A great snap
shot of the economic impact the 7th Special Forces Group is
making and will continue to make to this community. On the heals of this
group, we have the ramping up of the F-35 Training Program, which includes
about 9 US friendly nations bringing their pilots, maintainers, and supporting
cast. With all this, you have the growth of the vacation community, the
annual migration of snowbirds/baby boomers from around North America, as well
as, others industries wanting to move their companies to the area. Why
not? Most people come to visit or move here, and never want to
leave. Can you blame them? I am a little bias because I am a
native. But, as a retired military officer, I also understand what this
community means to our military both active and retired and the defense industry,
as well. I close with this. AIRBUS. More to follow.
Special
Forces to the rescue
Army
has given area a needed economic boost
By LAUREN SAGE REINLIE
EGLIN AFB — The arrival of the Army’s 7th Special Forces Group
(Airborne) more than a year ago has been a welcome boost to a slumping local
economy. The group, which officially opened its cantonment in October 2011,
should pump about $3.2 billion into Okaloosa County’s economy between 2010 and
2016, according to a report from the Haas Center at the University of West
Florida. It’s enough to offset the departure of 50 F-15s from the Air
Force’s 33rd Fighter Wing in 2009, which will result in a loss of $3.3 billion
during the same time period, the report said. Although the report calls
it an almost even trade, the area felt the economic boost when Army
families began arriving from Fort Bragg, N.C., last year because the economy
was so depressed, said Rod Lewis, director of the Haas Center. Their arrival
came on the heels of the housing bubble burst in 2008 and then the loss of the
F-15s in 2009. “It was a double whammy,” Lewis said. After two years
of significantly negative population growth in Okaloosa County, the 7th Special
Forces Group brought about 6,000 new people, including 2,200 soldiers and their
families, to the area. People had been used to operating in the
slump, Lewis said. “Then, boom.” The county has felt the impact,
especially in Crestview where most of the families settled. “We’re very
pleased with the outcome,” said Kay Rasmussen, interim president of the
Economic Development Council of Okaloosa County. “The community has
embraced the families moving into our neighborhoods.” She described a
ripple effect on the local economy as the new families started purchasing and
leasing homes and taking advantage of retail. Also,
many of the soldiers’ spouses opened small businesses, primarily in the
Crestview area, Rasmussen said. The departure of the F15s, the arrival of the
Special Forces Group and then the arrival of the first F-35s at Eglin Air Force
Base all were called for in a Base Realignment and Closure Commission report in
2005. The F-35s — the first of which arrived at Eglin in July 2011 — have
brought about 1,300 people to the community, said Col. Tony Douglas, vice
commander of the Air Force’s 96th Test Wing, which oversees operations at the
base. “It has been a big transition (for Eglin),” Douglas said.
It’s going well, though, he said. At a sprawling 724 square miles — about
the size of Rhode Island — Eglin is the Department of Defense’s largest
installation and was ready to absorb the new missions, Douglas said. The
community also welcomed the new personnel with open arms. “It’s been
great, not just for TEAM Eglin, but for the local community as well,” he said.
“We’ve got more people coming into what is, in my opinion, a very exciting and
diverse installation.” Many people had expectations that the new Army
jobs would be low pay and would not offset the loss of the F-15s, which
relocated about 2,000 airmen, Lewis said. They were a bit afraid. The
Army’s coming. The Army’s coming,” he said. “But these people are very
well-paid. This is not a private first class making $20,000 a year.”The
7th Special Forces soldiers are largely welleducated and earn $70,000 to
$90,000 a year. That’s quite a different (economic) impact when you look
at it,” he said. Lewis said 65 to 75 percent of the families settled in
north Okaloosa County. The soldiers deploy regularly and military spouses
wanted to live close to each other for support. They also are a tight-knit
group, having all been stationed together at Fort Bragg for years. “Crestview
got out ahead,” Lewis said. “They were very welcoming and worked to promote
Crestview as the place to be.” NMany of the families just didn’t look anywhere
else, he said. Lewis said he was somewhat surprised more families didn’t move
south because housing was much more affordable closer to the beach and
Choctawhatchee Bay than it would have been before the housing market crashed.
He said the lingering question about the military’s economic impact remains
what level of growth the area will see from the F-35 program. At one point, the
Air Force estimated there would be 107 planes at Eglin. Twenty-two jets have
arrived so far. The effects have been positive, but just how much
economic benefit will come from the program is yet to be determined, Lewis
said. “They are just not here in the numbers we initially thought they would
be,” he said.
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