Rich Overmoyer

Mar 24, 20213 min

First of its Kind: Ramsey County's Economic Competitiveness & Inclusion Plan

Updated: Jul 20, 2022

On March 23, 2021, Ramsey County, Minnesota released its first Economic Competitiveness and Inclusion Plan. This plan defines a set of economic priorities and actions that mitigate the impacts of institutional structural racism and disinvestment in Ramsey County’s Black, Latinx, Asian, and Indigenous communities while simultaneously accelerating economic growth and competitiveness in Ramsey County, dispelling the myth that the two are mutually exclusive.

“This Economic Competitiveness and Inclusion Vision Plan serves as an important step toward achieving two longstanding county goals:
 

 
1) Cultivating economic prosperity and investing in neighborhoods with concentrated financial poverty through proactive leadership and inclusive initiatives; and
 

 
2) Enhancing access to opportunity and mobility for all residents and businesses through connections to education, employment and economic development throughout our region.”
 
- Toni Carter, Ramsey County Board Chair

Our team at Fourth Economy provided overall project support as well as Housing Analysis, Economic Analysis, and Implementation-related services. We were honored to collaborate with partners including:

A year of engagement by Khou Vue

Tackling the system of oppression in housing by Mayumi Park

This partnership made space for a holistic approach to address the community’s opportunities and challenges. Every step along the way, residents, businesses, community leaders, a steering committee, and the Ramsey County Board of Commissioners were invited to engage in the development of an implementable plan that outlines economic and community objectives to pursue over the next five years.
 

 
This plan is innovative in its understanding of how current levels of poverty and disinvestment began decades ago. We think all communities need to reflect on their past to better understand the policies, programs, and practices that have created today’s conditions. While we cannot go back in time, we can be purposeful in our efforts to eliminate the negative consequences of the past.

The strategies prioritize inclusion in future investments and other actions related to housing, job creation, workforce development, and place-based investments while responding to the COVID-19 crisis.

Incorporating Art into an Economic Development Plan

Action: Strengthen Business Retention and Expansion infrastructure to support communities. Depicted as a food-truck ribbon cutting. by Leeya Jackson

To bring the actions and priorities to life, Ramsey County selected three local artists to illustrate sections of the report. Throughout this post, there are illustrations pulled directly from the report that represent both the painful past of redlining policies and the hopeful future of inclusive and equitable business growth and support.

Our team thinks that art is arguably the most critical ingredient in today’s economic development recipe book. Creative entrepreneurship, events, and energy create community vibrancy, driving talent attraction and retention. We applaud Ramsey County for inviting the creative sector into this plan! Visualizing the actions invites more people to the table to dream of what Ramsey County can become in the future.


Here’s what the artists had to say about their work...

Bulldozing through thriving Rondo neighborhood to make way for 94. Illustration by Khou Vue

"I was thrilled to learn of this initiative by Ramsey County to take accountability and try to take a step in reversing its historically racist past. When I researched more into the policies that allowed the construction of highway 94 right through the majority Black Rondo neighborhood, I was enraged and shocked. In my illustrations I wanted to portray growth, vitality, and abundance; that through making amends we can all begin to thrive."

Khou Vue
 
www.koovoo.me

Diverse hands coming together to design, build, and preserve housing of various types. The first hand on the left represents planning and designing housing; the next hand represents building housing, the remaining two hands represent preserving and maintaining homes. Illustration by Mayumi Park

I am someone who regularly thinks about housing issues and has the tendency to see reality through a figurative lens. My illustrations lean heavily on metaphorical elements in order to present my creative interpretation of the actions Ramsey County is taking to create a more equitable future.”
 

Mayumi Park
 
www.mayumipark.com

Action Step: Develop pathways to entrepreneurship and BIPOC business ownership. Depicted as an owner of a small local bakery.

"Inclusive and equitable economic development is something that is very near and dear to my heart. For this project, it was important to showcase the diversity of the Ramsey County community in a hopeful yet realistic way. I loved being able to depict BIPOC folks and other intersecting identities in the diverse roles that truly make the community what it is."
 

Leeya Jackson
 
Illustration: www.leeyamakesnoise.com
 
Design: www.noisemakerdesign.com

Fourth Economy Team

Rich Overmoyer

Jerry Paytas

Josh Devine

Kristina Harrold

Monica Hershberger

Mickey McGlasson