regionview 2012 volume 4

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Vol. 4, 2012 PUBLICATION OF THE GREATER SPRINGFIELD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE THE BUCK CREEK CORRIDOR RECLAIMING OUR WATERWAY PAGE 4 AT HOME. U.S. Open Qualifier 2 AT WORK. Job Fair 6 AT PLAY. Swap Meet & Car Show 7

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Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce Regionview Magazine 2012 Volume 4

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Page 1: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

V o l . 4 , 2 0 1 2 PUBL ICATION OF THE GREATER SPR INGFIELD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

C H A M B E R O F C O M M E R C E

THE BUCK CREEK CORRIDOR

RECLAIMING OUR WATERWAY PAGE 4

AT HOME. U.S. OpenQualifier 2

AT WORK.Job Fair 6

AT PLAY.Swap Meet & Car Show 7

Page 2: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

INSIDE VIEWS

SPRINGFIELD COUNTRY CLUB IS HOME TO A MEMBERS- ONLY GOLF COURSE, BUT ONE MONDAY THIS YEAR, IT INVITED THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY TO COME OUT AND ENJOY A GREAT DAY OF GOLF.

On June 4, the club was one of only 11 locations in the country to host a U.S. Open Sectional Qualifier.

This was the fourth year Springfield was chosen by the USGA to host one of the “Super Monday” events. Forty-four players - amateur and professional - competed to qualify for the U.S. Open, which was held June 14 in San Francisco.

“It gives our members a lot of pride to be associated with this national tournament,” said Craig Taylor, Springfield County Club general manager. “It also brings a certain prestige to the community.”

Nationwide Tour player Brice Garnett and 2011 NCAA Champion John Peterson took the top two spots at the Springfield qualifier.

Peterson went on to tie for 4th place at the U.S. Open, finishing just two strokes behind winner Webb Simpson.

Attendance at this year’s qualifier was the largest yet, Taylor said. He credited the day’s beautiful weather and an increased awareness about the event.

It also didn’t hurt that Seung-yul Noh, who is 44th in the FEDex Cup Standings, was returning this year.

“He wanted to come back. ” Taylor said.

The 36 holes of golf lasts the entire day and often players will come three or four days before the event to familiarize themselves with the course, he said.

The Greater Springfield Convention & Visitors Bureau hosted lunch for the players and caddies and provided visitor information for all attendees.

The event gives both Springfield and the club a chance to shine, he said.

“Admission is free to spectators, so we want people to come out and enjoy a great game of golf.”

Springfield Country Club U.S.OpenQualifier

Page 3: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

Greater Springfield Moving Forward: Leading the Way

3www.greaterspringfield.com

22nd Annual P. DennisSheehan MemorialChamber Golf OpenMonday, August 20 Windy Knoll Golf Club1 p.m. Shotgun Start

• The field is limited to 144 golfers• $175 per player/$650 per foursome• Includes lunch, player gift and after

party

Scan this code to register via your mobile phone or call us at 937-325-7621 or visit GreaterSpringfield.com.

REGIONVIEW SPONSORED BY:

1146 E. Home RoadSpringfield399-1100

“GOOD BUSINESS LEADERS CREATE A VISION, ARTICULATE THE VISION, PASSIONATELY OWN THE VISION, AND RELENTLESSLY DRIVE IT TO COMPLETION.” JACK WALSH

Since it was launched by the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce in 2010, the Greater Springfield Moving Forward program has taken on a life of its own.

And through the hundreds of volunteers that serve on its five committees, GSMF has created a vision, articulated the vision and passionately owned the vision for a greater community.

Each day those volunteers are relentlessly driving that vision to completion.

Two of GSMF focus areas – Parks & Green Spaces and Jobs & Job Readiness - show up in this edition of Regionview magazine.

The other three focus areas: Corridors & Gateways, Student Achievement and Downtown Development, have been featured in recent news articles as they are also making great strides toward the goals you as a community set for them to accomplish.

This month, the Chamber will be launching our redesigned Website where we will be able to keep you up to date on what GSMF is doing and how you can get involved.

If you haven’t been to our website in awhile, go to GreaterSpringfield.com and look around. You’ll find all kinds of information on growing your business and our community.

Thank you to all of the individuals who volunteer their time and talent to Greater Springfield Moving Forward.

I have never seen our community more focused on a common vision, than I do now. I’m excited about what we are accomplishing together.

Have a great Chamber day!

Individual & Business Tax PreparationTax Planning & ConsultingBusiness Accounting ServicesPayroll

Page 4: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

YOURCOMMUNITY

Larry Tourney, a 48-year employee of Navistar, inspects the grill on one of the plant’s newest large truck models.

Buck Creek Corridor:The Green Beltway

4 VOLUME 4, 2012

WITH THE SUCCESSFUL PASSAGE OF A PARKS LEVY IN NOVEMBER, the Greater Springfield Moving Forward Parks & Green Space Committee is soliciting residents to get involved in efforts to capitalize on the area’s natural assets – specifically the Buck Creek Corridor that meanders throughout the county providing recreational venues for everyone to enjoy.

The Greater Springfield Moving Forward Parks & Green Space Committee is part of the larger Greater Springfield Moving Forward strategic initiative, launched in 2010. The plan was prioritized through resident surveys and public forums.

Community leaders did not recognize how important the parks were to residents until they received the results of the citizen surveys, said Springfield Mayor Warren Copeland.

“Parks ranked second on the priority list,” he said.

The passage of the five-year joint parks district levy has given the Clark County Parks District and the National Trail Parks and Recreation District the funds needed to maintain the thousands of acres of rich parkland and bike trails.

It has also provided the groundwork for the committee’s planned improvements along the waterways.

“Springfield is lucky to have this corridor that runs from the C.J. Brown Reservoir to George Rogers Clark Park,” Copeland said, “not just the waterways but the park resources that lie along that corridor.”

The committee’s early discussions about improving the corridor were strictly geographical, such as focusing on one section of the corridor at a time.

That approach has now changed, said businessman Tom Loftis, who also serves on the Parks & Green Space Committee.

“There are a lot of people who are passionate about different recreational opportunities along the corridor – whether it’s kayaking, canoeing, bike riding or hiking,” he said. “We’re asking these groups, such as Greater Springfield Friends of the Trail or Friends of Snyder Park, to come up with their ideas.

“These people are very enthusiastic,” he said. “They’re the kind of people who, if you let them loose, will get things done.”

Kayakers and canoers enjoy the beauty of scenic Buck Creek.

Page 5: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

5www.greaterspringfield.com

A perfect example of that kind of initiative is the ECO Sports Corridor spearheaded by Loftis’ sons John and Kevin. Having returned to Springfield after living in Colorado for several years, the brothers saw the potential to create a whitewater playground just blocks from downtown.

Through community partnerships and their own financial investment, dams were removed, rapids were created and aesthetic improvements were made along the whitewater launching site, where kayakers and spectators can take in the action or just enjoy the water.

Since then, kayakers from a multi-state area are converging on the city daily to enjoy the only whitewater playground in Ohio. With them they bring their tourism dollars, shopping in our stores, and eating in our restaurants.

“It’s also bringing a younger demographic to our community,” said Horton Hobbs, Vice President of Economic Development for the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce. “This is the demographic we need to pay attention to.”

Copeland, who is a faculty member at Wittenberg University agrees.

“When we take students on tours of the city they are especially interested in the ECO Sports Corridor,” he said.

Development along the corridor such as restaurants, outfitters and connectors to the bike path and entertainment venues could bring more activity to the area and help fuel downtown redevelopment efforts.

“If we can make the corridor more attractive with more activities, we could hold onto our capable young people and attract more of those people to our community,” Copeland said.

While some residents might be attracted to water sports and the rock climbing near the corridor, others can enjoy the beauty the corridor provides along the bike and walking trails, Loftis said.

“Ask any realtor and they’ll tell you that people want to be near water,” he said. “They may never get in the water, but just being close to it increases the value of that property in their mind.”

You can get involved in the Buck Creek Corridor project by contacting:

Clark County Parks District: clarkcountyparkdistrict.orgNational Trail Parks & Recreation District: ntprd.orgGreater Springfield Friends of the TrailOSUE Master Gardeners: mastergardener.osu.eduFriends of Buck Creek: ecosportscorridor.comFriends of Snyder Park

Page 6: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

CICNEWS VIEWS+

Making the Connection:Greater Springfield Job Fair

6 VOLUME 4, 2012

On May 18, the Courtyard By Marriott became a link between job seekers and jobs.

The downtown hotel was the site for the Spring Job Fair, hosted by the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce and WorkPlus One Stop Center.

The event drew more than 750 job seekers.

Community Mercy Health Partners was one of 40 businesses that participated, tak-ing resumes for numerous clinical and nursing positions, said Don Austin, health recruiter.

“First impressions are very important to both the recruiter and the job seeker, Austin said. “It’s challenging for job seekers when they don’t get a chance to meet face to face with a recruiter,” he said. This gives them a chance to show their motivation and energy to a recruiter.”

A major goal that came out of the Greater Springfield Moving Forward initiative was to help current businesses expand, attract new businesses and help the unemployed or underemployed find gainful employment, said Lehan Peters, director ofWorkPlus.

“Hosting a community-wide job fair gives local employers an opportunity to recruit and select potential job candidates,” Peters said, “and it gives job seekers a chance to talk to a ‘live’ recruiter rather than competing for jobs through an online job portal.”

With skills ranging from line work to advanced manufacturing to professional services these individuals represent the quality workforce Greater Springfield needs to keep its companies competitive, its industry base diverse and attractive to new businesses, said Chamber President Mike McDorman. “That’s why the Chamber’s partnership with WorkPlus is so important,” he said. “In addition to coordinating the Job Fair every spring, this partnership matches employers with qualified employees on a daily basis. Not only that, but they help with preparing potential employees for job success.” WorkPlus serves both the unskilled and experienced professionals in their job search. They also help employers fill positions, from entry level to upper management.

The Chamber’s HITS program (Hire, Invest, Train, Space) is designed to help employees with training issues for existing and or new hires.

For more information, contact WorkPlus at 327-1961, WorkPlus.cc or call the Chamber at 325-7621.

Page 7: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

NEWS VIEWSCVB +

7www.greaterspringfield.com

WITH CAR ENTHUSIASTS FROM AROUND THE COUNTRY ATTENDING HIS ANNUAL SWAP MEET & CAR SHOW, GREENE COUNTY RESIDENT JIM WIRTH COULD EASILY HOLD THE EVENT ANYWHERE HE WOULD CHOOSE.

Thankfully for Greater Springfield, he chose the Clark County Fairgrounds 27 years ago and has no intentions to move.

Wirth took over the show at the request of Cars and Parts Magazine in 1984. He has since grown the show from 3,000 visitors to 30,000.

“The fairgrounds is a former airport so it’s nice and flat,” he said. “And the fair officials are always willing to work with me, which was a big plus.”

The largest in the Midwest, the May event draws around 4,000 vendors to the 126-acre site. Parking overflows to adjacent fields.

“We sell out every hotel in town and even farther than that,” he said. The result: an economic impact of nearly $8 million.

He sees no signs of it slowing down.

“No other country loves their cars like we do in America,” he said. “We all remember our first cars and we’ve all been attached to one car or another in our life.”

The son of an antique car enthusiast, Wirth cherishes the antique Hupmobile his late father left him. He is also enthused by the muscle cars of his generation, such as Chevelle SS and Pontiac GTOs that parade into the fairgrounds in pristine condition the first day of the show.

On the weekend of Sept. 7, the 23rd Annual IH Scout & Light Truck Nationals will be held at the fairgrounds in conjunction with the fall Swap Meet and Car Show.

The event will bring International Truck enthusiasts from around the country to make a pilgrimage to Springfield - where IH was founded more than 100 years ago.

The winter show will be held Nov. 10-11.

For more information about upcoming shows, go to:OhioSwapMeet.com Clarkcoag.com

7www.greaterspringfield.com

:Car NationSwap Meet and Car Show brings 30,000 to fairgrounds

Page 8: Regionview 2012 Volume 4

HELPING OUR COMMUNITY

8 VOLUME 4, 2012

Focus on: Chamber Ambassadors

Welcome to our new members!

Independent Living of OhioSpringfield Wellness CenterO’Conner’s Irish PubSpringfield Auto Supply, Inc. /dba: NapaDelille Oxygen Co.Northridge Lanes, Inc.Ohio Auto SalesImperial Express, Inc.Randall’s Audio, Video & Visual LLC /dba WWRD TVBug Stoppers, Inc.Jenks & Associates, Inc.Alpha & Omega Staffing SolutionsYoung LifeNew Touch RestorationsScholl Surveying LLCPaychexBone-A-Fido Bakery Shaffer’s Auto SalesChrist Episcopal Church – Free Membership Freedom Health Clinic LLCSpringfield Family Practice Inc.Emerald GreenWindy Knoll Golf Club Mershon’s World of Cars, Inc.Beacon of Hope & Kairos KoffeeBob Evans- Leffel Lane StoreDisability Management Process Solutions LLCStonecipher HughesSODEXO/ Wittenberg Dining Services Grandpa’s Garage, LLCThe Buckeye Sports Lodge TRECA Digital AcademyJob1USAValeo Insurance and Financial ServicesSpringfield Scrubs Profero Team, LLC

AS A TAX ACCOUNTANT, BLAKE SHAFFER KNOWS A GOOD DEDUCTION WHEN HE SEES ONE.

That’s why the chamber ambassador had no trouble introducing nine companies to chamber membership during Spring Membership Campaign.

“Sure, chamber membership is tax deductible, but that’s almost an afterthought when I talk to people about joining” said Shaffer, president and owner of LWS Tax and Accounting Services. “With all the

good things the chamber’s been doing lately, it almost sells itself. I tell people if you have money to invest, the chamber is a good place to put it. It’s a way to invest in your community.”

In strict monetary terms, Shaffer said the chamber’s electric discount program, Speedway gas cards and the prescription drugs cards are just some of the ways his company and employees have saved. He said companies are always surprised to learn about the chamber benefits.

“Also, I’ve gotten a lot of business from chamber events and being an ambassador,” he said. “When you’re involved as an ambassador you meet a lot of people and the more they see you, the more likely they’re going to think of you when they need your services.”

“The chamber appreciates the hard work of all of our ambassadors who helped us exceed our goal for the spring campaign,” said Kathy McPommell, the chamber’s vice president of operations.

Special “thanks” goes out to the following Chamber Ambassadors: • BarbCarpenter,WorkPlus • RitaSneed,ARCStaffing • CharleneRoberge,RoedigerRealtyCo. • KarenEhman,Ehman’sGarage • NancyCavanaugh,Clark,Schaefer,Hackett&Co. • JuliaMaiolo,OICofClarkCounty • BarbLong,PuroClean • JenniferPrice • AndrewLell,TheCeriumGroup • MicheleHemphill,VillaSpringfield • TrishaChurch,KeyBank • RichardSpangler,ChristEpiscopalChurch • KarenBrodbeck,StrategicLeadershipSolutions • LeneeLandry,WesBanco