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Harrisonburg area gets national ranking
by Heather Hayes
for Virginia Business
July 2005
Apparently, an awful lot of jobs can
be found in the Harrisonburg area.
A Bureau of Labor Statistics report recently cited the
Shenandoah Valley community as having
the second lowest jobless rate among the nation’s
metropolitan statistical areas. Harrisonburg and Rockingham
County had a combined unemployment rate of
2.8 percent in March — second only to the Honolulu
MSA and well below the national average of 5.2 percent.
Harrisonburg leads a pack of high-performing Virginia
metropolitan areas. Charlottesville finished
third in the BLS report, Winchester was
fourth and Roanoke tied with three
other cities for 10th place. Among the states, Virginia
had a 3.3 percent jobless rate at the time of the report
to tie North Dakota for third behind Hawaii and Wyoming.
Brian B. Shull, Harrisonburg’s
economic development director, credits the area’s
good showing to a diversified economy, strong growth
at James Madison University, the city’s accessibility
on Interstate 81 and its status as a retail hub for
eight counties.
The good economic news is drawing
attention. Shull notes that since the city and county
were combined into a MSA after the 2000 census, Harrisonburg
has been popping up on a number of site selector lists
as an excellent place to live and work. As a result,
workers and retirees are moving in. Shull adds that
JMU graduates increasingly want to remain in the area.
They are encouraged in part by the city’s push
to bring in more technology-based companies, especially
those specializing in information security and health
informatics. “We’re getting a very nice
mix of people here,” Shull says.
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