Betting on Tipton County, Tenn.

Mark Herbison has been in and around industrial economic development in the Memphis area for nearly two decades now.

He was the head of HTL Advantage, an economic development organization representing Haywood, Tipton, and Lauderdale Counties with the goal of landing a tenant at the West Tennessee Megasite. He is credited as one of, if not the, main recruiters for the megasite, now the home of Ford Motor Co.’s forthcoming BlueOval City.

HTL Advantage has since dissolved, its mission accomplished in $5.6 billion, 6,000-job fashion.

Herbison now has a new gig. He’s serving as president of the Tipton County Community Development Council. He believes the county just to the north of Shelby and west of BlueOval City stands to be at the center of the project’s impact.

Here’s how Herbison, along with the mayor of Tipton County and many others, are preparing for a future that is coming fast. 

BlueOval City ‘makes for a whole lot of work’ on sewage and infrastructure

Before BlueOval City, the megasite was just a cotton field. Many of the small towns nearby were seeing declining populations, and things were quiet.

Now, the mostly rural counties, with limited resources, have to respond to a huge influx of traffic, workers, and fundamental changes to their neighborhoods. Usually, communities chase the kind of growth the largest project in Tennessee history is set to bring. In Tipton, it’s been the opposite challenge, and it “makes for a whole lot of work,” according to Jeff Huffman, mayor of Tipton County. Memphis Business Journal