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Roanoke region combats loss of young professionals
by Rod Belcher
for Virginia Business
September 2006
The problem has persisted for
years: People move away from the Roanoke area, taking
their educational experience
with them. The effect, over time, can be detrimental
to the region’s economy.
The majority of those leaving are young.
The Roanoke Valley lost 8,500 people between the ages
of 25 and 34
from 1990 to 2000. The reasons that young adults leave
are usually twofold: work and play. Many young professionals
believe Roanoke’s job market doesn’t offer
enough good-paying jobs in a wide range of fields.
They also see Roanoke as a community focused more on
an older
population and offering fewer cultural attractions
for young people than Northern Virginia or Charlottesville.
Wayne Strickland, executive director
for the Roanoke Valley-Alleghany Regional Commission,
says that only
21 percent of the people in the Roanoke Metropolitan
Statistical Area have college degrees. By contrast,
the national average is 24 percent and the state average
is 30 percent. “There is a push in Roanoke to hold
on to a younger, educated population,” Strickland
says.
To combat this problem, Roanoke hired Stuart Mease in
February to develop programs to attract and retain young
adults. Mease has developed a Web site, the Roanoke Connect
Database (www.roanokeva.gov/connect) and a blog to get
the word out to young Roanoke professionals that they
are not alone.
Mease is planning several events to
show young professionals what Roanoke has to offer. The
Roanoke Holiday Career
and Quality of Life Fair, scheduled for Dec. 28, is
designed to showcase the valley’s professional,
social and personal opportunities to young professionals
coming
home to Roanoke during the holiday season.
The NewVa Career and Quality of Life Fair is also in
the works. Mease describes the locals-only job fair as
showcasing the Roanoke, New River Valley and Alleghany
Highlands regions to local college students who seek
summer internships or want to stay in the area after
graduation. Companies without a presence in the region
will not be allowed to participate in the fair.
“It is the perception [that] there are no jobs, and there is nothing to
do,” Mease says in explaining the exodus of young people from the region. “It’s
a myth. There are jobs and there are things to do. It just takes patience and
personal networking to find them.
“
The problem is that Gen X and Gen Y are using new communication channels, and
baby boomers and traditionalists are using older ones,” he says. “The
generations are also not connecting informally at places like churches, civic
groups and networking functions. As a result, the information flow of ‘hidden’ job
information and word-of-mouth communication is much less than it was years
ago.”
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