Job Opportunity – Economic Development Analyst for IPRE

The Institute for Policy Research and Engagement is seeking candidates to join our team as an Economic Development Analyst.

Review of Applications Begins
January 3, 2022; position open until filled.

Special Instructions to Applicants
Along with your online application, please submit a resume, a cover letter (no more than two pages), and names and current contact information for three references. In your cover letter, be sure to address how you meet the qualifications and competencies of this position. 

Department Summary
The Institute for Policy Research and Engagement (IPRE) is an interdisciplinary research institute in the School of Planning, Public Policy and Management at the University of Oregon. The role of IPRE is to link the diverse perspectives, skills, expertise, and innovation of higher education with the planning, policy, and management needs identified by our organizational and community collaborators. IPRE provides technical assistance, capacity, and basic research services using an experiential learning model. In this way, we help resolve local issues, address resource gaps, and improve the quality of life for our project partners while providing future planners, policymakers, and community leaders with opportunities to apply what they are learning through work on real-world projects.

IPRE actively seeks to promote diverse thinking, equity of voice, and inclusivity in everything we do. Candidates with varied backgrounds, language fluencies, lived experiences, and skillsets are welcome to apply for positions with our team. We strongly encourage candidates from diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds, women, LGBTQ+ individuals, and persons with disabilities to apply.

Position Summary
The Institute for Policy Research & Engagement (IPRE) Economic Development Analyst will coordinate and direct technical analysis on projects primarily within IPRE’s Economic Development Portfolio. This position reports to the Associate Director for Applied Research and works with IPRE program faculty, staff, and students. This is a funding-contingent position. Activities will include developing, conducting, supporting, and managing research and analysis tasks and projects. Responsibilities will include developing and stewarding relations with external partners, identifying economic development needs in Oregon and regions of the state, preparing work programs, managing applied research related to economic development, and grant reporting. The position may also include management, guidance, and direct supervision of graduate and undergraduate student research teams and paid graduate and undergraduate research assistants. Additionally, this position may support IPRE’s other program areas including our off-campus service-learning branch, the Resource Assistance for Rural (RARE) AmeriCorps Program. This position will require statewide and limited overnight travel.

Minimum Requirements

  • Master’s Degree in Economics, Economic Development, Planning (Community, Regional, or Urban), Public Administration/Affairs, Public Policy, or related field; Bachelors degree with five or more years of professional experience may substitute for a masters degree.
  • Two years of demonstrated work experience in one or more of the following areas: economic research, economic development, economic justice, economic democracy, economic resilience, financial analysis, business development, market research, budget analysis, applied research related to economics. Work experience may include paid internships or professional projects conducted during graduate school.

Professional Competencies

  • Ability to communicate effectively with diverse communities and audiences, including oral and written communication.
  • Ability to present research results using reports, tables, figures, and charts.
  • Understanding of economic development practices, business development, workforce development, economic justice, entrepreneurial ecosystems, and innovation ecosystems.
  • Awareness and understanding of common economic data sources and data collection approaches.
  • Skills and experience in stakeholder engagement, public outreach, public involvement coordination, and small group facilitation.
  • Experience with mailed or internet survey design, administration, and analysis.

Preferred Qualifications

  • Experience with a statistical software package (Stata/SPSS/SAS/R) or similar statistical software.
  • Ability to design, code, run, and report out statistical analysis using OLS, MLE, and other modeling techniques as appropriate.
  • Experience using ArcGIS to conduct data analysis.
  • Experience interpreting and forecasting market trends.
  • Professional experience in a government agency.

For more information and to apply, visit here: https://careers.uoregon.edu/en-us/job/528579/economic-development-analyst

Challenges persist for rural Marion, Polk county residents lacking broadband as state plans for federal funds still uncertain

By Ardeshir Tabrizian, Salem Reporter

Thousands of Marion and Polk county residents lacking high-speed internet continue to face barriers to education and their ability to earn a living, and whether a federal bill intended to expand broadband access will help remains unclear.

Oregonians will see at least $100 million in funding from a federal infrastructure bill earmarked for broadband services, but state officials say it’s too early to tell when or how those funds will be distributed.

County officials hope the infrastructure dollars will make life easier for rural area residents in Marion and Polk counties but say the challenges of not having broadband access will persist for the foreseeable future.

Many rural area residents have had to drive to libraries to access the internet, or even do their taxes on their cell phones, said Danielle Gonzalez, economic developer for Marion County. “People don’t realize what others are having to do to get access to the internet,” she said.

Gonzalez said teachers in the Santiam Canyon School District have had to give out different homework assignments based on whether students could access them. “This creates (an) immediate difference in the education of our students,” she said.

As a parent of teenagers, she said if her children couldn’t access the internet for their studies, she couldn’t guarantee that they’d be able to go to college. “If we’re not doing this now, we’re not just harming this generation of students, we’re harming the generation of their workforce for the rest of their lives.”

Gonzalez said she knows a young athlete who had to drive out to the middle of a field to be able to do an interview for a major running platform.

Another woman in Detroit who did remote counseling had to move her business because she couldn’t guarantee that she could be there for her patients. Gonzalez also knew a man who had to make the trip to Stayton anytime he needed to upload stock photos for his work.

She said county officials want to protect local farmland and ensure it is economically viable. “The only way to be economically viable is to be super efficient with everything from water use, chemical use, soil moisture, calculations and data. You can’t get those things without having access to the internet,” she said.

Eli Heindricks, rural broadband specialist for Marion County Community Services, said some residents even a half mile outside of city limits have told him they don’t have access to reliable internet for the online school work their children are required to do.

Others have had to get creative to access the internet. Heindricks said he visited one farm where he saw internet equipment was set up in the bathroom.

It’s a similar situation in Polk County, where county commissioner Craig Pope said he has heard from residents who needed to use hotspots from their cell phones to educate their children at home. “It’s pretty tough to get solid network connections on a hotspot,” he said.

“We heard from a lot of people who said, ‘I’m desperate,’ or those who were told, ‘Look, you can work from home, but you’ve got to have enough of a network to be able to supply your computer,’” he said. “We had hundreds and hundreds of people that could not make that work.”

Gonzalez said the Federal Communications Commission estimates around 7,000 Marion County households are unserved. “That means broadband in a very slow sense,” she said.

She said the actual number is much higher than is reflected in the FCC data. “It’s obviously some flawed information, but it’s the best information we have as of right now,” she said.

In Polk County, Pope said FCC data incorrectly shows nobody is without service and all residents have minimum access that could allow a household of three to use their computers simultaneously while streaming video.

“I can only say anecdotally that based on the number of surveys we send out and the number we get back, the indicators are that the numbers are significant,” he said.

With any money available through the infrastructure bill, Heindricks said Marion County will likely work with private providers to build out their networks and lower the costs of serving all areas of the county.

“It’s probably going to be a while,” Heindricks said of how long Marion County residents will have to wait for broadband funding from the infrastructure bill.

The federal government will provide infrastructure dollars to the state, which will decide how to distribute them. “We’re really waiting for the state at this point,” he said.

Gonzalez said there is no guarantee that the county will get any infrastructure funds for broadband services.

“It’s never a guarantee. The only thing you can guarantee is us putting in the work now,” she said. “We can’t wait for the federal government and the state government to figure out all of those rules, so we’re going to have to start planning now so we will be ready the moment that they’re ready for us.”

Nathan Buehler, spokesperson for Business Oregon – the state’s broadband office – said it’s too soon to know how much money for broadband access Marion and Polk counties can expect to receive through the infrastructure bill, or when they will receive funding.

“The bill just passed, so we really don’t know. We only know how much will go into the state at this point, at least $1.6 billion plus the reauthorization of the Highway Trust Fund,” Buehler said in an email Nov. 8.

Heindricks said a recurring problem he has seen in Marion County has been that privately operated service providers find it difficult to make money in the timespan they normally do by serving rural areas.

“In rural areas, the cost of gaining access to service is often shouldered on the residents themselves, even if that connection is a few hundred feet from a road to the home,” he said in an email.

Gonzalez said that a couple of years ago, she had to advocate for expanding broadband services in small, rural communities. “I had people tell me that, ‘Well, they move out to those communities, so they don’t want it,’” she said. “With Covid and online learning and online workplaces and remote education and all of those things, health care, I don’t have to make those arguments anymore. Everybody now sees that this is part of our new utilities that are required.”

She said Marion County will also be able to apply for other broadband funding through the American Rescue Plan Act, which Congress passed earlier this year.

Marion and Polk counties have both been waiting on their share of the $120 million Oregon received from that bill. Buehler said the state’s broadband office received final instructions on how to apply for the funds last month and doesn’t expect to get it until Fall 2022.

Pope said the program, which is separate from the infrastructure bill, will not have a grant application process in place until late 2022 and won’t start funding projects until 2023 at the earliest.

Meanwhile, he said he expects providers in Polk County will apply for the infrastructure dollars and hopes that funding will support the private sector. “I hope local governments will not be confusing the issues by competing for those funds unnecessarily,” he said in an email.

Pope said he hopes the state will commit to real dollars, dates and locations for distributing the infrastructure funding. “They certainly aren’t including local governments in those decisions,” he said in an email.

CORRECTION: This story was updated to reflect that Business Oregon has not yet received American Rescue Plan Act funding for broadband services. Salem Reporter regrets the error.

Contact reporter Ardeshir Tabrizian: ardeshir@salemreporter.com or 503-929-3053.

Rural communities get a hand from the UO’s RARE program

By Emily Halnon, Around The O

In Oakridge, residents often have to live with poor air quality from wood-burning stoves and the city’s valley location where stagnant and toxic air can settle. But a University of Oregon program is working to improve this environmental challenge.

Reducing pollution in Oakridge through energy efficient upgrades, weatherization projects and distribution of air purifiers is one of dozens of projects happening in rural communities around the state through Resource Assistance for Rural Environments, more commonly known as RARE, an AmeriCorps program housed at the UO. The Oakridge project is one of thousands undertaken since the program launched 28 years ago.

RARE’s mission is to increase the capacity of rural communities to improve their economic, social and environmental conditions. It does that by placing members in rural cities and towns to work on projects like downtown development, renewable energy upgrades, land use and natural resource planning, community food assessments, and economic recovery from COVID-19 and wildfires.

The program has placed more than 600 members in rural communities around Oregon since it was established in 1994. It is administered through the UO’s Institute for Policy Research and Engagement, where it is able to leverage the expertise of the institute’s researchers in issues like planning, public policy, housing and transportation.

The program places young professionals in rural communities, where they spend 11 months contributing the skills, expertise and resources of the UO, as well as their own energy and excitement for the work.

“RARE helps these communities meet their most pressing needs by pairing them with recent graduates who are passionate about these issues,” said Titus Tomlinson, the RARE program director, who served two consecutive terms in the program himself and describes it as a life-changing experience.

“And the program is helping to build up the next generation of leaders who will continue to make a difference in communities,” he said.

One of the exciting features of the program is that it provides a mutually beneficial experience to both the communities and the program’s members, Tomlinson said. The individuals who participate in RARE are able to build professional skills, technical knowledge and project management experience through their immersive work helping communities.

Johnathan Van Roekel opted into a second year of service with RARE, partially because he felt he was getting such valuable professional and life experience from his placement.

The recent college graduate is serving with the Lake County Resources Initiative, where he helps small businesses and agricultural producers get funding for renewable energy systems, including solar, wind and hydro projects. The program was just awarded a $100,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to support its work helping rural communities transition to renewable energy infrastructure that provides both environmental benefits and lowers energy costs for consumers.

Through his service and his work helping several small business owners and farmers access more affordable and more efficient energy, Van Roekel has recognized his strengths and explored the contributions he can make through his work.

“My experience in RARE has empowered me to ask, ‘What are the problems I can help solve, both in this program and beyond?’” Van Roekel said. “We’re given a lot of independence and hands-on experience through RARE, which allows us to see where our work is really making a difference.”

Grace Kaplowitz also opted into a second year with the program because she was getting so much out of the experience. Kaplowitz is working with the city of Oakridge, and the air quality improvement project is one of her top priorities.

But it’s far from her only project. She is also helping the city with economic development, business recruitment, wildfire resilience, tourism and outdoor recreation initiatives, affordable housing improvements, and building up the local workforce.

Kaplowitz grew up in a small town outside Oakridge, and she appreciates that RARE gives her the opportunity to work and serve in rural Oregon, and that it’s given her really big projects to work on with enough support to succeed. Through all of the projects, she’s learning a lot about collaboration, relationship building, facilitation and project management, she said, and she appreciates that RARE connects its members with communities that have so many needs and can really benefit from the time and energy of RARE members.

“It’s a great opportunity to work in rural Oregon, where I can feel really connected to the work and really connected to the community while also exploring my own professional interests and strengths,” she said.