Newsletter Volume 5, published August 2005. Original contents.
Austin Courts Japanese Employers
by: Matt Hudgins
Representatives
from Austin's business community hope to strengthen ties with Japanese
automotive suppliers and electronics manufacturers on a visit to Tokyo
and Nagoya July 25 through Aug. 4.
The
four-person Austin delegation will spend three days in Tokyo meeting
with about 15 companies that either have a presence in Austin or may be
potential new employers here in the future. Later, the Austin group
will join 65 other Texans, including Texas Gov. Rick Perry and other
high-ranking officials, in representing Texas at the 2005 World
Exposition in Aichi, Japan, just outside Nagoya.
"First
and foremost, we want to express our sincere appreciation to the
Japanese companies that have already made investments in Austin," says
David Porter, vice president of economic development at the Greater
Austin Chamber of Commerce. "Second, we want to be able to discuss with
other companies the benefits of doing business in Austin."
In
addition to Porter, the Austin delegation includes Gary Farmer, who is
chairman of the Greater Austin Economic Development Corp. (GAEDC).
Farmer heads the Opportunity Austin initiative to create 72,000 new
local jobs in the next five years. The Japan visit is one of 18
Opportunity Austin excursions planned in 2005.
The
Chamber has prepared an eight-page Austin brochure in Japanese, as well
as a 12-minute video in Japanese promoting the city to prospective new
employers. The group will distribute the video on CDs.
"We
already have a number of Japanese companies in Austin, so we have some
of the basic infrastructure Japanese employers might look for,
including as a Saturday school," Porter says.
Also
representing Austin on the trip will be Jason Ford, director of
economic development at the Chamber of Commerce; and Jerry Heare, a
principal with at real estate firm NAI Commercial Industrial Properties
Co. and chairman of the Chamber's automotive supplier initiative.
Heare
says he and representatives from several Texas cities have scheduled a
joint meeting with executives at Toyota Motor Corp. during the visit.
Toyota Motor Manufacturing North America Inc. is currently constructing
an $800 million Tundra truck assembly plant in San Antonio. |