Extreme partisanship is bad for Wyoming’s businesses

Politicizing state programs that help businesses and local economies thrive could have dire consequences for Wyoming’s small communities

By Rep. Trey Sherwood, HD-14, Minority Caucus Chair Via WyoFile
Posted 3/13/24

I am optimistic that Wyoming can grow its small businesses, create good-paying jobs at local companies and successfully diversify its statewide economy.

I am hopeful because, as the director of Laramie’s Main Street program, I’ve been deeply involved in the process of developing a thriving downtown business district.

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Extreme partisanship is bad for Wyoming’s businesses

Politicizing state programs that help businesses and local economies thrive could have dire consequences for Wyoming’s small communities

Posted

I am optimistic that Wyoming can grow its small businesses, create good-paying jobs at local companies and successfully diversify its statewide economy.

I am hopeful because, as the director of Laramie’s Main Street program, I’ve been deeply involved in the process of developing a thriving downtown business district.

Since 2021, I’ve brought my passion for building local economies to the Wyoming House of Representatives. As a Democratic state legislator, I advocate for laws and a budget that invests in our communities and supports hardworking small businesses across our state.

Unfortunately, instead of joining together to make sure our communities prosper, a lot of time this session was spent fighting over hot-button social issues that have nothing to do with the budget or bolstering industries that provide good-paying jobs tomorrow and into the future.

This extreme partisanship is bad for business and blocks what’s best for Wyoming.

My Democratic colleagues and I are dedicated to making smart investments in the budget and crafting policies that help communities and businesses succeed regardless of their size.

Back in my district, entrepreneurs are the heart of Albany County’s economy — we lack the energy industries that are major business drivers elsewhere in the state. As Wyoming tries to diversify its economy and create good-paying jobs in other sectors like health care and manufacturing, growing our small business communities — from Evanston to Sundance, from Burns to Alpine — will be a major part of the solution.

This is why the proposals I bring as a state lawmaker focus on solutions to problems facing local businesses. I sponsored two bills this year: one to make it easier for communities to deal with abandoned or nuisance buildings, and another to allow workers to buy into a voluntary insurance plan for family and medical leave coverage.

No matter how appealing a local business makes itself, it won’t find success if there’s a crumbling building next door full of junk. We need to provide municipalities with tools to deal with these nuisances, including offering tax credits to the property owners to remove dangerous buildings or bring them up to code.

At the same time, small businesses often struggle to afford comprehensive insurance for their employees. I’ve witnessed local employers lose talented young workers to larger companies with better benefits — often out of state — when they decide to start a family. Establishing a voluntary paid leave program would allow skilled employees to raise families while working in our small businesses without burdening their employers.

Both of these bills won support from a bipartisan majority when I brought them to the Legislature this year, but politically motivated opposition stopped them from receiving the two-thirds vote they needed for introduction during a budget session.

While I’m disappointed these bills died, I’ll bring them back next year because Wyoming’s small business owners deserve solutions. I am more disheartened by the Legislature’s general lack of focus on strengthening our local economies and, in some cases, the outright hostility from some toward state-funded programs that help businesses succeed.

By and large, the Wyoming House crafted a version of the budget that is very pro-business — helpful to large and small companies alike. But this is only because we managed to defeat attempts to cut funding from the Wyoming Business Council, the Business Ready Community Grant Program, the Women’s Small Business Development Center, the Wyoming Tourism Board, as well as the public schools and community colleges that train our workforce.

The lawmakers who argue that we should cut the legs out from under these agencies are the same ones who say that small Wyoming towns shouldn’t exist because they’re “welfare states.”

I disagree. Wyoming is a small town with long streets, and the well-being of my community depends on the success of my neighbor. We cannot build a future for our state by defunding business and workforce services. The voters in my district want good jobs, affordable healthcare, quality schools, and public lands where we can recreate.

These are not partisan issues — they’re Wyoming issues that my fellow Democrats and I will continue to prioritize despite the bickering and political rhetoric that grabs the spotlight these days.

 

As a community builder with 19 years of nonprofit leadership in the Equality State, Rep. Trey Sherwood (D-Laramie) is passionate about small businesses, solutions for affordable housing, funding for education, suicide prevention and exploring Wyoming’s wide-open spaces.

WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.