Politics & Government

Cunningham to Lead LVEDC, Details Vision

Lehigh County Executive and former Bethlehem Mayor Don Cunningham will take the reins of economic development corporation on July 9.

Don Cunningham said Wednesday he would relish his opportunity to create new jobs and expand the Valley’s tax base in a “sustainable way,” as the head of the Lehigh Valley Economic Development Corp.

The current Lehigh County executive and former mayor of Bethlehem, today officially named the next president and chief executive officer of the LVEDC, said he will recruit new business and “more importantly, grow businesses here.”

Redeveloping brown fields – which still includes the former Bethlehem Steel Corp. site, where he played a key role in establishing a plan for reuse when he was mayor – will be a priority. 

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The Valley’s urban cores will also be a focus. He said his views on the Allentown arena project and the controversial Neighborhood Improvement Zone taxing district are in line with LVEDC’s board of directors, which issued a statement in support of the project and special taxing zone last week.

Cunningham will officially step aside as county executive on July 8 and take over leadership duties of LVEDC the day after that. The official announcement was made today during a news conference at the LVEDC’s offices in Bethlehem.

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“I’m excited by the opportunity to serve LVEDC and continue to serve the Lehigh Valley,” said Cunningham, who has worked exclusively in the public sector since 1998.

He left the mayor’s office in 2003, two years before his second term expired, to become secretary of the state Department of General Services under former Gov. Ed Rendell. He was elected county executive in 2005.

“In all three of those jobs, economic development was at the core of what I needed to do and it’s what I love to do the most,” Cunningham said.

Cunningham said he is leaning toward picking Tom Muller, the county’s director of administration, as his interim successor. The county commissioners will then have less than two months to pick another successor to finish Cunningham’s term.

Under the provisions of the Lehigh County Home Rule Charter, that person must be a Democrat because Cunningham was elected as a Democrat.

Don Bernhard, chairman of LVEDC’s board, said Cunningham easily stood out as the best candidate for the job, even among candidates who have run similar organizations across the country. His communications skills, in particular, set him apart.

Cunningham will earn $120,000, with the potential to earn $10,000 in performance bonuses, Bernhard said. He will run a staff of 18 people for an organization that has a $2.4 million annual budget.

In Lehigh County, Cunningham has been earning $75,000 a year running a county with 3,000 full- and part-time employees and an annual budget of $389 million.

South Whitehall Patch Editor Mary Ellen Alu contributed to this story.


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