Source: Connecticut Post, Friday May 1, 2001
It's being billed as the largest industrial facility
built in Bridgeport in the last 25 years and it couldn't come at a better time.
The former Bryant Electric site in the city's West End,
vacant for 13 years, will be the new home in 2002 of Prime Resources Corp., cited
just last week by Inc. Magazine as one of the nation's 100 fastest growing companies.
Prime Resources is a promotional products company that
now has employees scattered at five locations. The new 10-acre West End site will
allow the company to put all its operations under one roof.
The good news for Bridgeport is not only the ability
to retain Prime Resources in the city, but that company's rising success indicates
growth and more employees for the future.
Plaudits also to the Rowland administration, which put
together an aid package⦠which induced the firm to remain in Bridgeport.
That the new facilities will be the largest industrial
growth in the city in a quarter century, however, underlines the development dilemma
that Bridgeport faces.
As Bridgeport has lost its old line manufacturing companies
during the past quarter century, an inequitable tax burden has been placed on residential
property owners and the city has been left with many brownfield sites.
Fortunately, there are signs on the economic development
front that this may be changing.
In addition to Prime Resources, Derecktor Shipyards,
a maker of luxury yachts and ferries, should soon be developing the Car Tech site
on the city's East Side and two new proposals for the Steel Point project are now
being evaluated.
If Bridgeport is to succeed in the future in rebuilding
itself, it must, with the help of state aid, be able to attract industrial entities
into the city.