three agencies head into 2007, they do so with new plans and strategies developed by each agency to deal specifically with these issues, as well as a strong commitment to work collectively together so that our combined resources can be used most effectively for the greater benefit.

Our collective goal is to create a business climate that allows our existing businesses to grow and prosper, while also attracting new businesses and industry.

Amy Gruzesky is the executive director of the Pike County Chamber of Commerce and the Pike County Industrial Development Authority, and president of PIDCO (the Pike County Industrial Development Corporation).

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TINA PALACEK: When a community is really a family


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MARY BETH WOOD: Investing in career and technical education
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JOE LEVINE: When compromise is a recipe for disaster
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VIDAL MARTINEZ: The Upper Delaware experience
July 10, 2008
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Barbara Arrindell: Looking back
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JO CLEARWATER: Welcome to the new world
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JONATHAN F. ROUIS: Out of many, one
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Jim Serio: Educating the Delaware River Basin
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John Bunting: Milk price and power
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Brian Smith: It's time to work and worry
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Carol Roig: Celebrating history close to home
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Debbie Smorto: Be a part of the solution
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Robert Dadras: Creating a new direction for Sullivan County
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Dave Williams: Save your local dairy farm
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Dave Williams: Save your local dairy farm
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Troy Bystrom: Conserve to preserve
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Alegra Jennings: Do you see what I see?
January 18, 2007
Amy Gruzesk: A new alliance for business in Pike
January 11, 2007
Grace Wildermuth: Our rural environment must be preserved


December 28, 2006
John Jose: Meeting the challenges of stormwater management
December 14, 2006
Daniel Kennedy: Making memories in Pike County
November 30, 2006
Stephen Stuart: Sustainable Solutions
November 16, 2006
Linda Cobb: The Harmony Project
November 2, 2006
Judy Harlan: What municipalities can do about flooding
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Samuel Jackson: Walking the talk
October 5, 2006
Jay Epstein: The foundations of a viable plan
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Tom Kane: The clean water act
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Skip Mendler: A community of communities
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FREDERICA LEIGHTON: Flood reality: vision or the lack of it
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Neal Halloran: Greenway: a program whose time has come
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Steven Sharoff: Strong visions can change the world
June 15, 2006
Heinrich Strauch: Cooking up a vision
June 1, 2006
Jennifer C.S. Brylinski: The IDA keeps to its vision
May 18, 2006
Norma and Bob Santee: Maintaining our environment
May 4, 2006
Don Parry: The “vision thing”
April 20, 2006
Joe Walsh: Keeping farms a mainstay of Sullivan County
April 6, 2006
Heather Brown: Why I came here, and what keeps me here
March 23, 2006
Pat Carullo: We are with the program
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Helen Budrock: The power of proactive thinking
February 23, 2006
Carol Collier: A basin-wide collaboration
February 9, 2006
Barbara Leo: A birding trail for the Upper Delaware
January 26, 2006
Virginia Kennedy: Our vision—economic and environmental sustainability
January 12, 2006
Tom Zeterburg: At the crossroads of two rivers
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Sally Corrigan: Hallmarks of a successful community
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Brian Stuart: Protecting an amazing backyard resource
November 17, 2005
John LiGreci: The need for a master plan
November 3, 2005
Tom Kane: The need for intelligent land use practices
October 20, 2005
Michael Chojnicki: The need for intelligent land use practices
October 6, 2005
Alan Schadt: The Town of Highland through a crystal ball
September 22, 2005
Ernie Mattern: Comprehensive Planning in Damascus
September 8, 2005
Jerry DaBrescia: Visioning in Hancock
August 25, 2005
Neal Halloran: Ways to secure open space
August 11, 2005
Clem Fullerton: Flow woes
August 11, 2005
Tom Kane: Options for preserving open space
July 28, 2005
Charlie Buterbaugh: Fishing Days Gone
July 28, 2005
George Fluhr: What's special about this place
June 30, 2005
Tom Kane: There are many visions in the river valley
June 30, 2005
Mary Curtis: My vision for the Upper Delaware River
June 16, 2005
Sarah Sutto-Plunz: It depends on us
June 16, 2005
Green buildings: a healthy revolution in the construction industry
June 2, 2005
Pat Carullo: If horses can fly, rivers can speak!
May 19, 2005
Laurie Stuart: A view from the ridge
April 21, 2005
Rosie Starr: Preserving the Beauty of the Delaware River Valley
April 7, 2005
Robert Burrow: Developing a plan takes study
March 24, 2005
Tom Kane: Comprehensive Plan: The Key to the Future
March 10, 2005
Katharine Dodge: We have a choice: aggressiveness or fairness
February 24, 2005
Editorial: A tide in the affairs of men
February 24, 2005
Jim Greier: Let’s not put our eggs in one basket
February 10, 2005
Elliot Zucker: A voice for private property rights
January 27, 2005
Steve Daley : Visions of business growth and home ownership
January 13, 2005
Laura Quigley : Living and working in the land of plenty
December 30, 2004
Dr. Martin Handler : My list of visions
December 16, 2004
Dr. Bruce Getzan : Bringing harmony to contrasting visions
December 2, 2004
Sally Talaga : Visioning’s first step
November 18, 2004
Michele Ulmer : Be involved before it’s too late
November 4, 2004
Marcia Nehemiah: It's all about the river
October 21, 2004
John Drobysh: Balancing preservation with property rights
October 7, 2004
Jeffrey Moore: Raising the standards in the river valley
September 23, 2004
Dimitri Zaimes: The right and wrong of the Upper Delaware September 9, 2004
Frederica Leighton: Combining hindsight, foresight, present awareness and action
August 26, 2004
Krista Gromalski: Turning the Conversation Up
August 12, 2004
Jo Clearwater: Visioning
July 29, 2004
Noel Van Swol: What about Property Rights?
July 15, 2004
Cindy Wildermuth: A call for stewardship
July 1, 2004
Tom Kane: Taking stock of the visioning process
June 17, 2004
Dick Riseling: Sustainability and justice is at the heart of vision
June 3, 2004
Peter Pinchot: Exurban sprawl or livable communities?