Jobilism Revisited
With statistical full employment, luring jobs for jobs' sake doesn't
make economic sense. Many localities can afford to be picky. |

Prince William County is happy to have companies like
Avenir Inc., Covad Communications and America Online Inc. rather than Disney, notes
development director Martin Briley.
Photo by Mark Rhodes |
By Mark Davidson
In the early 1990s, Prince William County was determined to shed its image as a suburban
community in the shadow of Washingtons huge federal establishment and Fairfax
Countys booming technology corridor. In 1994, Prince William officials thought they
had found an answer: Disneys America.
With Walt Disney Corp. proposing its massive historic theme park near the town of
Haymarket, county and state legislators scrambled to put together a package of incentives
that would secure Disney and the hundreds of jobs and thousands of acres of rides,
restaurants and historical attractions that it would have brought.
Public opposition was surprisingly fierce. Foes expressed a variety of complaints.
Among them was concern about the influx of low-wage hourly and seasonal jobs. "The
argument of bringing jobs is a sham," one resident proclaimed at the time. "Look
at the types of jobs these parks generate: ticket-takers, groundskeepers, popcorn sellers
not exactly living-wage positions in one of the most expensive areas of
Virginia."
Ultimately those cries of protest may have been a factor when Disney withdrew its
plans. They also served as a wake-up call to Prince William officials, who decided to
re-examine their economic development philosophy. Their new goal: steer development
efforts toward fancy offices and high-tech companies and at least in the short run
de-emphasize strip malls, shopping centers and residential development.
So far, that recipe has shown promise. Today, thanks in part to a booming state economy
with an unemployment rate hovering near 30-year lows, Prince William is evolving into a
high-tech center. In the past two years, several high-tech companies have announced plans
to locate facilities there, bringing with them thousands of relatively high-paying jobs.
They include Avenir Inc., Covad Communications and America Online Inc., which is building
a $520 million complex.
"Theres a whole new environment here than there was just four or five years
ago," says Martin Briley, the countys economic development director.
"Prince William County is well on its way to moving from a bedroom community to a
high-tech center." As for the countys role in that transformation, he says,
"Its really a matter of shifting our focus to what the market is delivering.
Right now, the opportunity is not in theme parks its in Internet, software,
hardware, telecommunications and biotechnology firms. Those are the types of businesses we
are targeting."
Prince William is by no means alone in that regard. With the help of Gov. Jim
Gilmores economic development team in Richmond, localities across Virginia
from the Northern Neck to the Shenandoah Valley, from Portsmouth to Pulaski are
riding the wave of the states biggest economic expansion in recent history. Many
communities are targeting, and attracting, high-end businesses that just a few years ago
seemed unattainable.
Many localities can now afford to break away from "jobilism" competing
to attract jobs for jobs sake and instead are vying for higher-paying
positions that will deliver long-term benefits. "With the tight job market, a great
deal of cities and counties in Virginia are refining what their target businesses and
industries are," explains Roy Pearson, professor of economics at Williamsburgs
College of William & Mary. "They are getting more specific and, in many cases,
much more particular.
"Most localities in Virginia are still open to a broad range of businesses,"
Pearson continues. "Most cities and counties cant afford to say they are only
going to go after companies that pay more than $40,000 a year. However, he adds,
"these days they might be more inclined than they have in the past to say they
wont pursue those that pay less than $25,000 a year."
* * *
For decades, Southwest and Southside Virginia have been peppered with coal operations,
tobacco farms and light manufacturing but few of the higher-paying industries that other
parts of the state enjoy.
That is beginning to change. There are numerous examples of Virginias
less-affluent communities reaping the rewards of the robust economy and local and state
governments new concentration on high-end employment.
In early 1999, for instance, Aspen Motion Technologies announced it would bring
200-plus high-tech jobs to the small college town of Radford. Innotech, founded in Roanoke
then purchased by Johnson & Johnson, now provides 600 jobs that generally pay well
above the median income there.
In economically depressed Richmond County on the Northern Neck, Gannon Technologies
announced about a year ago that it would open a plant in the town of Warsaw, employing 400
people.
"Thats just the tip of the iceberg. The list goes on and on," says
Barry DuVal, Virginias secretary of commerce and trade. "We are really seeing a
whole new climate where any community, with a little help, can compete for the high-paying
jobs."
DuVal says 45 percent of the jobs created in Virginia during the past few years were
related to the high-tech industry, a major shift from just five years ago. While the
average annual salary in Virginia is $25,000, the average salary in tech-related fields is
$47,000, DuVal notes. "Obviously the earnings potential is much greater in
technology-related jobs, and the state has certainly placed an emphasis on bringing those
jobs to Virginia."
Five years ago, DuVal adds, only 10 percent of the states project managers
those who actively recruit firms were devoted to technology-related projects. That
has grown to 50 percent, indicating a marked shift in the states stepped-up effort
to seize on the strong national economy and boom in high-paying industries, according to
DuVal.
"Lets face it. If youre in the position to create one job that pays
$47,000 and one that pays $25,000, youre going to try to get the $47,000 job,"
DuVal says. Because 60 percent of the states operating budget comes from payroll
taxes, focusing on higher-salaried jobs is vital to state coffers.
DuVal is quick to point out that "we are not abandoning anybody in the process.
Half of our project managers are still devoted to primary industry, services and
transportation companies." In fact, one focus of the Gilmore administration is to
help less prosperous areas like Southside, which is heavy on tobacco-farming and textiles,
become more lucrative. "We need to find new industrial sectors for those
less-prosperous regions," DuVal says.
In the past, there were more workers than jobs in Virginia. Today many companies will
say there are more jobs than available workers. According to William Mezger, chief
economist with the Virginia Employment Commission, the unemployment rate in October 1999
the most recent figure available was just 2.6 percent, compared with 3.8
percent for the United States as a whole. That, according to the governors office,
is the lowest October unemployment rate in 21 years. Because people regularly move in and
out of the work force, its considered statistical full employment.
Not all areas of the state are equally prosperous the Martinsville areas
jobless rate was 9 percent. But even those communities reported declining jobless rates
from the prior two months. "The numbers tell the story," DuVal says.
"Virginia is positioning itself for a strong economic future."
* * *
In the Williamsburg area, where tourism has long been the leading industry, an informal
group of business leaders, hospital executives, government officials and scholars have
been working hard to give the Colonial area a new look.
Members of the Crossroads Project, formed about three years ago to explore expansion of
the regions economic base, came up with some big ideas. They want a medical research
center linked with Eastern State Hospital; a biotechnology complex; a high-tech corporate
center; a convention center; and a host of high-end service industries to support the new
complex.
With Crossroads, which encompasses York and James City counties, "the Williamsburg
area is now focusing on high-tech businesses as opposed to tourism and manufacturing,
which had been the main targets in days past," William & Marys Pearson
explains. "Those, of course, are not generally among the higher-paying industries.
High-tech and computer companies generally are."
Pearson notes that the Williamsburg area has the advantage of a top-notch university,
which allows for "a broad range of work force training that areas without a
university dont have. Access to that kind of training is crucial" to attracting
high-paying jobs to a region, he points out.
Communities trying to evolve into a high-tech center from scratch could face a rough
road, however. Generally speaking, localities that already have a cluster of high-end
industries and office complexes are more likely to attract similar firms looking for a
home.
Even communities that succeed in creating such clusters "must strike a
balance" between high-end jobs and lower-paying service industries, Pearson says.
That is mainly because of Virginias unusual tax system, in which there is no local
income tax and the state receives the majority of locally generated sales taxes. A
localitys main sources of revenue are real estate and food-and-beverage taxes.
High-end businesses do attract high-paying jobs, which means employees who can afford
bigger homes and thus generate more real estate tax are likely to spend more
in local businesses. The problem, Pearson says, is that those jobs generate minimal local
tax revenue.
"Its a tradeoff, and one that local governments are very sensitive to,"
Pearson says. "The tight job market gives them the opportunity to go after the
high-paying jobs, true. But those jobs dont offer the same local revenue
opportunities that, say, a hotel or a restaurant chain do."
Jerry Gordon, president of the Fairfax County Economic Development Authority, says
"it makes perfect sense that in a strong economy, localities are going to focus on
attracting high-end jobs. Part of that is certainly due to change in [recruitment]
philosophy. You dont want to go after low-end jobs if high-end firms are
abundant."
Yet localities cant turn their backs on those service businesses, Gordon says.
"A community needs economic diversity," he says. "You cannot throw all of
your resources at one type of industry." He points out that Fairfaxs technology
corridor also has become a hotbed of shopping centers, restaurants, hotels, theaters and
entertainment complexes where the countys well-off employees "can go and spend
that money theyve earned. That keeps it in the county."
* * *
Prince William has spent the past few years learning from the Disney debacle and
taking lessons from Fairfax and other localities that have carved out effective economic
development strategies.
The Board of Supervisors in 1996 "made a conscious decision to be more aggressive
in participating in the high-tech boom in Northern Virginia," says economic
development chief Briley. "The economy was on fire at that time, but we felt we were
letting a lot of that pass us by."
The county of 280,000 people created a separate economic development department by
extracting it from a division within the planning department. That move allowed it to hire
Briley, a former state economic development official, to increase its budget by 40 percent
and to double its staff.
In January 1998, the department charged ahead in its efforts to recruit high-end
companies, including the creation of a 1,000-acre business park.
"Thats when we really put ourselves in the marketplace. We went from having
five dialogues a month [with potential firms] to 70 a month by mid-1998. And that has paid
off. In 1999, investment in the county has been six times what it was for the previous
five years combined."
Drawing good jobs to Prince William is important to the countys residents, 60,000
of whom commute every day to jobs in other Northern Virginia communities or the District
of Columbia. "We are a major exporter of workers, and wed like to turn that
around," Briley says. "We have a strong, well-educated work force right here,
and there is no reason they should have to commute in rush-hour traffic to another county
every day to go to work." In some cases, Prince William and other Virginia counties
and cities do find themselves competing with each other for key jobs. But officials say
that pattern has faded in recent years with the advent of regionalism.
Rather than compete with each other, communities today are more likely to team up and,
with the states help, try to snatch jobs from other states. In fact, the General
Assembly has passed enabling legislation that will allow neighboring localities to share
in the revenues of a business that chooses to locate or expand in an area.
Localities "are not nearly as competitive with one another as they were 10 or 15
years ago," Pearson says. "They all realize that everyone benefits from
additional economic development in their region."
|