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- <text id=89TT0813>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: Small-Town Blues
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 66
- Small-Town Blues
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The trains don't stop anymore, jobs are vanishing and young
- people are moving away. Now America's rural hamlets are
- fighting to stay on the map
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Hornick
- </p>
- <p> Even on a bleak, late-winter day, the little town of Clay
- Center, Kans., exudes all the homeyness and warmth of a Norman
- Rockwell painting. Tidy, freshly painted houses cover the small
- knoll that rises north of the town square. The homes of the
- middle class cost about $20,000; those of the poor are timeworn
- but neat. One of the tallest buildings in town is a barnlike
- structure built by a woman who gives baton-twirling lessons.
- </p>
- <p> Serious crime almost never happens here; crack and heroin
- come to town only on TV news shows. Boasts the mayor, Thelma
- Bisenius: "This is a place where you don't have to lock your
- door and you can let your children come into downtown alone."
- Clay Center citizens care about one another, and about outsiders
- too. The 55-member Rotary Club has raised $30,000 in three years
- to help administer polio vaccinations around the world. In
- short, this should be an idyllic place to live. Yet something
- is wrong here. Clay Center (pop. 4,700) has lost hundreds of
- jobs in the past decade, which has prompted an exodus of its
- young people. In all of Clay County, for which the town serves
- as county seat, the number of deaths (1,000) since 1980 has
- substantially outnumbered births (900).
- </p>
- <p> Clay Center, like thousands of other small communities from
- Maine to New Mexico, is struggling to avoid becoming a ghost
- town. The population of rural America is being sapped by an epic
- postwar migration to cities and suburbs, a trend that has
- accelerated in the past decade. Each year since 1985, more than
- half a million rural residents have packed up and moved away,
- usually in search of employment. While self-reliant, spirited
- towns like Clay Center are putting up a plucky campaign to bring
- back jobs and citizens, such communities now find they are
- threatened by conditions, ranging from global competition to
- deregulation, that are beyond their control. As the small towns
- shrivel away, so does a way of life that helped define America's
- character. The U.S. is gradually becoming a more congested,
- coastal megalopolis, with an increasingly lonely place in the
- middle.
- </p>
- <p> Founded by land developers as a farming center in the
- 1860s, Clay Center had hopes of becoming a rival of Chicago.
- Nowadays the four stoplights that mark the corners of the town's
- courthouse square often change from green to yellow to red
- without anybody noticing. Most of the shops on the town square
- rarely get more than two customers at a time. Shoppers who once
- bustled along the dusty main strip have defected to the new mall
- in Manhattan, 40 miles to the southeast, or the Wal-Mart outside
- Concordia, equidistant in the opposite direction.
- </p>
- <p> Though small towns have suffered a critical loss of
- business and services in recent years, their populations have
- been ebbing for decades. The decline began as farms started
- mechanizing and becoming less labor intensive. Says John Keller,
- a professor of regional and community planning at Kansas State:
- "Many of these communities peaked in 1890. This has been the
- longest deathbed scene in history." Many towns tried to
- diversify in postwar years by attracting industry, especially
- low-paying light-manufacturing businesses. Many of those jobs,
- however, were eventually lost to even lower-wage foreign
- suppliers, especially during the run-up in value of the U.S.
- dollar in the early 1980s. During this decade, rural areas have
- created new jobs at only 40% the rate of metropolitan centers.
- </p>
- <p> Another heavy blow in the '80s was deregulation of rail,
- truck, bus and airline service, along with the breakup of the
- Bell system. These changes permitted corporations to abandon
- service or increase rates in thousands of small towns. H.E.
- ("Ned") Valentine, owner and editor of the Clay Center Dispatch
- (circ. 3,800), finds the outcome ironic: "Both Presidents Carter
- and Reagan espoused small-town American values. Both were
- admired for it. But Carter's deregulation program, amplified by
- eight years of Reagan, has taken its toll here."
- </p>
- <p> Clay Center's once-a-day bus service along two-lane U.S. 24
- stopped two years ago. The bus carried mostly the poor and
- elderly to see their doctors or relatives an hour away in
- Manhattan. Bus service also meant that the town's two florist
- shops could count on daily deliveries of fresh flowers. And
- repair shops could often get same-day emergency shipments of
- spare parts. Although the town's cooperative grain elevator
- still has access to a working railroad spur, weeds surround the
- tracks. Reason: the Kyle railroad has added a $750-per-car
- surcharge to the standard rate, forcing the cooperative to haul
- its grain 17 miles by truck to a main railroad line.
- </p>
- <p> While deregulation has brought lower prices and better
- services for many Americans, it has not worked out that way for
- residents of sparsely populated areas. Most economists would
- argue that the old system subsidized small-town Americans by
- requiring companies to provide services at a loss to such areas,
- but the U.S. traditionally saw rural development as worth the
- price. Says Jack Tierce, an administrator at the Kansas state
- corporation commission: "The transportation system of the U.S.
- was based on moving people from the densely populated East out
- West. Now it is driving people from rural areas into
- metropolitan areas." Cities get better service simply because
- customers are more concentrated and thus more profitable to
- accommodate.
- </p>
- <p> The indirect costs of deregulation are adding up. Moving
- grain by truck instead of rail increases the rate at which
- highways and bridges are being degraded. Says Tierce: "In the
- long term the public is going to pay the price, and rural
- America will pay a terrible price."
- </p>
- <p> Clay Center's aging population is symbolized by the skyline
- of the federally financed senior-citizen housing on the town's
- west side. The eight-story red brick apartment buildings are the
- only high-rises on the horizon. "Our big industry is Social
- Security," says Thomas Lee, president of the Union State Bank.
- "Fully one-third of our checking accounts are senior-citizen
- deposits." The aging process has also led to a leadership
- vacuum, as older business people retire from civic life. And the
- town's young people show no inclination to stay. When a visitor
- asked a class of 20 Clay County high school students how many
- would stay in town or return after college, not a single hand
- went up. Volunteered their teacher: "They're not being shy."
- </p>
- <p> Rural planners contend that communities need a critical
- mass of at least 2,500 citizens to survive. The shrinkage of
- America's small towns will only accelerate as young people
- continue to leave to find better jobs, even though some retirees
- have migrated from the big cities to rural areas in search of
- peace and quiet. Although their money is welcome, older people
- often fail to see the need for economic development,
- particularly if it means higher taxes.
- </p>
- <p> Ginger Walker, a vivacious 30-year-old Clay Centerite,
- launched her own business, Ginger's Shoe Shoppe, three years
- ago. Her stylish boutique carries an impressive assortment of
- stock, and has attracted enough customers so far to make a
- passable profit. Says Walker: "The biggest challenge is to
- compete with the large communities around us. Our prices aren't
- that much different. It's just the magic of the malls."
- </p>
- <p> The growth of huge regional discount stores -- despite all
- the convenience they provide -- has been devastating for many
- small downtowns, since one shopping center can draw customers
- away from a dozen or more communities. Says Robert Van Hook,
- executive director of the National Rural Health Association:
- "Wal-Marts are the last nails in the coffins of a lot of rural
- Main Streets." Because downtown retail shops are important
- employers, their decline can be fatal to the rest of the town's
- economy as well. Another major small-town employer, the local
- hospital, is disappearing at the rate of more than 40
- institutions each year. A principal cause was the 1983 decision
- by Congress to eliminate suspected rural subsidies in the
- Medicare system by reducing payments to small-town hospitals.
- </p>
- <p> Though the whitewashed grain elevators two blocks from Clay
- Center's town square are still in use, the county's economy is
- no longer primarily agricultural. Clay County benefited during
- the 1950s and '60s from the arrival of manufacturing companies
- that produced such goods as metalworking equipment and
- grain-handling machinery. But in the past decade almost 300 jobs
- have disappeared. Says Mayor Bisenius: "In the past few years
- we have realized that we cannot exist as a town without
- something new coming in."
- </p>
- <p> In January, during three days of meetings that rang with a
- fervor akin to that of an old-time tent revival, almost 200
- residents anted up more than $250,000 to buy a small equity
- stake in a new Kansas City-based company that plans to produce
- light aircraft. Townspeople hope their investment will help
- persuade the company to put its assembly plant in Clay Center,
- where it would provide 300 jobs. Says Deanna Fuller, a former
- farmwife who heads the local economic development group: "These
- people just want to make it possible for the young folks to come
- back."
- </p>
- <p> Smokestack chasing, as the practice of wooing factories has
- become known, is rampant in small-town America. Although often
- portrayed as a response to problems in the farming sector, in
- many cases the search is an effort to replace the industrial
- jobs lost in the 1980s, says Kenneth Deavers, a chief economist
- for the Agriculture Department. Farming and related businesses
- account for only about one-eighth of rural employment.
- Attracting new industries to a small town can be tricky. "A lot
- of these firms are gypsies. They fly from one set of subsidies
- to another," notes Mark Lapping, dean of architecture and design
- at Kansas State.
- </p>
- <p> Is saving small-town America worth the expenditure of more
- state and federal money? As U.S. cities face deeper problems,
- ranging from grime to gridlock, the rural option could become
- more important, or at least more appealing. In a recent USA
- Today poll, 39% of the people surveyed said they would prefer
- to live in a small town. (According to U.S. Census figures, less
- than 24% of the population dwells in rural areas, compared with
- 44% in 1950.) At the very least, says former Agriculture
- Secretary Bob Bergland, "it would be unwise for U.S. public
- policy to force people to leave rural North Carolina and come
- to Washington, D.C."
- </p>
- <p> Rather than trying to re-create the web of regulations and
- subsidies that once supported rural America, federal policy
- should concentrate on helping rural areas compete in the new
- global economy. Economist Robert Reich of Harvard University
- believes that rural America must shift its dependence from
- production of low-value, high-volume products like grain and
- simple manufactured goods to high-tech manufacturing and
- services. To make that transition, business and government would
- have to pump more money into rural schools, hospitals, roads and
- other infrastructure. Says Van Hook: "We have to make some
- investments in rural America."
- </p>
- <p> Access to high-quality telephone service will be as
- important to a community in the coming century as the railroads
- were in the last. Clay Center, because of its inexpensive real
- estate and literate work force, might be an ideal spot for a
- credit-card processing center or other "electronic cottage."
- Unfortunately, Clay Center's phone service, provided by
- Southwestern Bell, is so antiquated that hookups with
- international computer networks are impossible.
- </p>
- <p> Telemarketing would not be the complete answer for small
- towns, because it generally offers mostly minimum-wage jobs.
- Several studies have found that the full blossoming of a
- high-tech economy comes only after it receives a heavy dose of
- defense contracts. The bulk of that money currently goes to the
- country's heavily populated coastal regions, which have the most
- congressional representation. Says Tom Daniels, associate
- professor of regional and community planning at Kansas State:
- "Look where all the defense dollars are going, and you can see
- we are creating a bicoastal economy."
- </p>
- <p> Investment in rural America would pay off, says Reich, who
- believes that small towns will offer opportunities in the next
- century as urban centers become more congested: "The new
- economy toward which we're evolving operates on a smaller scale
- and is far better suited to rural environments. But unless we
- remove the present barriers to rural America's economic
- transition, more and more of us will find ourselves packed ever
- more tightly together."
- </p>
- <p> The folks of Clay Center are anxiously waiting to find out
- whether the aircraft company will locate there. And Deanna
- Fuller, who maintains a storefront office next door to city
- hall, is working on a dozen other possibilities. Already she has
- assisted in organizing a community campaign to help expand a
- manufacturing plant that makes grain augers. Editor Ned
- Valentine, whose family-owned newspaper has chronicled the
- town's ups and downs for 100 years, is optimistic. Says he: "The
- difference between towns that survive and towns that don't is
- attitude, not population." Clay Center may have the moxie to
- thrive once again, but for hundreds of other tiny U.S. towns,
- their little spots on the map are seriously endangered.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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