In recent years, Pasco County has been exporting its greatest natural resource. Not phosphate. Not citrus. Not timber. Our people.
For decades, communities like Pasco County carried the label of a “bedroom community.” People live here because housing was affordable but every morning thousands of talented residents leave the county to build the economy of neighboring counties before making the long commute home exhausted each evening. That wasn’t economic prosperity. It was economic dependence.
Today, as our county continues to grow, I often hear concerns that “economic development” simply means more traffic, more rooftops and more congestion. Those concerns are understandable but they also highlight an important distinction that deserves greater attention.
Economic development is not the same thing as growth.
And it is certainly not the same as unmanaged growth or urban sprawl.
Growth happens whether we plan for it or not. People move to Florida because of our climate, our quality of life and our economic opportunity. New homes are built because families need places to live. That is population growth.
Economic development, however, is intentional.
It is the deliberate effort to create quality jobs, attract investment, diversify our economy and ensure that residents can build successful careers without leaving the community they call home.
The question isn’t whether Pasco County will grow. The question is whether we will create enough opportunity to grow wisely.
For years, Pasco exported its greatest asset – its workforce. Thousands of talented teachers, engineers, healthcare professionals, manufacturers, software developers, financial professionals and entrepreneurs left our county every day to earn a living elsewhere. That meant more congestion on our highways, more time away from families and fewer opportunities for our local businesses to thrive.
Creating local jobs changes that equation.
When a company chooses to locate in Pasco County, it doesn’t simply occupy a building. It creates careers. It generates tax revenue that supports public services. It strengthens local restaurants, retailers, professional service firms and small businesses. It provides opportunities for our graduates to stay close to home instead of relocating elsewhere.
That’s economic development.
It is also important to understand what economic developers mean when we talk about creating employment centers. An employment center is a concentration of businesses that provides significant job opportunities across multiple industries, whether advanced manufacturing, life sciences, corporate headquarters, logistics, research and development, healthcare or technology. A great example of how economic development terminology is not widely understood was a recent community discussion where many of the commentators were speaking about ’employment centers’ under the assumption that they were actually ‘data centers.’ While data centers serve a role in the digital economy, they generally employ relatively few people compared to the thousands of jobs created by business parks, innovation districts, medical campuses, manufacturing facilities and mixed-use employment hubs. When economic developers advocate for employment centers, we are advocating for places where people work, not simply where computers operate.
Projects like Moffitt’s SPEROS campus (an employment center), advanced manufacturing facilities, corporate headquarters, life science companies and food manufacturers aren’t examples of sprawl. They represent the type of investment that transforms a community from a place where people simply sleep into a place where they can build a career.
Strong communities require balance.
Housing without jobs creates long commutes.
Jobs without housing create affordability challenges.
Infrastructure without planning creates congestion.
The goal of economic development is to bring those pieces together in a thoughtful way.
That also means protecting the qualities that make Pasco County special. Smart economic development isn’t about paving over every open field. It means directing investment to appropriate locations, preserving natural resources, supporting existing businesses and ensuring infrastructure keeps pace with development. Responsible planning and economic development are partners, not competitors.
It’s also important to recognize that Pasco County has demonstrated a long-standing commitment to land conservation. Through initiatives such as the Environmental Lands Acquisition and Management Program, the county has permanently preserved thousands of acres of environmentally sensitive lands, wildlife habitat, wetlands and natural corridors. Those protected lands will remain part of Pasco’s landscape for generations to come. The choice has never been between economic development or conservation; the most successful communities embrace both. By protecting our natural resources while strategically developing employment centers and infrastructure in appropriate locations, Pasco can continue to enhance both its economy and its exceptional quality of life.
Communities that fail to pursue economic development don’t avoid growth. They simply lose the ability to shape it.
The employers (and the high-paying jobs they create) go somewhere else, while residents continue commuting longer distances to support someone else’s economy.
As someone who has worked in economic development for more than three decades, I’ve seen firsthand what happens when communities invest strategically in their future. They become more resilient during economic downturns. They offer greater opportunities for young people. They attract talent, innovation and entrepreneurship. They improve quality of life not just for today’s residents, but for generations to come.
Economic development isn’t about chasing growth. It’s about creating opportunity. It’s about ensuring that the next generation can live, work and raise a family in the same community they grew up in.
For a county that spent decades as a bedroom community, that isn’t just progress. That’s transformation. And it’s a future worth building together.
The future of Pasco County is not a choice between jobs and green space. It is a commitment to both. We can preserve the places that make people want to live here while creating the opportunities that allow them to work here. That’s not sprawl. That’s smart economic development.
Bill Cronin serves as president & CEO of Pasco EDC.