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Valley's diverse economy keeps unemployment low
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by Calvin Trice
for Virginia Business
October 2005 Eugene Stoltzfus points with delight to a group of 3-by-5-inch
photos taped to an office door at Fairfield Language
Technologies in downtown Harrisonburg. The pictures show
his late brother, Allen, running the language instruction
company out of two rooms of a nearby bank building soon
after Fairfield started in 1991. Eugene Stoltzfus notes
the secondhand dining room tables in the photo that had
been drafted into service as office furniture.
The photos are a reminder of how much Fairfield has
grown. Today the company has 355 employees, and its Rosetta
Stone software offers instruction in 29 languages to
millions of customers in 150 countries. In recent years,
Fairchild's revenue has increased at an 80 percent clip.
Despite its Silicon Valley profile,
Fairfield hasn't lost its Harrisonburg roots. The company
operates from
a 50,000-square-foot converted feed warehouse
that it is quickly outgrowing, but Stoltzfus, the chairman and president,
has no plans to move away from his hometown. "Because of fax, e-mail and courier
service, you can run an international company in a small town in Virginia," he
says.
Fairfield exemplifies the Shenandoah Valley's economic
adaptability. Long known as a rich agricultural area,
it has become an industrial hub that is now home to a
growing number of diverse companies, including high-technology
firms.
Low unemployment
The increasing diversity of area employers has resulted
in consistently low unemployment and a local economy
that has hummed along in good times and bad. The Harrisonburg
area, for example, recorded the second lowest unemployment
rate, 2.8 percent, of any metropolitan area in the
nation last spring. The jobless rate was just slightly
higher, 3 percent, in July. "The Valley has prospered
economically primarily because of its diversity," says
Don "Robin" Sullenberger, executive director
of the Shenandoah Valley Partnership. "It's important
for us to maintain that."
The partnership is a nonprofit organization that promotes
economic development in the region. It is funded partly
by Rockingham, Augusta, Highland and Rockbridge counties
along with the cities of Harrisonburg, Waynesboro, Staunton,
Lexington and Buena Vista. Farming and agribusiness have
been economic staples of the Valley since before the
Civil War, when its reputation as the Confederacy's breadbasket
made it the scene of constant fighting. While the poultry
industry still thrives, local ownership nearly disappeared
with two buyouts in 2001, when Texas-based Pilgrim's
Pride Inc. acquired WLR Foods and Minnesota-based Cargill
Inc. purchased Rocco Enterprises.
Last year, about 140 farmers
reversed the trend by forming a cooperative to buy
a turkey processing complex west
of Harrisonburg that Pilgrim's Pride sought to jettison.
The Virginia Poultry Growers Cooperative saved about
550 of the 1,300 jobs that would have been lost if the
plant had closed. Most importantly, says co-op President
Sonny Meyerhoeffer, the business keeps money in the Valley. "All
the profits are spent right here in the Valley — not
only in wages, but in payments to the growers who own
the co-op." Pilgrim's Pride made the move as part
of a nationwide switch away from selling fresh birds
as commodities, says company spokesman Ray Atkinson.
Instead the industry is moving toward selling processed
and precooked poultry that's easier to prepare.
Outside of agribusiness, manufacturing plants from a
variety of industries dot the region. Food packaging,
plastics, metalworking, cold storage, candy-making and
heating and air conditioning companies employ thousands
from the Augusta County in the south to Winchester and
Frederick County in the north.
Job losses and new investments
Reflecting nationwide trends, the region has nevertheless
suffered job losses in manufacturing even amid hundreds
of millions of dollars worth of new factory investment.
In the Winchester area, closings and relocations by
Rich's bakery products plant and the Lear Corp. automotive
components factory will cost the area 200 good-paying
jobs, says Patrick Barker, executive director of the
Winchester-Frederick County Economic Development Commission.
The area has seen expansions elsewhere. MNH Plastic
Co. established its first plant outside of Great Britain
last year with a $12 million factory that will eventually
employ 57 workers. H.P. Hood is undergoing a $43 million
expansion of its 6-year-old extended shelf-life dairy
products plant. The development is expected to create
65 jobs, Barker says.
One of the region's best examples
of the new investment is the $200 million being spent
by Coors Brewing Co.
at its Elkton plant. The project will convert the bottling
plant into a brewery — the company's third in the
United States. Another area project involves pharmaceutical
giant Merck & Co. It is working on a $40 million
expansion at its east Rockingham County plant to produce
a new vaccine.
Neither project, however, will produce a lot of jobs.
Coors brewery is expected to add no more than 10 workers
beyond the 470 already employed. Merck's expansion will
create no new jobs, only retraining for 30 to 40 existing
employees.
Merck has had a plant in Elkton
for 64 years. Jim Russell, the plant's developer of
capital engineering, says the
company's decision to expand there reflects the benefits
it gets from a high-quality work force and the Valley's
well-developed transportation network. "We do most
of our shipping by rail or by truck," says Russell,
who is also director of waste treatment utilities and
information services. "We have a rail line right
in front of the plant and a major highway right in front
of the plant. Those are the types of things that help
us keep our costs down."
Retail growth
Low unemployment throughout the region means laid-off
employees usually are not out of work for long, officials
say. They point out that brisk growth in retail and
services around Waynesboro, Staunton, Harrisonburg
and Winchester have absorbed some displaced manufacturing
workers, although wages at such jobs tend to be lower.
Waynesboro, for example, lost 1,100 plant jobs in recent
years because of cutbacks at Invista, Virginia Metalcrafters
and Wayne-Tex. Offsetting those lost jobs were Hershey
Foods' $48 million expansion of its Augusta County plant
that created 110 positions last year, and a sudden boom
in retail stores and restaurants on Waynesboro's southern
end that has added 1,300 jobs, says Brent Frank, the
city's director of economic development.
The region's retail growth has been reflected in its
retail sales. Waynesboro's taxable sales rose 28 percent
from 2000 to 2004. Harrisonburg and Winchester are the
region's leaders in taxable sales, which climbed 25 percent
during that same time, according to the state Department
of Taxation. Harrisonburg recently added a Home Depot
and Kohl's. In Winchester, a Wal-Mart Supercenter set
to open this year will be the area's second, Barker said.
The Valley's reputation for low
unemployment can be a double-edged sword. Some industry
prospects avoid areas
with low jobless rates because they fear they will have
difficulty hiring dozens of workers for new positions.
But Valley officials say many workers with jobs are "underemployed," toiling
in low-paying service jobs. These workers swell the ranks
of potential employees when a new industry appears.
Hiring in a low-unemployment
area can be challenging but not impossible, says Holly
Combs, the quality assurance
and team development manager for Southeastern Container
Inc. in Winchester. "You have to get creative in
how you recruit people," Combs said. "But we've
never come to a point where we can't place someone."
The company built the plastic bottle manufacturing plant
13 years ago in Winchester, and it now employs about
200. It chose the area in part for access to Interstate
81 and proximity to major cities, Combs says.
The interstate has grown in importance as a primary
commercial shipping corridor between the Northeastern
cities and growth areas in the South and Southwest. The
increase in commercial trucking on the highway has spurred
plans to expand I-81 in a project that would be partially
funded by tolls.
While most agree that the highway
needs extra lanes, local business and government leaders
say they would
object if the toll structure — yet to be developed — placed
a heavy burden on local traffic.
Influence of JMU
Besides the interstate, a major factor in the growth
of the Harrisonburg area economy has been the transformation
of James Madison University from a college of 5,000
students to a sprawling institution of more than 15,000
students. The city has adopted a downtown technology
zone plan developed in an applied science class last
year. The centerpiece is a technology center in a downtown
building that Harrisonburg bought for $1.5 million.
The center expects to begin attracting businesses next
year, says Brian Shull, the city's economic development
director.
Officials would like to see more high technology successes
like that of SEI Technology Inc., a company founded by
a JMU graduate who provided records management and software
application support for the Department of Homeland Security.
This year, Reston-based SI International Inc., bought
the company for $75 million.
Further enhancing the connection between JMU and local
businesses is the school's recently established technology
transfer program. Director Mary Lou Bourne is charged
with obtaining patents to protect university-developed
technology and with getting some of those ideas to market,
she says.
Stoltzfus of Fairfield Language
Technologies says his company is proof that the Valley
is fertile ground for
high-technology companies. "When we moved in here
[in June 2002] we thought we'd be here for five to 10
years," he says, speaking of his converted feed
warehouse. "We're already filling up the building."
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