With a new look and a fresh focus, the Port of Tacoma announced during Tuesday’s annual breakfast event its strategic development plans for the next 10 years.
The strategic plan and fresh brand identity mark about a year’s worth of outreach and development with customers, community members, business leaders and employees.
While the strategic plan includes nearly 50 initiatives, the resulting framework calls for four main areas of focus that build on the Port’s specific strengths:
- Make strategic investments that enhance waterway, terminal, road, rail and industrial property infrastructure to create the most efficient, productive and cost-effective system possible to move freight to market.
- Create opportunities for future investments by attracting new business opportunities with healthy income streams and increasing diversity of the Port’s business portfolio.
- Demonstrate “best in class” care for business relationships with customers and key stakeholders.
- Grow the Port responsibly to ensure the community continues to support trade-related jobs.
The Port embarked on the strategic plan to position itself for success among significant competitive shifts in the global shipping industry and a still-sluggish U.S. economy.
Specific initiatives outlined in the plan include:
- Redeveloping and expanding the peninsula bounded by the Sitcum and Blair waterways into a highly efficient container terminal capable of handling the world’s largest ships quickly and capably.
- Expanding Tideflats rail to receive and deliver mile-and-a-half-long full-unit trains, as well as a second rail crossing over the Puyallup River.
- Develop a new bulk facility on the Blair Waterway.
- Continue working with customers to expand and enhance existing cargo terminals as the market grows.
- Develop future new cargo capacity in partnership with the Puyallup Tribe of Indians.
- Move toward zero-emission technologies at cargo terminals, continue cleaning up contaminated property and restoring critical habitat.
- Take a leadership role in seeing State Route 167 completed from its current end in Puyallup to the Tideflats.
“It’s a hefty list,” Chief Executive Officer John Wolfe told breakfast guests Tuesday, “and these projects are necessary for the Port to remain competitive. We have high-performing people at the Port, and I am confident we can make it happen.”
The Port also unveiled a contemporary brand identity, which will be rolled out gradually as materials are reprinted. The arcs and connection points of the new logo—the Port’s first in more than 30 years—symbolize a refocused mission to “deliver prosperity by connecting customers, cargo and community with the world.”
Accountability for the strategic plan’s success—10 targets in 10 years—focus on specific cargo volume measures, income for reinvestments, environmental commitments and jobs.
See highlights of the strategic plan, measurements and brand identity at www.portoftacoma.com/strategic-plan. Or view the two-minute brand video.
Watch videotaped highlights of the breakfast event, the Summit Awards and keynote speaker Peter Tirschwell’s address.
About the Port of Tacoma
The Port of Tacoma is an economic engine for South Puget Sound, with more than 43,000 family-wage jobs in Pierce County and 113,000 jobs across Washington state connected to Port activities. A major gateway to Asia and Alaska, the Port of Tacoma is among the largest container ports in North America. The Port is also a major center for bulk, breakbulk and project/heavy-lift cargoes, as well as automobiles and trucks.