Grand Rapids: Economy
Grand Rapids: Economy
Major Industries and Commercial Activity
The furniture industry has been a mainstay of the Grand Rapids economy since the late 1800s. Today the metropolitan area is home to five of the world's leading office furniture companies: Steelcase, Herman Miller, Haworth, Knoll, and American Seating. Several firms also produce residential furniture. The Grand Rapids metropolitan manufacturing base is among the largest county employers. Steelcase and Amway, manufacturer of home care products, along with Meijer, a supermarket chain, are the largest private companies in the county. In October 2000 Amway became a subsidiary of a newly created company, Alticor.
Grand Rapids has always thrived because of its entrepreneurial, family owned businesses. Among the national firms that began as family operations are Meijer; Bissell, carpet sweeper makers; Wolverine World Wide, makers of Hush Puppies; and Howard Miller, the world's largest manufacturer of grandfather clocks.
Automotive parts, industrial machinery, printing, graphic arts, plastics and chemicals, grocery wholesalers, and food processors comprise a substantial portion of the economic base. International businesses also play an important role, with more than 50 foreign-owned firms in the county and many metropolitan area firms involved in international trade. Tourism is an emerging industry as West Michigan increasingly becomes a popular vacation and convention destination.
Items and goods produced: office furniture and hardware, home furniture, automobile parts, plastics, industrial machinery, tool and dies, home-care products, home appliances, commercial printing, electronic equipment, scientific instruments, food, leather
Incentive Programs—New and Existing Companies
In 2004, the Michigan Economic Development Commission approved a total of more than $10.3 million in Single Business Tax credits for the expansion and consolidation of Steelcase and the redevelopment of two contaminated brownfield sites in the city's downtown. Gaines Township will support the Steelcase expansion with a tax abatement valued at approximately $96,000 over four years.
Local programs
The city of Grand Rapids and its downtown development authority have committed approximately $6.3 million in local incentives toward the brownfield projects through tax abatements and tax increment financing incentives. The Right Place Program (RPP), founded in 1985, is a regional non-profit organization headed by business and government leaders to encourage economic growth through expansion and retention of area businesses and attraction of national and international companies.
State programs
More than 800 properties within 10 areas of the city are designated Renaissance Zones, where Michigan Single Business Tax, the state education tax, Michigan personal and real property taxes, and city income taxes are waived. Tax credits and exemptions are also available in the city's SmartZone, an area adjacent to downtown where the city is seeking to locate high tech and life sciences companies.
Job training programs
Through the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, employees have the opportunity to improve their skills through three Michigan Technical Education Centers (M-TEC) operated through Grand Rapids Community College.
Development Projects
Rosa Parks Circle, a small, downtown park, opened in 2002. It was designed by architect Maya Lin, who also designed the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C. Millennium Park is a $25 million, 10-year restoration of 1,500 acres of industrial land. A 200-acre section of the park, including Millennium Park Beach, opened in 2003. The $210 million De Vos Place project incorporates De Vos Hall and the old Grand Center convention space in a new one-million-square-foot facility, which was completed in 2005.
Economic Development Information: The Right Place Program, The Waters Building, 111 Pearl Street NW, Grand Rapids, MI 49503; telephone (616)771-0325; fax (616)771-0329
Commercial Shipping
Because of its strategic location, Grand Rapids is no more than two delivery days away from all Midwest, East Coast, mid-south, and eastern Canadian markets. Ground transportation is available through more than 40 motor carriers, several of which operate terminals in Grand Rapids, and three rail freight systems provide a range of services such as piggyback shipments, bulk handling, and refrigeration. The South Beltline Corridor, currently under construction, connects I-96 on the East with I-196 on the West, with U.S. 131 in the center. Portions of this highway opened in 2001 and 2004, with the remainder scheduled to open in 2005. Seven air cargo carriers and a deep-water port on Lake Michigan, 35 miles away in Muskegon, link Grand Rapids with world markets.
Labor Force and Employment Outlook
Employers in the Grand Rapids area have access to a young and growing population with a Midwestern work ethic. Employer relations are said to be excellent and work stoppages rare.
The city and region enjoy a high rate of employment overall. With a designated foreign trade zone, Grand Rapids importers and exporters expect to continue to expand markets internationally.
The following is a summary of data regarding the Grand Rapids metropolitan area labor force, 2004 annual averages.
Size of nonagricultural labor force: 384,100
Number of workers employed in . . .
construction and mining: 19,300
manufacturing: 74,100
trade, transportation and utilities: 73,200
information: 5,700
financial activities: 20,900
professional and business services: 52,900
educational and health services: 51,400
leisure and hospitality: 31,700
other services: 17,100
government: 37,800
Average hourly earnings of production workers employed in manufacturing: $17.56
Unemployment rate: 6.6% (March 2005)
| Largest employers |
Number of employees |
| Spectrum Health |
14,000 |
| Meijer |
9,785 |
| Steelcase |
5,400 |
| Johnson Controls |
5,000 |
| Herman Miller, Inc. |
4,400 |
| Alticor, Inc. |
4,000 |
| Farmers Insurance Group |
3,500 |
| Grand Rapids Public Schools |
3,490 |
Cost of Living
Grand Rapids is noted for its quality of life and affordable health care costs.
The following is a summary of data regarding several key cost of living factors in the Grand Rapids area.
2004 (3rd Quarter) ACCRA Average House Price: $229,900
2004 (3rd Quarter) ACCRA Cost of Living Index: 97.7 (U.S. Average = 100.0)
State income tax rate: 4.3%
State sales tax rate: 6.0%
Local income tax rate: 1.3% for residents; 0.65% for non-residents
Local sales tax rate: None
Property tax rate average: varies from 22.1515 to 29.0215 mills per $1,000 of assessed home value (2004)
Economic Information: The Right Place Program, The Waters Building, 111 Pearl Street NW, Grand Rapids, MI 49503; telephone (616)771-0325; fax (616)771-0329
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Henry VII: a source-based question and answer: Robert Hughes provides an Examiner's Commentary.(SURVIVAL SKILLS)(Essay)
Magazine article from: History Review; 9/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...out when considering this issue, Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck. The fact that...the other hand, while support for Simnel and Warbeck indicated Yorkist desperation...and once the fraudulent nature of Simnel, the first pretender, was exposed...
|
|
Mum's the word
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo; 3/12/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Though Mr Champley advises that "simnel" is from the Latin for fine flour...lustrously named Perkin Warbeck and Lambert Simnel, impostors to the Tudor throne...consigned to historical make believe. Simnel, poor sap, was said in turn to...
|
|
A healthy Easter? It's a piece of cake.(Recipe)
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 3/31/2007; 700+ words
; ...represented, by a ball placed at the centre. Simnel cakes have been known since mediaeval times. The word simnel is probably derived from simila, Latin...s creation to the English pretender Lambert Simnel, who according to legend devised it...
|
|
Arts of power.
Magazine article from: New Criterion; 11/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...pretenders of Henry's reign, Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck. This is the...his vulnerable position. Lambert Simnel in 1486 and Perkin Warbeck between...believed by James IV of Scotland. Simnel later changed his claim and said...
|
|
THE GREAT PRETENDERS; Royal wannabes and their claims to the throne.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Mirror (London, England); 10/26/2006; 700+ words
; ...s men and hanged as a traitor. LAMBERT SIMNEL SHORTLY after the first Tudor king...challenged by a 10-year-old boy. Simnel was probably a son of a baker...London. Whisked off to Ireland, Simnel became the figurehead of rebellion...
|
|
Healthy Eaters: Tasty cake treat with a royal link
Newspaper article from: Evening Mail; 4/11/2001; ; 556 words
; ...cross buns, but the jewel in the crown for me is the Simnel cake, crammed with dried fruits and glistening glace...after the man who invented it, Henry VII's cook, Lambert Simnel. Simnel Cake Ingredients 200g (7oz) SR flour 5mls (1 tsp...
|
|
Healthy Eaters: Tasty cake treat with a royal link.
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Evening Mail (England); 4/11/2001; 603 words
; ...cross buns, but the jewel in the crown for me is the Simnel cake, crammed with dried fruits and glistening glace...after the man who invented it, Henry VII's cook, Lambert Simnel. Simnel Cake Ingredients 200g (7oz) SR flour 5mls (1 tsp...
|
|
HOW I SEE IT I'M THE ONLY KING IN ENGLAND! Fancy being monarch of your own kingdom? Well, now you can and (Mr Blair please note) you can even sell honours. But there ARE a few snags ...(Column)
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 6/10/2006; 700+ words
; ...alternative ruler. They produced Lambert Simnel, the ten-year-old son of an...ringleaders died while Henry pardoned Simnel on the grounds of his young age...a long session at the bar - the Simnel story was revived. It became an...
|
|
Review Blood & Roses
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 8/9/2001; ; 465 words
; ...Blood & Roses tells the story of Lambert Simnel, groomed to rule as a royal pretender...conspirators. The plot is uncovered and Simnel is demoted from king to lowly kitchen...another political ploy to avoid making Lambert into a martyr. The set and venue...
|
|
Great history at the double.
Newspaper article from: The Mail on Sunday (London, England); 5/4/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Tower, by Sir John Everett Millais Perkin Warbeck or Lambert Simnel - it's hard to know which name sounds sillier...years earlier, they had dressed up ten-year-old Lambert Simnel as the Earl of Warwick and even crowned him king in...
|
|
Lambert Simnel
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Lambert Simnel , c.1475-1525, imposter and pretender...changed, however, and in 1486 Simon took Simnel to Ireland, claiming that he was Edward...rallied to his cause, and in May, 1487, Simnel and his supporters, led by John de la...
|
|
Simnel, Lambert
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History
Simnel, Lambert ( c. 1475– c. 1535). Simnel, one of the many pretenders to the throne of Henry VII...VII met it at Stoke , near Newark, and was victorious. Simnel, a mere pawn, was pardoned and set to work as a scullion...
|
|
Henry VII
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History
...attended the council to decide how to deal with Lambert Simnel—before riding off to join the rebels...down without difficulty. It was followed by the Simnel plot in 1487. Simnel claimed to be Edward, earl of Warwick, despite...
|
|
Stoke, battle of
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History
Stoke, battle of, 1487. Lambert Simnel , posing as Edward, earl of Warwick...fighting, Lincoln was killed and Simnel captured. With a humour or clemency...apparent in the Wars of the Roses , Simnel was given menial employment at court...
|
|
Henry VII (England) (1457–1509; Ruled 1485–1509)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...Yorkists. The first serious rebellion came in 1487 when Lambert Simnel, claiming to be the Yorkist earl of Warwick, was crowned king of England in Dublin. Henry defeated Simnel and his followers at the Battle of Stoke in June. A...
|