Greater Washington Partnership

The Greater Washington Partnership is a nonprofit civic alliance of 27 employers and entrepreneurs that represent businesses from Baltimore to Richmond. Jason Miller is the Partnership’s Chief Executive Officer.[1][2]

Greater Washington Partnership
Founded2016
FocusEconomic Growth, Transportation, Human Capital
Location
  • Capital Region
Key people
Jason Miller, Russ Ramsey, Peter Scher, Ted Leonsis
Websitewww.greaterwashingtonpartnership.com

History

The Greater Washington Partnership is a civic alliance of 27 employers and entrepreneurs that represent businesses from the Baltimore-Richmond-Washington D.C. region.[3][4] It was founded in 2016, and grew from an original foundation of a number of businesses working to bring the Olympics (Washington 2024) to the region.[5][6][7][8][9] The Partnership focuses on creating solutions for the major issues of transportation, human capital, innovation and entrepreneurship in order to make the Capital Region a center for business growth and innovation.[5] Jason Miller is the Partnership’s CEO.[5][10][11] Board chairs include Russ Ramsey, Ramsey Asset Management; Peter L. Scher, JPMorgan Chase & Co.; Ted Leonsis, Monumental Sports and Entertainment.[12][13][14]

In May 2018 the organization advocated for higher tolls.[15]

Transportation and workforce development were two early goals of the organization.[16]

Developing the region is part of a strategy to encourage more companies to establish themselves within the region.[17]

The organization seeks to establish some standardization in regional educational credentials.[18]

Activities

When Amazon announced a North American sweepstakes for the location of its second headquarters in 2017, the Partnership contributed 11 addendums supporting each of the first round of bids submitted by jurisdictions in the region.[19] “When one wins, we all win,” was the theme used by the Partnership to show Amazon that the region had the businesses, talent, and infrastructure to support being selected as the second headquarters location.[20][21][22][23][24] In November 2018, Amazon announced Arlington, VA as one of the locations for its second headquarters.[25]

Regional mobility

The Greater Washington Partnership is a founding member of the MetroNow Coalition, which works for long-term improvements to WMATA, the DC Metro system.[26][27][28] In May 2018, MetroNow worked with other organizations, including CSG, Federal City Council, Northern Virginia Chamber of Commerce, The 2030 Group, the Greater Washington Board of Trade and Fund It Fix[29] to get DC, Maryland, and Virginia leaders to approve $500 million annual funding for Metro.[30]

In November 2018, the Partnership released its Blueprint for Regional Mobility,[31] a comprehensive transportation strategy to improve commutes, increase transportation options, and provide better access to public transportation for people around Baltimore, Washington, and Richmond.[32][33] It is the first-ever CEO-led agenda to improve the region’s transportation system.[34][35] The Blueprint lays out four main priorities: connecting the super-region, improving the consumer experience, ensuring equitable access and integrating innovation as the keys to fundamentally transforming the way residents move around the region.[36][37][38]

A few of the Partnership’s recommendations include a commuter rail network for the region, an expansion of the regions toll-lane network, improving the region’s bus network, and growing programs for commuters at private employers.[39]

Dominion Energy CEO Tom Farrell, MedStar Health CEO Kenneth Samet, and EY global chairman and CEO Mark Weinberg are the co-chairs of the Greater Washington Partnership Regional Mobility Initiative and authored the Blueprint.[36]

The Partnership has also released several issue specific reports on buses, integrated mobility, performance-driven tolling, and Richmond’s transit revolution. This includes a case study titled “Richmond’s Transit Revolution: GRTC Ridership and Accessibility Analysis,” which was released in June 2019.[40][41] The study analyzed the launch of the Pulse Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line, a bus redesign in Richmond and expansion of service in Henrico Country.[42][43] The Pulse was recognized by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy with a bronze ranking for design and implementation.[44]

Housing

In October 2018, the Greater Washington Partnership, together with the Urban Institute and JPMorgan Chase, launched the Regional Housing Framework, in an effort to address the Capital Region’s future housing needs.[45][46]

On September 4, 2019, the Urban Institute released "Meeting the Washington Region’s Future Housing Needs", commissioned by the Greater Washington Partnership and JPMorgan Chase. The report provides business leaders, policy makers, community members and advocates with evidence-based insights so they can join the collective push for solutions and help create a healthy housing market in which residents and businesses thrive.[47]

Capital CoLAB

One of the Partnership’s main initiatives is to grow the region’s economic competitiveness.[48][49] The Greater Washington Partnership created the Capital CoLAB (Collaborative of Leaders in Academia and Business), an alliance of educators and business leaders working together to develop talent in the region by providing them with enhanced digital technology education, to ensure people have the skills that employers require.[32][50][51] CoLAB companies include Amazon, Capital One, JPMorgan Chase, MedImmune, Monumental Sports & Entertainment, Northrop Grumman, and Under Armour.[52][8] University partners include: American University, George Mason University, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Maryland, University of Richmond, Virginia Commonwealth University and Virginia Tech.[53][50][54] Wes Bush, Partnership board member and former Chairman and CEO of Northrop Grumman serves as the inaugural chair of the Capital CoLAB.[55]

Digital Tech Credential

In March 2019, the Capital CoLAB launched the digital tech credential program with colleges and universities in the Capital Region. The announcement was made at an event hosted with the Business Roundtable, “Driving Talent and Innovation in the Capital Region.”[56] The Digital Tech Credential brings together big employers and higher education institutions in a collaborative effort to develop a skilled workforce for high-tech jobs.[57][18][32] The credential was designed with guidance from regional businesses to certify that graduates have taken a series of courses that cover knowledge and skills in certain fields such as statistics, data visualization, and cybersecurity.[58] The CoLAB based the program on 44 types of “knowledge, skills and abilities” that businesses say they want their employees to have to fill high-paying jobs in the age of digital information.[59][58]

The credential program debuted in 2019 at George Mason University and Virginia Commonwealth University.[50][60][61] American University, Georgetown University, the University of Richmond, and Virginia Tech launched their own programs in the fall of 2019.[50][62][63]

In addition to the generalist credential, the CoLAB plans to offer additional specialized credential programs in cybersecurity, data analytics, artificial intelligence and machine learning.[64][65]

References

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  2. "Northern Virginia counties and cities form alliance to lure companies and jobs". Washington Post.
  3. Martz, Michael. "New report highlights 'clear disparities' by income and race in Richmond-area access to transportation". Richmond.
  4. "Two Capital Cities Take Stock of Their Transport Infrastructure, Find It Needs Work". Nextcity.org.
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  7. "GREATER WASHINGTON PARTNERSHIP | Open990". www.open990.com. Retrieved 2019-09-19.
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  9. Ramsey, Russ; Scher, Peter (5 January 2017). "Why we launched a Baltimore-to-Richmond business group". Washington Business Journal. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  10. "CEOs Recommend Improvements for Richmond Transit". VPM.org. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
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