Nashville’s suburban headquarters hub will continue funding economic development. But priorities have changed, and even the county Republican Party isn’t happy about it.
On June 10, the Williamson County Commission approved a new one-year contract with Williamson Inc., the county’s economic development arm and chamber of commerce.
The $400,000 arrangement, which accounts for 30% of Williamson Inc.’s annual revenue, sustains a role the organization has played since it came into existence a dozen years ago.
The funding fight served as the latest flash point in a spreading backlash to growth. In the last two years, longstanding six-figure government contracts for economic development went away in Davidson and Sumner counties. For the last few months, Williamson Inc. has faced the same prospect, intensified by a twist: Commissioners had approved $400,000 of economic development funding in the budget, but the county contract had lapsed in mid-2023 and went undetected until now.
Nashville Business Journal

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