It's easy to see why rural voters fell for Mark
Warner. He was all over them last summer, a rich
guy in rolled-up shirtsleeves. He talked constantly
about spreading the wealth and even had a corny
bluegrass campaign song that dubbed him the man
from technology-rich "NOVA-ville." Again
and again he told country folk, "Virginia will
never fully prosper as long as all the good jobs
are in Northern Virginia." He backed up the
talk with money invested through a handful of venture-capital
funds he helped launch in places like South Boston
and Blacksburg.
It was all part of a strategy to woo GOP-leaning
rural voters with his business savvy, and it worked.
But now that Warner is governor, the hard truth
is there isn't much he can do. A recession and the
$1.3 billion hole in this year's state budget -
produced in part by high state spending and his
predecessor's tax cuts - has tied Warner's hands.
Gone is the campaign talk about how a Warner administration
would spread Virginia's prosperity. "The reality
is there's going to be a lot of pain," Warner
says. "The state has serious financial problems.
I'm committed to maintaining the safety net, but
everything else is going to be on the table."
That's tough news for those hit hard by the recession
and other layoffs driven by the North American Free
Trade Agreement. The demise of the state's manufacturing
sectors, especially apparel and textiles, has crippled
the economies of some communities, which missed
out on the economic good times of the late 1990s
because they were hitched to dying industries. Layoffs
abound, from the clothes plants of Henry County
to the Volvo truck factory in Pulaski County to
an aluminum wheel facility in Russell County. There,
Alcoa Wheels announced in November that it would
close the plant by August and lay off 200 people.
The plant will be sorely missed: When it opened
in 1996 more than 4,000 people applied for jobs.
One cruel irony is that Warner and rural business
leaders and legislators generally agree on strategies.
Small businesses need access to capital, workers
need new skills and everybody needs broadband telecommunications
capability.
But the budget mess "dominates everything,"
Warner says, and the timing couldn't be worse for
people in the hardscrabble regions of Southside
and Southwest. Take the two-year-old Rural Virginia
Prosperity Commission. The 18-member panel of rural-area
legislators and business leaders unveiled a 98-page
study in December that it hoped would be a blueprint
for a state strategy. Instead, it's dead on arrival.
Warner has already rejected one of its six recommendations
- a state Cabinet post for agriculture - as too
expensive for now. And other commission recommendations
such as tax breaks for economically distressed areas
are getting a chilly reception from the new governor.
"I am very reluctant at this point to look
at new tax breaks," Warner says. The state
gave more than 50 in the past six years, he says,
costing the state $600 million a year. Combined
with double-digit state spending and the car-tax
phase out, he says, "That's why we've got right
now a budget crisis."
Still, the commission's chairman, Del. Steve Landes,
R-Weyers Cave, clings to hope that something can
be done this session. "We have the data that
we think we can make a case to the legislature"
in support of its recommendations. A big worry,
he says, is the shrinking power of rural areas in
the General Assembly. Northern Virginia and Hampton
Roads control about half the seats.
While Warner may not follow the commission's lead,
he says he does have some tools to help struggling
rural regions. First, a little arm-twisting: Warner
says he'll work his connections to get Northern
Virginia companies to consider expanding. "I've
got personal relationships with a number of these
CEOs," he says. "Nothing beats a governor's
personal involvement." And he'll create the
"Economic Crisis Strike Force" that he
described during the campaign. It won't be a new
agency but a collection of staffers from existing
agencies who will emerge when an economic crisis
hits. The idea, he says, is to avoid the gridlock
of two years ago when 1,600 people in three Southside
communities lost their jobs after Martinsville-based
Tultex Corp. closed textile plants. Then-Gov. James
Gilmore and the General Assembly couldn't agree
on a benefits package for workers.
Warner also wants to work with the state's Tobacco
Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission
on how it spends the state's $4.2 billion share
(over 25 years) of the tobacco settlement. Since
its creation in 1999 the commission has distributed
more than $40 million in grants to tobacco communities
in southwestern Virginia and Southside. It's now
developing plans to fund telecom infrastructure
projects - something Warner says he supports so
long as they choose the right technologies. Yet,
Warner sent confusing signals by appointing Michael
J. Schewel, a respected corporate attorney in Richmond,
as secretary of commerce and trade. Sources say
he's not well-known either in the economic development
profession or in rural Virginia.
For hard-hit regions there isn't much to do but
focus on long-term restructuring and build on what
they still have. Pulaski Furniture in Pulaski, for
example, has cut about 1,000 people from its Virginia
work force since May 2000 when it went private through
a management-led buyout. Now many of the company's
products are made in China and the Philippines;
it has around 1,250 workers in Virginia. Still,
that's better than no jobs at all. "There's
no doubt about it, we have fewer employees here,"
says CEO John Wampler. "We wish we could have
brought everyone with us to the point we are, but
sometimes you have to make your company stronger."
Warner so far hasn't announced any specific actions,
but at least he hasn't ignored communities in trouble.
He went to Henry County three weeks after his election
win to host an "economic summit" just
after VF Imagewear announced its massive layoffs.
Tom Harned, director of Martinsville's economic
development office, says he's in regular contact
with Warner. He praised Warner's private venture-capital
initiatives, though he says they haven't borne much
fruit. Southside Rising, a fund tailored for Southside,
did try to start a couple of high-tech ventures
but "just as a couple of projects started coming
on line, the high-tech bubble burst," he says.
The tobacco commission won't help much, Harned says,
because Martinsville has no tobacco and Henry County
grows only a little. The city did get $114,000 from
the commission for a city incubator - not much of
a sum considering the huge layoffs.
After a string of layoffs, unemployment in Henry
County has climbed to 9.5 percent, and Martinsville's
unemployment rate is nearly 13 percent. In Dickenson
County in southwestern Virginia, unemployment now
tops 15 percent. Those figures won't turn around
quickly, all agree, and state largess is a long
shot. On Jan. 8, Warner told top business executives
in Richmond that the next 2 1/2 years could see
a $3.2 billion budget shortfall and revenues could
fall short through 2005. If true, there won't be
much available for innovative economic development
programs. Even so, Warner's campaign raised hopes
among rural workers that he could combine business
know-how with the power of state government to shorten
their wait. "I got hired for good times and
bad," Warner says. Well, at least he's got
a job.