Barry
Pless and his wife Lindsay had been eyeing the solid-wood
bedroom furniture set for some time. Scouting stores
had turned up nothing that the couple liked as much.
Still, the price tag gave them pause. Yet after
receiving the biggest pay raise in his 14-year Navy
career, Petty Officer 1st class Pless rushed back
to the Value City Furniture store in Virginia Beach
for the $4,000 set of their dreams. "This was
a purchase we were looking forward to making for
a year," he says. Like many of the 100,000
military personnel and their families living in
the Hampton Roads region, the Plesses are finding
that military pay raises that took effect in January
mean a big difference in their standard of living.
They are eating out more, taking better and longer
vacations and buying big-ticket items like homes
and cars. They're feeling better about the economy,
and they're more likely to spend their increased
discretionary income.
The
increased spending provides a real shot in the arm
to the Hampton Roads economy as well as the state
economy, which is seeing few other bright spots
these days. The pay raises - the largest in nearly
a generation - will pump an additional $350 million
annually into the economy and provide the equivalent
of 9,000 new jobs paying $40,000 each, according
to one study by Old Dominion University.
The
military pay raises average 5 percent for officers
and 6 percent for enlisted personnel. But some service
members received as much as a 15 percent jump in
pay when housing allowances and bonuses are included.
Most increases in the area topped out around 10
percent. While other studies are more conservative
than ODU's, even a 5 percent raise for military
personnel and reservists at the 11 area bases will
add $200 million to the economy. "We're doing
well. ... It has a lot to do with that defense spending
is rising, and the primary reason is military personnel,"
says John Whaley, an economist and deputy executive
director of the Hampton Roads Planning District
Commission.
Even
before the pay raises went into effect, Hampton
Roads was faring better than much of the state and
nation during the last year because of the military
presence. Sales of existing homes and new home construction
remain strong. Area auto dealers, helped by post-Sept.
11 rebates and zero interest financing, posted record
sales in October and have had strong sales in the
last six months. Retail sales are down, but not
nearly as much as the rest of the nation. The unemployment
rate for January was also nearly 2 percent below
the national average.
The
war in Afghanistan is not hurting the region the
way the 1991 Gulf War did when at least 40,000 area
personnel were deployed, and many of their families
left the area temporarily to stay with other relatives.
Current deployments are normal and most family members
have stayed in the area.
Even
at the higher end of economic forecasts, the pay
raise is a fairly modest amount of money in the
overall size of the Hampton Roads economy, but it
is important to the families receiving it and is
likely to have a far-reaching impact on the region.
The raises and planned future increases in housing
allowances are part of an effort to boost the quality
of life for members of the military. As retention
and enlistment rates rise, areas like Hampton Roads
can only benefit.
Identifying
how the pay raise is affecting a region can be tricky,
however. Business has picked up at popular eateries
such as the Duck-In & Gazebo in Virginia Beach,
but manager Helen Beale isn't sure whether it's
because of the extra cash military personnel may
be carrying around or the $9.99 "retro buffet"
promotion the restaurant offered over the winter.
"That brought a lot of people in," she
says on a recent weekend when the Shore Drive restaurant
was packed with family of some of the 7,000 sailors
and Marines who returned with the U.S.S. Theodore
Roosevelt battle group on March 27.
Auto
and motorcycle dealers say they, too, have seen
strong sales, but it's difficult to pin anything
on the pay raise. Many military personnel deployed
or stationed overseas often make their auto and
motorcycle purchases through a program between the
military and the Big Three auto manufacturers and
Harley-Davidson. Service members get steep discounts
and are guaranteed their vehicle is ready for delivery
when they return.
One
area where Southside Harley-Davidson in central
Virginia Beach has seen a huge increase is in accessories,
says military sales coordinator Steve Conrad. Sailors
and Marines are "jumping all over the military
program" and then dressing up their bikes with
chrome covers and buying complete outfits such as
jackets, boots and rain gear. "These guys are
very happy with their pay raise," he says.
Realtor Tommy Alphin of RE/MAX West Inc. in Chesapeake
is sure the extra money being pumped into the local
economy is helping sales, but he says it's often
hard to quantify. Sales are up 6 percent to 8 percent
annually, but "being a military town, stuff
churns here so much because people come and go so
often" that it's difficult to credit the pay
raise, he says.
Late
winter and early spring are usually peak times for
residential real estate business as homeowners splash
on new paint and ready their properties to be listed,
and prospective buyers start looking around. Alphin
says business remains strong, but this spring doesn't
seem as busy to him. One reason may be the war on
terrorism with the attention of military families
focused more on the conflict and the safety of loved
ones than house hunting. Alphin serves the areas
around Portsmouth, Chesapeake and Suffolk. "Usually
when these guys get more money, they like to spend
it," he says.
Service
members tend to want to make sure their families
live in nice homes and good areas so they have fewer
worries if they are deployed. They also like to
have a nice place to go home to at night when their
ships are being overhauled. That's exactly what
Petty Officer 1st Class Julius Hayes and his wife,
Kelley, want. Hayes is saving the extra $200 he
takes home each month to buy a home later this year.
The pay raise isn't enormous, but it is noticeable.
"We really don't get paid a lot, so $200 is
a sizable pay raise," says Hayes. "It
was substantial enough for us to begin making some
investments for our future. The pay raise won't
allow for me to get a $250,000 house, but something
suitable for us."
The
13-year veteran stationed at the Atlantic Fighter
Wing at Oceana Naval Air Station has also started
a college fund for his 8-year-old daughter and expects
to have a few bucks left over each month to take
the family out for an extra dinner and movie. After
purchasing the bedroom furniture and a 2002 Toyota
Highlander sport utility vehicle, Pless of Virginia
Beach is done purchasing big-ticket items. He's
opened his first retirement account and is now able
to stash away most of the extra $200 he takes home
each month from a 7.5 percent raise without cutting
his standard of living. "It's the first time
in my 14- year-career that I've started saving for
retirement. I now have an account with my name on
it that I control," the 40-year-old assigned
to the carrier Enterprise says with pride.
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to Virginia Business - May 2002