ReMaiiC
Resiliency, Manufacturing, Industrial, and Infrastructure Coalition
ReMaiiC provides industry-driven insights to meet the needs of New York City’s changing labor market and prepare local talent for high quality careers in resilience, manufacturing, industrial, infrastructure, and construction.
Whether producing energy-efficient products and resiliency technologies, distributing and installing those technologies, supporting the construction life cycle, transforming our electrical, transport systems and infrastructure, or recycling our waste, ReMaiiC supports sectors crucial to city resiliency and essential functioning.
JOBS
The industrial sector provides over half a million jobs—more than NYC's technology or finance sectors, and supports a pathway to the middle class.
New York City’s industrial sector is more diverse compared to the industrial sector nationwide. In Brooklyn, Black employees make up over 36% of the workers in the Industrial sector compared to the 13.2% nationwide.
MWBE firms account for 19% of the NYC industrial sector.
All of the industrial sectors are expected to grow in the United States except for the utility sector.
The industrial sectors offer higher wages than other sectors such as food and accommodation, with manufacturing and utilities having the highest salary ranges.
The industrial sectors represent opportunities for those without college degrees. 18.8% of jobs posted in the manufacturing sector do not require any college education; for other industrial sectors, such as transportation, waste management, and construction, those percentages are 42%, 57.6%, and 34.3%, respectively (Burning Glass).
Resiliency and Security
When supply chains broke down during the COVID-19 pandemic, the industrial sector stepped up to ensure that grocery stores were stocked, PPE was available, and our hospitals received the ventilator equipment they needed.
Investing in our industrial sector will help NYC remain resilient in the face of our next crisis.
Distribution firms keep food and other essential goods flowing to NYC communities.
Hardware manufacturers pivoted to provide over a million PPE to 100 healthcare facilities.
Garment manufacturers provided over 400,000 isolation gowns to city hospitals.
Technology manufacturers pivoted to produce 3,000 ventilators in one month.
Distilleries and breweries pivoted to manufacture sanitizer.
Utilities facilitated infrastructure of remote work.
Heavy materials manufacturers provided plexiglass dividers to businesses.
Innovation
Developing New York into a smart, sustainable, and resilient city, while creating the next wave of innovation requires a robust industrial ecosystem.
Market and government efforts indicate the opportunities and need for a green local industrial sector.
By 2025 there is a projected nearly $6 trillion market for cleantech segments (the largest being energy efficiency at almost $2 trillion) all of which require industrial roles for implementation.
Offshore Wind NYC plan will support NYC based suppliers, contractors, and manufacturers in the over $70B supply chain opportunities created by the wind industry.
Having multiple production capacities in-house and at-hand enable manufacturers to pivot from normal operations to emergency needs. As an example, one NYC communications systems manufacturer produced thousands of ventilators in under a month.





