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Return to Virginia Business - January 2004

Regional Report

City looks to broadband to grow economy

by John Peters
For Virginia Business
January 2004

WEB POINTERS
For more information on Bristol:
Bristol Chamber of Commerce
City of Bristol, VA

Not many cities straddle two states, but in Bristol the Virginia-Tennessee line runs right through the middle of downtown. In just a few blocks things can change, particularly for businesses with the two states offering different tax structures and amenities. These days, companies are tempted to cross the border to take advantage of something that Bristol claims no other city of its size offers — a $30 million fiber-optic network.

Bristol isn’t the first Virginia city to install a fiber-optic system, nor is it the smallest place with one. The big difference, say city officials, is that Bristol Virginia Utilities will run the fiber optic right up to a resident’s home or business, giving them the benefit of high-speed broadband Internet, cable and telephone all going through a single line. That gives the city a leg up in attracting new businesses and residents, says Jerry Brown, director of economic development for the city of 18,000 people. “We see it as a major tool for anyone who needs broadband capability,” he says.

The system, fully launched last summer, has shown it can turn heads. Cross Stone Products, a maker of decorative metal containers, moved its 30-employee operation to the Virginia side of Bristol two years ago in part to get access to the high-speed network. “When we made that decision we were involved quite heavily with some major retailers in the United States,” says Larry Bays, company controller. The company needed the ability to exchange detailed images of products with potential customers, he says.

Bristol’s network will help keep existing businesses in Bristol, says Jim Kelly, Vice President of Operations for Bristol Virginia Utilities’ OptiNet Division. “Businesses are always looking for high-speed, high capacity Internet access at competitive prices,” he says. “Prior to this, a company (in Bristol) that wanted high-speed Internet access had to buy a full T-1 connection ... at about $1,400 a month.” Now, he says, the same service can be purchased from BVU/OptiNet for $800.

Both Bristols, though, are better known for their mountain views and NASCAR races at nearby Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee than for high technology. Yet, increasingly more towns and cities in rural areas are embracing broadband as a way to entice new businesses to replace jobs lost from declines in the textile and furniture industries. Telecommunications experts offer a word of caution, though. With technology changing quickly, systems can become outdated and are no guarantee of success.

Still, many localities wouldn’t get a second look from prospective tenant companies if they didn’t have broadband access, says Rick Richardson, director of communications for the Virginia Economic Development Partnership. “That extends not only to ones you would associate directly with the Internet, but also with manufacturers who would have in the early days been content with water, sewer and highway access. Now broadband is part of that. The fact that a community like Bristol has such a system is clearly an advantage.”

Unlike many localities in the Southwest, Bristol’s economy is not dependent upon the struggling coal industry. Nor was it overly dependent upon the textile and furniture industries. In fact, its economy is actually quite diverse, with 34 percent of local workers employed in the retail and service sector. Manufacturing accounts for 23 percent of the local job market, while the trade and professional sector makes up 18.5 percent. With this mix, Bristol is home to everything from Bristol Compressors — an exporter of compressors to the Middle East — to The United Co., which started out in coal and gas and later diversified into real estate and financial services.

Joblessness in Bristol is a concern, but not nearly as much so as in other Virginia localities. The unemployment rate for the city for 2002 was 4.3 percent, while neighboring Washington County, where much of the city’s work force lives, stood at 6.4 percent. While the jobless rate spiked in 2003 to as high as 7.7 percent it’s still lower than many surrounding counties, such as Dickenson, which in 2002 had a rate of 15 percent.

In this far-flung area of the state — which has seen its share of factory closings along the I-81 corridor — the city of Bristol and Washington County are among the most prosperous localities, with an average income of $24,296 a year. Nevertheless, Bristol officials are trying to gauge what they need to attract new companies and residents. “We realize new companies we attract are going to be smaller companies. There aren’t going to be many (new industries with) 300 to 500 employees,” says Brown. “We’re a very small city, with not a lot of land. We can’t attract tremendously large facilities.” Companies of anywhere from five to 100 workers would find it easier to get a site, he says.

With the need for broadband access nearly ubiquitous, city officials aren’t focusing on any particular sector. “People say we’re trying to attract high-tech firms, but if you’re not high-tech, no matter what you’re making, you’re not in business any longer,” Brown says. “It could be a firm doing quite a simple task, like selling a product over the Internet that requires them to have broadband capabilities. Or it could be a software development firm.”

State officials support the importance of broadband in rural areas. Michael W. Schewel, Secretary of Commerce and Trade, points out that firms with customers and office locations flung across the country must be able to exchange data, business plans, all sorts of information. “Those are not necessarily businesses we think of as technology businesses, but good, inexpensive access to high-speed broadband is essential for those types of businesses.” And Bristol’s fiber optic system is a major reason behind his office’s recent move to begin marketing Southwest Virginia’s broadband capacity. “That gives Southwest Virginia a real competitive advantage and is one of the things that distinguishes that region of the state,” says Schewel.

The fiber network was financed with revenue bonds and internally by Bristol Virginia Utilities. It was a long time coming, according to Wes Rosenbalm, president and chief executive officer of Bristol Virginia Utilities. Hired in February 2001 to bring the fiber-optic system to completion, Rosenbalm guided the program through two lawsuits and two changes in state law to get it up and running. Private-sector telecom firms objected to competing against a publicly owned network but lost their court challenge. Hired in February 2001 to bring the fiber-optic system to completion, Rosenbaum guided the program through two lawsuits and two changes in state law to get it up and running. Private-sector telecom firms had objected to competing against a publicly owned network but lost their court challenge.

Bristol’s other attractions predate the broadband network. The Bristol Motor Speedway just across the Tennessee state line has two major NASCAR races a year in addition to several smaller events. With more than a million annual visitors for the races, all the region’s hotels and restaurants are full several times a year.

Being the birthplace of country music doesn’t hurt either, says Matt Bolas, vice president of the local chamber’s convention and visitor’s bureau. The city has the Birthplace of Country Music Alliance Museum and a number of country and bluegrass concerts that draw tourists to the city, as does nearby Barter Theatre and the annual Virginia Highlands Festival in Abingdon. All total, those attractions bring nearly 400,000 people to the city every year.

Improving the area’s quality of life are opportunities for outdoor recreation and education. There’s hunting, fishing and boating available at numerous area lakes and hiking along the Appalachian Trail. East Tennessee State University offers a medical college 25 miles away, and there are other colleges in the region, including Emory & Henry College, a private liberal arts school in Emory.

Still, economic development officials view the fiber-optic system as their main attraction. “If you go back to once upon a time, if you didn’t have the railroad through your town, you were at a disadvantage,” says Rosenbaum. “Now, it’s the interstate. We equate the fiber optic system to that, the new interstate.” And, he adds, Bristol is in the fast lane.

Return to Virginia Business - January 2004


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