Wes McCurry Takes Helm of St. Lucie EDC

Rachel Savela promoted to chief operating officer

Leadership transitions at the St. Lucie County Economic Development Council include longtime president and CEO Pete Tesch, left, stepping into a strategic adviser role as Wes McCurry, center, assumes the presidency, joined by newly appointed chief operating officer Rachel Savela. ST. LUCIE COUNTY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL

A little more than three years after joining the Economic Development Council as senior vice president leading business attraction and retention, Wes McCurry on Jan. 1 took the helm of the organization as president and CEO. Longtime president and CEO Pete Tesch will remain with the organization as a strategic adviser, and Rachel Savela has been promoted to the new position of chief operating officer.

McCurry is the former community development director for the city of Port St. Lucie, where he oversaw development of the city’s jobs corridor. Prior to that, he led planning, development and operations for Tradition on behalf of Fishkind & Associates and as president of the Tradition Development Company. McCurry was also vice president and planning director for Core Communities during the master planning phase of Tradition, transforming 8,200 acres of dying orchards and fallow land into one of St. Lucie County’s most dynamic communities.

“The EDC has ascended new heights, having its most successful outcomes ever over the past few years, and currently has a staff ‘dream team’ with no peers,” Tesch said. “Now is the opportune time to pass the reins to Wes McCurry, a consummate professional and trusted leader. Wes will bring new energy, vision and, most importantly, tangible results to the organization and community.”

“I’m honored to step into this role at such a pivotal moment for St. Lucie County,” McCurry said. “Our community is growing, our momentum is strong, and I’m committed to working alongside our private, public and education partners to build on that foundation to attract high-wage industries, strengthen our workforce pipeline and support the businesses that call St. Lucie home.”

McCurry served as chairman of the EDC’s board of directors in 2018. He graduated from the University of Tennessee with a degree in urban studies.

RECORD OF ACCOMPLISHMENT

Tesch assumed the presidency of the EDC more than a dozen years ago.

“After 12 years serving as St. Lucie EDC president and close to 38 years as an economic development practitioner, it is my desire to step aside and relinquish my leadership position,” Tesch said. “It has been an amazing career journey for me, and my very best, most productive and fulfilling years have been here in St. Lucie County.”

Tesch will remain with the EDC in a part-time capacity as senior adviser for strategic initiatives. His focus will be on workforce development with the Treasure Coast Center for Economic and Educational Development, the 501(c)(3) nonprofit incorporated by the EDC in 2023. He will also support a fund development campaign for both organizations.

When Tesch began his tenure in 2014, 53% of property values in the county’s largest city had been erased during the Great Recession, the unemployment rate was 8.6%, prominent economic development projects had imploded, and the EDC itself was at a critical crossroads.

By December 2025, the landscape had dramatically changed. The unemployment rate was in line with national trends, county property values had tripled — from $23.8 billion in 2014 to $74.4 billion in 2025 — and a total of 24,267 jobs were added from January 2014 through December 2024.

As the county emerged from the recession, the EDC under Tesch’s leadership from 2017–2024 supported 85 business expansions and relocations totaling 16.5 million square feet of new development. It helped create 12,935 projected new jobs and retain 6,743 existing jobs. More than $1.87 billion in capital investment and $4.36 billion in economic output were added to the county’s economy, representing approximately 17% of the total St. Lucie County economy.

“Under Pete’s leadership, the EDC has accomplished so much in strengthening our region’s economy and partnerships,” EDC Chair Azlina Goldstein said. “I’m grateful for his vision and confident that with Wes McCurry as our new president and Robert Barfield as the new chair — supported by the EDC’s talented staff — the organization is poised for even greater success and more opportunities for the community we serve.”

“While the stars certainly aligned along the way, and significant support and investment by the county, the municipalities of Port St. Lucie and Fort Pierce, Florida Power & Light Company, the Fort Pierce Utilities Authority and private investors in the EDC made an enormous impact, navigation along the path for much of the economic development success over the past 12 years was charted and championed by Pete Tesch,” said Robert Barfield, the incoming chair of the EDC board of directors.

Prior to joining the EDC, Tesch was president of Peterson Hill Partners LLC, an economic development consultation and site-selection company. He served as president and CEO of the Ocala/Marion County Economic Development Corporation from 1997–2012 and was selected as the 2012 Eunice Sullivan Economic Development Professional of the Year by the Florida Economic Development Council.

Tesch was named an Economic Development Rock Star in 2023 by Southern Business & Development and one of Florida’s 500 most influential business leaders by Florida Trend in 2024. The EDC earned an Excellence in Economic Development Award from the International Economic Development Council in 2022.

NEW COO

As the EDC’s chief operating officer, Savela will oversee business operations for both the EDC and TCCEED, investor relations and development, human resources and events management.

Savela joined the EDC in April 2022 as business manager and was promoted less than two years later to director of investor engagement, responsible for growing the EDC’s private-sector investment and coordinating multiple investor events throughout the year.

“I’m honored to step into this new role and work alongside Wes and the EDC team as we continue to take the organization to new heights,” Savela said. “As someone who has lived in St. Lucie County my whole life, I’m eager for the economic opportunities the EDC will create for our community."