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With peanuts on the wane, this rural area tries to forge
a new identity
Related
story:
- Growth & Development
by
Lynn Waltz
Virginia Business
September 2004
On
a hot summer day in Southampton County, M.L. Everett
gently scrapes the hull off a peanut pod, a mid-season
check on the plump Virginia peanuts he plans to harvest
come fall. Everett, his father, Marvin, and his son,
Louis — the family’s fifth-generation peanut
farmer — hope they can keep growing what they
believe are the best-tasting peanuts in the world. They’re
not sure they can.
When Virginians think Southampton County, they think
peanuts. But the fields of yellow-flowering foliage
with tasty morsels growing below in sandy loam are swiftly
disappearing. Two years ago, federal price supports
and quotas were phased out, and since then peanut production
here has plummeted. In Southampton the acreage dropped
from 24,000 in 2000 to 9,800 last year, a trend mirrored
statewide as farmers abandon the once-profitable crop.
The Everetts haven’t escaped the trend —
they planted just 130 acres in peanuts this year —
down from 325 acres in past years. “I’m
trying to hang in there,” says M.L. Everett, whose
great-grandfather was a sharecropper on the land he
farms today.
Farmers aren’t the only ones affected. Hancock
Peanuts in Courtland, a peanut processor that employed
about 125 people, closed in August 2003. Another processor
and retail outlet, the 20-employee Peanut Patch, put
expansion plans on hold. Shellers such as Birdsong and
Golden are investing in states where peanut production
is growing, such as South Carolina and Texas. “We
can’t grow corn like the Midwest. We can’t
grow vegetables like Florida, California or Georgia.
We can’t produce soybeans like the delta,”
says county extension agent Wes Alexander. “Peanuts
were the perfect crop for our soil and climate, then
they took peanuts away from us.”
Even with the cutbacks, Southampton remains the state’s
top peanut producer. Still, the lost income and spending
from peanuts is being felt throughout the local economy.
Some of the losses are direct. Peanut prices to farmers
have dropped from about $604 per ton to about $475 per
ton. Land rents have fallen from about $85 to $45 an
acre. With roughly half of the county’s 348,000
acres in cropland, the direct cash impact is in the
millions, estimate county extension agents. “Farmers
buy pickup trucks. They have insurance. They shop at
Wal-Mart. The whole economy is affected,” says
Alexander.
Filling this gap in the economy is particularly difficult
here, in part because Southampton has few resources
to do so. The county budgeted just $133,753 this year
for economic development. “Identifying who we
are is difficult,” says Cindy Cave, Southampton’s
economic development director. “We are part of
Hampton Roads and we’re looking for regional alignment,
but we’re not getting a lot of attention.”
Cave wants the state and city economic development leaders
to recognize the county’s role in the regional
economy, as a land-rich resource with great potential
for customized site development.
The region’s economic future, she believes, lies
with the highways that stretch through wide parcels
of flat, developable land, linking Interstate 95 with
the Port of Hampton Roads. U.S. 460 and U.S. 58 provide
two major east-west corridors. In addition, both CSX
Transportation and Norfolk Southern railroad companies
serve the region. Companies that support trucking are
a natural, Cave says. “Industrial site development
is a primary focus for me while simultaneously marketing
what we have. The state has to have the confidence to
send interested companies.”
Change comes slowly, though, to Southampton and to Franklin.
Besides farming, the region has long depended on a handful
of businesses such as International Paper, Naricott
Industries, maker of webbing for seat belts and military
use; and Hercules Inc., which makes chemicals and resins
for paper. State and private prisons are major employers
as well, along with Southampton Memorial Hospital and
the public schools.
While many employers have been here for generations,
new ones are hard to find. Cave watches with envy as
neighboring communities closer to Hampton Roads announce
the arrival of big-box distribution centers such as
Target and Wal-Mart. Along with port-related business,
Cave is focusing on second-tier manufacturing that would
tie into regional industries such as automotive. “They
don’t need to be in Norfolk. It’s a 45-minute
drive. The cost of living is less, land cost is less,
and there are capable skilled workers here.”
It’s true that the region has workers who would
probably like to get jobs closer to home. About 62 percent
of county workers travel to jobs in neighboring localities,
and just under a third of Franklin residents do the
same. Unemployment here hovers around 4 percent. But
the work force is undereducated and underpaid compared
to the rest of the state. In the county, only 8.5 percent
have a bachelor’s degree and 36.8 percent don’t
finish high school. About 14.6 percent live in poverty.
In Franklin, about 30 percent of the population doesn’t
graduate from high school, while only 11.3 percent graduate
from college. Nearly 20 percent live below the poverty
level.
Improving the local labor pool will take time. The Paul
D. Camp Community College has a $5.2 million work force
education program that customizes training for Hampton
Roads employers. But much of the change in the work
force may end up coming from new residents. County population,
stable for the last decade at about 17,482, is projected
to grow to 23,500 by 2030, according to the Hampton
Roads Planning District Commission. Franklin’s
population is expected to expand from 8,346 to 13,400.
As many as 500 new homes are planned by developers in
Franklin within the next decade. “People are just
flocking over here,” says Teresa Beale, director
of the Franklin Chamber of Commerce. “It’s
further to drive, but with traffic, you can almost get
to work in the same amount of time. Plus, there’s
a more laid-back lifestyle. A lot of families are looking
for a small-town quality of life.”
Of course, that small-town feeling comes from having
lots of farms, and Southampton is losing many of them.
Many farmers are close to retirement, and some are selling
equipment and scaling back because of the financial
strain. The number of farms dropped from 303 in 1997
to 275 in 2002. “In 2003 I did 183 comprehensive
financial plans for farmers in the region. Usually I
do 10,” says Mike Roberts, a farm business management
coordinator with Virginia Tech. “We’re on
the brink of a total change in rural agricultural farms.
Some trace their family farms back to the 1600s. I’ve
sat in kitchens where a person is saying, ‘I’m
the one that’s going to lose this farm.’”
This year’s weather, which is producing bumper
crops, may help marginal farmers hang on a bit longer,
adds Roberts.
Along with bad news — Southampton Motor Speedway
closed in May for lack of business and International
Paper whittled its work force to 1,300 people with two
layoffs in 2003 — there’s been good as well.
A $21.9 million expansion at Deerfield Correctional
Center will add about 100 employees when it opens in
2006. Southampton Memorial Hospital opened its $17 million,
60,000-square-foot addition this summer. Money Mailers,
a direct coupon distributor, opened in Franklin in March
2003 with about 30 employees, expanding this spring
to 60. The city, which rebounded from a devastating
flood in 1999, has just launched a business incubator
to encourage small businesses to expand or relocate
there. Niche market entrepreneurs, such as mushroom
growers and goat farms, are sprouting up in the region,
serving the gourmet and ethnic food markets in urban
areas. The large whitetail deer population supports
about 70 public and private hunt clubs. A high-end bed
and breakfast, Sunnyside Plantation, has opened in Newsoms.
In Franklin, a strong retail cluster along U.S. 58 is
attracting national chains. Applebee’s is building.
Huddle House is nearly complete. A Rose’s department
store has reopened. There’s a Wal-Mart, three
small hotels, strip shopping centers and numerous restaurants.
Travelers through the region spent nearly $9 million
in 2000, according to the Virginia Tourism Corp.
Those visitors can’t see the evidence, though,
of the peanut industry’s decline. A water tower
in Franklin still proclaims the city as “Home
of the Jumbo Peanut.” A brochure for The Peanut
Patch in Courtland still tells visitors to come try
samples of “the world’s best peanut.”
Extension agent Alexander believes there’s a potential
market for Virginia-grown peanuts as a gourmet snack.
“You ship them up to the Yankees. They’ll
love them,” he says. “They’ve never
seen gourmet peanuts, only cocktail peanuts in a jar
that aren’t fit to eat.”
That might help a few farms, but the region’s
best hopes are likely to come from what it can get from
being on the edge of the growing Hampton Roads region.
If land prices and the labor pool here can compete in
that market then capital investment and jobs will follow.
Then, the people who live here won’t have to work
for peanuts.
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