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ignored by the big city press! Think about this. If an outsize
percentage of new U.S. jobs hatched during the last three years
had occurred anywhere near the media hives of New York, Washington,
D.C. and Los Angeles, you would have heard about it. You would
have seen daily stories on TV and in major newspapers about America
being a roaring jobs-creation machine. John Kerry might have
had to drop his "Benedict Arnold CEO" schtick
in the face of such good news. Paul Krugman would have had to expel
his columnist's gas on other topics. Gas prices, perhaps.
The swell news about rural America doesn't surprise Jack Schultz.
He's the CEO of Agracel, an economic development consultancy
in Effingham, Ill. Schultz has written a book, Boomtown USA,
that examines an emerging trend: Americans, he says, are moving
to small towns for quality-of-life issues. These are educated
and entrepreneurial people, says Schultz, and they are reinvigorating
America's boondocks. "While not a tidal
wave, this trend appears likely to continue for many years. It
has caught the attention of futurists who address not only how
we will live in the 21st century but also where we will live."
I agree with Schultz. Ever since 9/11, I've wondered if the
time was ripe for a rebirth of towns in America's heartland.
Hooterville is wildly cheaper than Metropolis, as a place to
both do business and buy a house. The price gap continues to
grow. Yet the sophistication gap between large cities and small
towns is narrowing. Novelist Sinclair Lewis rose to fame in the
1920s (and won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Literature) by satirizing
small-town small-mindedness, in Main Street and Babbitt. Lewis
wasn't all wrong. Growing up in North Dakota, I felt cut off
from the world. The 1960s didn't arrive in my town until 1973.
But consider what the last 25 years have brought to small towns:
cheap overnight delivery service, cable television, USA Today,
national retail chains, Internet access, cell phone coverage
and broadband. New Yorker or New Paltzer, we sip from the same
information hose now. Yes, broadband is hard to get in many small
towns. Wireless will soon solve that problem.
Schultz is a realist on small towns. He says only a minority,
perhaps a third, of America's small towns are on a success path.
He calls them "agurbs." An agurb is a prospering rural
town with a tie to agriculture and a location outside a metro
region. Schultz says there are more agurbs in the small states
of North Dakota, West Virginia, Mississippi and New Mexico than
there are in New York, Illinois and California.
What separates Schultz's 397 agurbs from those hamlets that
are struggling? Schultz lists the reasons in Boomtown USA. I
don't have the space here to spoil Schultz's story. Buy the book.
If you call the shots for your company's outsourcing or site
selection, the book is a must read. |