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ISSUES AND POLICIES <br />The proposed policies are arranged in four groups, each of which focuses on a <br />general issue. <br />The Council-s decisions and actions do affect business decisions. <br />Therefore, it is important that economic factors be considered in the <br />Council's decision -making process. The AREA -WIDE POLICIES state that <br />economic needs should be considered in Council reviews and capital <br />expenditure decisions related to the metropolitan agency systems <br />(highway, transit, air, sewers and parks). <br />Businesses do not always consider broad regional issues when making <br />development decisions. The Council is in a position to provide <br />information on this broader view to the business community. The POLICIES <br />FOR COORDINATING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT make more explicit a number of <br />roles the Council is already performing. Under these policies, the <br />Council will collect and distribute economic and demographic data to the <br />business community, examine economic issues related to the <br />entrepreneurial climate and retraining of the Region's labor force and <br />monitor economic development efforts in the Region. <br />High interest rates in recent years have emphasized a need for capital in <br />the business community. Smaller businesses have had that need even <br />before rates were high. The nation, including Minnesota and the Region, <br />is entering an era where the public and private sectors are working <br />together more closely --particularly in the area of financing. Government <br />sector financing has its critics (see Position Paper on Tax Exempt <br />Financing as an Economic Development oo , ug. , owever, if <br />used appropriately, it is one area w ere job growth can be stimulated. <br />The BUSINESS FINANCING POLICY is very general and is geared to making <br />more capital available to businesses. Two programs are being proposed <br />under this policy --a regional Small Business Administration 503 program <br />and a regional program for issuing industrial revenue bonds. These are <br />discussed in detail in the implementation section of the policy document. <br />In the nationwide effort to help businesses help themselves, the needs of <br />the poor and the unemployed sometimes have been forgotten. There are <br />programs dealing with various aspects of their problems, but there is no <br />comprehensive or regional approach to the problems, nor is there any <br />attempt to coordinate the programs. The ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY POLICY will <br />be used to study the various problems and programs for the poor and <br />unemployed, and attempt to find ways to integrate the efforts and <br />solutions. <br />