JournalStar.com

2015 Vision group growing

BY MATT OLBERDING / Lincoln Journal Star
Friday, Nov 10, 2006 - 12:16:21 am CST
On the day it publicly unveiled its plans for Lincoln’s future, the 2015 Vision group also revealed its membership has ballooned.

The group, which claimed 12 members earlier this week, released a list of more than 70 members that reads like a who’s who of the city’s top private and public leaders.

Released at a Thursday morning news conference, that list includes corporate CEOs, bank presidents, community boosters and current and former public officials.

Kent Seacrest, a local attorney who is a member of the 2015 Vision group and has acted as its public face, said those on the list will be asked to help make the plan come to fruition.

“They’re signing up, in my opinion, to work,” he said.

Seacrest said that may mean pledging money, helping to raise it, volunteering or doing a host of other things.

Although he earlier dispelled rumors that those wanting to join the group were required to pledge a certain amount of money, that doesn’t mean some haven’t.

Many of the group’s members own or lead businesses that might be likely candidates to invest in the projects the group is advocating.

When asked whether the group had received any commitment for investment, Seacrest said he wasn’t prepared to say and then smiled and said, “Stay tuned.”

The group, which some members say grew out of informal talk among local business executives, is proposing an ambitious list of projects it says are necessary to keep the city’s economy growing and to keep its best and brightest young people from moving away.

The projects include a new arena, convention center and hotel in the Haymarket, establishing a research and development corridor stretching from downtown to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus and moving the State Fair to the grounds of the Lancaster Event Center to give UNL room to grow.

The group hopes to accomplish its goals through public-private partnerships, much like the one between the city, UNL and Nebco that produced the Haymarket Park baseball stadium and softball complex.

Seacrest said the group has not done extensive research on potential development costs, but he acknowledged Thursday it will be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Public officials who attended Thursday’s news conference praised the group’s work and said they were eager to see the projects go forward.

Mayor Coleen Seng said she was reassured that members had embraced elements of so many different studies and plans.

“There’s nothing but good coming out of what I’ve seen,” she said.

Lancaster County Board Chairwoman Deb Schorr called the plans exciting and said the board is looking forward to working with the private sector on the projects.

UNL Chancellor Harvey Perlman, who is a member of the group and has taken heat over the its assertion that the fairgrounds should move, said he was excited about the recognition the community is giving to the role UNL will play in economic development.

And while the plan is focused on Lincoln and developed by Lincoln leaders, Perlman said, it will benefit for the entire state.

“This project, particularly as it supports the university, is a state asset,” he said.

Now that it has unveiled its plans, Seacrest said the group will spend the next weeks and months gathering input, raising money and talking with more public officials, particularly at the state level.

“We’re ready to go and want to get to accomplishing things,” he said.

Reach Matt Olberding at 473-2647 or molberding@journalstar.com.

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2015 Vision members

Lynn Roper, Merrill Lynch executive

Roger Larson, Mayor’s Arena Task Force member, planning commissioner

Carl Sjulin, Westgate Bank president

Mark Hesser, Pinnacle Bank Nebraska president

Robert Scott, Kinport Corp. co-owner, property developer

Don Linscott, developer

Will Scott, Kinport Corp. co-owner, property developer

Donna Woods, vice president, Woods Charitable Fund

Ron Harris, MDS Pharma Services executive

Deane Finnegan, Leadership Lincoln executive director

Chandler Tyrrell II, president, Lincoln Community Foundation

Chris Kingery, building construction

Harvey Perlman, chancellor, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Chuck Pallesen, attorney

Bruce Wright, attorney

Kim Robak, attorney, lobbyist

Bill Mueller, attorney, lobbyist,

Earl Scudder, attorney

Gates Minnick, retired DuTeau Chevrolet owner, former City Councilman

Gil Lundstrom, TierOne Bank president, CEO

JoAnn Martin, Ameritas Life Insurance Corp. president, CEO

Tom White, developer

Pam Baker, Woods Charitable Fund executive director

Polly McMullen, Downtown Lincoln Association president

Steve Pella, Aquila executive

Joe Hampton, retired developer and builder

Susan Gourley, Lincoln Public Schools superintendent

Dick Campbell, Lincoln Chamber of Commerce chairman, Campbell's Nurseries and Garden Center Inc. president

Don Wesely, former mayor, former state senator

Clay Smith, developer, B&J Partnership general partner executive

Angie Muhleisen, Union Bank and Trust president, CEO

Steve Erwin, U.S. Bank Nebraska market president

Linda Wilson, former City Councilwoman

Jon Hinrichs, physician

James Seacrest, former president and chairman of the board for Western Publishing Co.

Rhonda Seacrest, arts patron

Doug Lienemann, president,  Haymarket Development Corp.

Rick Herink, First National Bank Lincoln president

Jennifer Brinkman, neighborhood leader

Bill Cintani, Mapes Industries CEO

Heidi Cuca-Conklin, development director, Nebraska Children and Families Foundation

Terry Uland, executive director, NeighborWorks Lincoln

Russ Bayer, former planning commissioner

Scott Miller, Telesis Inc. president

Janet Labenz, partner, Labenz & Associates accounting firm

Thomas C. Woods IV, Woods Charitable Fund program officer

Mike Morrow, attorney

Brad Hedrick, Windstream vice president and general manager

Dave Snitily, president and co-owner, Snitily Carr advertising

Bob Lanik, Saint Elizabeth Regional Medical Center president

Drew Stange, NAI FMA Realty executive vice president/broker

John Sampson, president, Sampson Construction

Margaret Donlan, community volunteer

Kathy Campbell, executive vice president of Cedars Home for Children Foundation

James Strand, former Alltel executive

Rick Wallace, Community Development Resources executive director

Mark Koller, president, CEO of HRConnex Inc.

Tom Henning, president, CEO, Security Assurity Group of insurance companies

Jim Abel, chairman, Nebco

Marc LeBaron, chairman, CEO, of Lincoln Plating

Larry Arth, chairman, CEO, Unifi Mutual Holding Co.

Tonn Ostergaard, president and chief executive, Crete Carrier Corp.

Mike Dunlap, chairman and co-chief executive officer, Nelnet

Kent Seacrest, attorney

Terry Fairfield, president, University of Nebraska Foundation

Roger Severin, chairman and chief executive officer, Olsson Associates

Brad Korell, chief financial officer, Olsson Associates

Tom Smith, chief executive officer, Smith Hayes Financial Services Corp.

Nick Cusick, IMSCOR partner

Liz Fieselman, Foundation for Educational Funding president

Jim Krieger, vice chairman and chief financial officer of the Gallup Organization

Frank Hilsabeck, retired Alltel executive