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Franklin has a lot of unoccupied commercial and industrial space, but administrative officials aren’t sitting back and waiting for the recession to end.
Instead, local leadership has pursued special economic development designations for three areas of town in an effort to attract new businesses. The three areas are: Forge Park, Franklin Industrial Park and a town-owned Pond Street parcel that overlooks Interstate-495.
“We think by offering tax breaks in a great community that has rail and great highway access, we can take control of the process and attract businesses here,” said Bryan Taberner, Franklin’s planning director.
Franklin is one of 10 communities in the I-95/495 South Regional Technology Economic Target Area, which allows the towns to designate areas of economic opportunity within its borders. The state’s Economic Assistance Coordinating Council approved Franklin’s application in April.
Properties within the economic opportunity areas can take advantage of tax increment financing (TIF) as well as other incentives.
In the mid-1980s and early 1990s many industrial and commercial properties were built in Franklin along with an MBTA station. Businesses have concentrated in Franklin, but over the last few years the normal moving-in-and-out of businesses has become lopsided, with the economy heavily contributing to a larger exodus, Taberner said.
Now there is little land available for new industrial and commercial development, so it’s important to redevelop what the town already has, according to Franklin Town Administrator Jeffrey D. Nutting.
“We want to enhance the intensity of the use in those areas,” he said.
The moves have already seen some success. Tegra Medical has consolidated some of its work at 9 Forge Park. The company makes complex wire and tube products for the medical device and life sciences industries. It brought 180 employees and expects to grow to 200 by the end of the year, Taberner said.
Tegra was created in 2007 when Boston-based private equity company, Riverside Partners LLC, acquired three companies in different locations: New England Precision Grinding in Holliston, Accu-Met Laser of Cranston, R.I. and American Medical Instruments of Dartmouth. It consolidated the Holliston and Cranston, R.I., facilities in Franklin.
Robert Holmes, managing director of asset management for Colony Realty Partners LLC of Boston, which owns several properties in Franklin including 9 Forge Park, said the special economic designation has made a difference.
“It can be a tie-breaker. The 10-year, TIF financing really helped [Integra] bring three locations here to Franklin,” he said.
With the special economic development designation also comes an incentive for occupying and improving vacant buildings. Any company that moves into a building that has been 75 percent empty for two years or more can take advantage of a 10 percent abandoned building tax deduction.
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Worcester Business Journal presents a special commemorative edition celebrating the 300th anniversary of the city of Worcester. This landmark publication covers the city and region’s rich history of growth and innovation.
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