LANSING – In her third State of the State Address, Governor Jennifer M.
Granholm announced Tuesday evening a comprehensive plan to fuel Michigan’s
21st century economy and create tens of thousands of good-paying jobs.
“The foundation of a good life is a good-paying job,” Granholm
told a joint session of the Legislature. After describing her three-point Jobs
Today and Jobs Tomorrow plan, the Governor called on lawmakers to act.
“I ask you, tonight, to build Michigan’s future with me. I am moving
forward; move with me.”
Granholm’s Jobs
Today, Jobs Tomorrow plan outlines a three-pronged strategy to create
jobs immediately and diversify and grow Michigan’s future economy. It
will:
- Create 72,000 high-wage jobs by investing $2 billion to establish Michigan
as a global center of research in new technology and emerging industries.
- Create 36,000 jobs over three years and make Michigan a better place to
live and do business by accelerating $800 million in critical state infrastructure
projects, by giving local communities new tools to carry out their own public
investment projects, and by sparking private development projects.
- Give children in school and adults in the workforce greater access to higher
education and to the skills they need to fill both the jobs of the future
and job vacancies that exist in Michigan today.
To create jobs of the future, Granholm announced a 21st Century Jobs Initiative
that will make Michigan the nation’s epicenter of alternative energy research,
a leader in the biotech industry, and a hotbed for homeland security R&D.
The initiative calls for a $2 billion investment over 10 years to grow Michigan’s
economy by increasing research in our university, corporate, and non-profit
research institutions and by stepping up efforts to turn new ideas into new
commercial products. Michigan voters will be asked to approve a ballot measure
this November that would authorize the Governor’s plan to create 72,000
jobs over the next decade.
Granholm told lawmakers her plan could have revolutionary impact on the state’s
economy: “Imagine Michigan, the state that put the nation on wheels as
the state that made those wheels run on pollution free fuel cells, the state
that made these United States independent of foreign oil.”
To put thousands of Michigan residents to work this year, Granholm proposed
a Jobs Today Initiative that will speed up state and local infrastructure improvement
projects that were scheduled to begin over the next decade and provide incentives
that will lead to new private development and renovation projects. This acceleration
will create some 36,000 new jobs over three years in the building trades, construction,
and related service industries. By repairing roads, modernizing schools, cleaning
industrial sites, and renovating downtowns, the Jobs Today Initiative will also
improve Michigan’s quality of life and make the state more attractive
to job providers.
Granholm also announced a new initiative to cut unemployment by rapidly filling
90,000 job vacancies that exist in the state today. Granholm said a new MI Opportunity
Partnership could match and place as many as 30,000 citizens who are looking
for work with a job this year through training programs focused on the skilled
trades and health care fields. “If Michigan hospitals can run ads for
nurses in Montreal, surely we can train people on Mack Avenue or in Monroe or
Munising for those career opportunities,” Granholm said.
Noting that higher education is the key to economic success in the 21st century,
Granholm called for a new educational compact that will build Michigan’s
future workforce by rewarding success in post-secondary education. Beginning
with the class of 2007, all Michigan students will receive a $4,000 new Merit
scholarship when they successfully obtain an associate’s degree, its equivalent
or earn junior status at a Michigan college. The new scholarship is equal to
two years of in-district tuition at a Michigan community college and will result
in the phasing out of the existing $2,500 Merit scholarship. For students who
receive Pell grants, the new Merit scholarship will make up the difference between
their federal grant and $4,000.
In closing, Granholm said, “The cynics will look at this plan and say
we can’t do it. But, I argue we must. The naysayers will say we can’t
afford to do it. But, I say, with the changes in our global economy, we can’t
afford not to.