|
The building blocks for an economic revival
Southwest Virginia seeks small, new-technology companies
to replace lost factory jobs
by Rod Belcher
for Virginia Business
September 2006
What’s a few hundred jobs
in Pulaski? Maybe the shape of things to come for Southwest
Virginia.
James Hardie Building Products, a leading
manufacturer of fiber-cement siding used in home and
office construction,
recently opened first Virginia plant in Pulaski, creating
more than 200 jobs. “It didn’t get a lot
of media buzz at the time” that plans for the $98
million plant were announced, says Aric Bopp, executive
director of the New River Valley Economic Development
Alliance. “But it is significant.”
Southwest Virginia’s economy
has taken some hard hits in recent years. The slow, decade-long
erosion
of its manufacturers resulted in the closing of several
plants. In the past year, for example, Valleydale Foods
closed its pork processing plant in Salem, eliminating
344 jobs, while Hooker Furniture Corp. announced plans
to shut down its Roanoke manufacturing facility, which
employed 275 workers.
Overall, manufacturing jobs in Southwest Virginia declined
19.4 percent from 2000 to 2004 compared with a 12.9 percent
decline for the rest of the state and a 12.9 percent
decrease for the United States. The last two years have
seen a 7 percent rise in manufacturing jobs, but that
increase has yet to offset the losses of the early part
of the decade.
Bopp and other economic development
officials in the Roanoke-New River Valley area see the
James Hardie
plant as a major building block in a new foundation
for the
region’s economy. “We’re looking at
smaller, new-technology businesses that are not as labor-intensive,” says
Bopp. “They may employ a few hundred people,
instead of thousands.
“
It takes a lot of businesses like that to make up the
loss of one big manufacturer, but these are good paying
and, hopefully, recession-proof jobs,” he says “It
isn’t as labor-intensive an industry as textiles
or furniture, but these jobs are not going to end up
going overseas. They’re stable, and you can build
a community around them.”
The loss of blue-collar jobs has been
softened by the growth of other industries that are building
on the
area’s
strengths. Roanoke, for example, was created in the 19th
century as a railroad town, but today the city and neighboring
county are best known as a center for financial and medical
services. “Roanoke provides three services for
the rest of Southwest Virginia,” says William F.
Mezger, chief economist for the Virginia Employment Commission. “It’s
a major cluster of health care for western Virginia,
it’s a center for private education with Hollins
University and Roanoke College, and finally it is a
center for finance and trade industries for the region.”
New biomedical and biotechnology companies
have emerged that capitalize on the area’s medical and financial
expertise. “You’ve got Novozymes Biologicals
in Roanoke County’s Center for Research & Technology,” says
Wayne Strickland, executive director of the Roanoke Valley-Alleghany
Regional Commission. “You have Luna Innovations,
Tecton Products and the Carilion Biomedical Institute.
Biotechnology is a growing cluster for us.”
The growth of this sector can be seen
at the Carilion Biomedical Institute (CBI), a joint effort
involving
Carilion Health System, the University of Virginia
and Virginia Tech. One of CBI’s primary aims
is to commercialize products and services resulting
from university
research.
Carilion is developing a 27-acre business and research
park called Riverside Center in the city of Roanoke.
Its first building will house a new CBI headquarters.
Plans also have been announced to build a Cambria Suites
hotel in the development.
Riverside Center is part of a larger brownfield being
redeveloped into a technology park by the city and the
Roanoke Development and Housing Authority.
Virginia Tech’s presence in the region is a major
factor in the growth of its technology-based companies. “If
you look at these industries, most of them lead back
to Virginia Tech and the research being done there,” says
Phil Sparks, executive director of the Roanoke Valley
Economic Development Partnership. “It’s
a huge engine for growth and development in the region.”
And Tech wants to enhance that role,
says Ted Settle, the university’s director of the Office of Economic
Development. “The reason why that is important
to the community is that roughly every million dollars
spent in research here translates into about 30 to 35
good, well-paying and stable jobs. Research is a driver
of economic development. It’s not the only one,
but it is a major factor.”
Settle points to many Tech projects
in the region that could have a significant effect on
the economy. “There
is Tech and Carilion’s joint effort at Riverside
Center in Roanoke,” he says. “Then there
is the Corporate Research Center, located on the Tech
campuses.”
The Corporate Research Center is a
research park that houses 120 high-tech companies. “Businesses come
to Blacksburg because of cutting-edge IT and communications
technology,” Settle says. “Part of it is
scenery, and part of it is a stimulating work environment.”
He says that Tech is looking at ways
to bring more of its research to the marketplace. “The university’s
interest and attention is on economic development more
so now than in some time,” he says.
Tech officials, for example, are considering
branching into energy research. Another idea is to allow
Tech
professors to take entrepreneurial leave to develop
pet research
projects into viable business models. “It’s
considered acceptable for a teacher to take a year or
two off to go write a book,” Settle says. “This
would let a professor take a leave from his teaching
duties to go start a business and develop an idea into
something you can take to the marketplace.”
While biotechnology and research promise
new opportunities, one of the region’s oldest industries
may revive its role as a transportation hub. Norfolk
Southern
Corp. is considering Elliston, near the Montgomery
County-Roanoke
County line, as the site for an intermodal terminal.
Scheduled to be open by 2010, the $18 million terminal
would be used as a transfer point where cargo coming
by rail from Hampton Roads could be placed on trucks.
The terminal is part of the $251 million Heartland Corridor
project designed to allow trains to traverse a more direct
route between Hampton Roads and points as far north as
Ohio and Illinois.
Bopp notes that a much larger intermodal
facility has operated in Front Royal for many years. “It created
$600 million in surrounding investments,” he says “If
we see a fraction of that it will have an enormous impact
on the region.” Bopp says he has already been
approached by several companies scouting the area for
potential
sites near the terminal.
Also contributing to the region’s
efforts to become a transportation hub has been the federal
designation
of the New River Valley Airport in Dublin as a customs
port of entry.
The designation will allow manufacturers
and other businesses to have their products and materials
cleared
through
customs at the airport rather than going through congested,
high-volume ports at other East Coast sites. Tie-ups
at those ports can cause delays in production and distribution. “It
will be a big benefit to businesses that rely on transporting
raw materials for manufacturing,” explains Bopp. “With
the federal government stepping in to oversee it, it
adds legitimacy to our region and shows we’ve
got the businesses and traffic to warrant a federal
port.”
Officials hope that the combination
of new industries and transportation facilities will
help boost the region’s
growth rate. Currently, the region’s economy is
expanding at an annual rate of 0.4 percent. “That’s
pretty stable,” Strickland says. “But what
we’ve got to do is push our growth rate. I’d
like to see us at 1 to 1.2 percent growth.”
But economic officials don’t want to sacrifice
stability for a roller-coaster economy of booms and busts.
That’s why they believe that a strategy emphasizing
smaller companies attuned to the global economy is
the best course.
“That’s our focus,” Bopp says. “Globalization;
the world is flat. The sad reality of the U.S. economy
is that labor-intensive industries
and businesses are going to go overseas. These days, local industries that
employ a thousand or more people are few and far between.”
|