by Peter Galuszka
In the secretive, deal-making world of economic
development, Wayne Sterling is regarded as a superstar.
By turns, he's been compared to sports luminaries
Joe Montana, Barry Bonds and Michael Jordan. His
record for nailing big projects is legendary. In
South Carolina during the early 1990s, for example,
he snatched a shiny jewel, the $350 million Bayerische
Motoren Werke Inc. (BMW) car factory. Later, in
the mid-1990s, when he was Virginia's top business
scout, he brought in computer chipmakers Dominion
Semiconductor and Infineon. In 1997, South Carolina
leapt at the chance to lure him back.
So, when Sterling landed on the
job market again last summer, officials of hard-hit
Henry County went after him in a big way. The small,
economically depressed county offered him an incredible
$200,000 a year. The princely sum raised eyebrows
since Henry County is located in the center of the
state's foundering Southside textile belt area where
thousands of people don't even have jobs. By comparison,
wealthy Henrico County in suburban Richmond pays
$130,161 a year for a similar economic development
post. "I like Henry County," says Sterling.
"I knew some of the leadership. They made me
a very good offer. It is a very interesting opportunity,
and the timing worked the way I liked."
The timing is indeed fortuitous.
Last September, Sterling was forced to resign as
chief of staff of the South Carolina Commerce Department,
following a probe into alleged financial improprieties.
Among the allegations: Sterling allowed his staff
to hire relatives, charged up to $28,000 to give
speeches as a public official, billed the state
for expensive golf getaways and furnished his offices
lavishly. He and an associate who went with him
to Henry County are still the targets of a probe
by a South Carolina state audit committee. Sterling
didn't respond to questions about the probe.
Officials in Henry County and Martinsville,
its major city, defend the hire. "Well, the
Washington Wizards wanted Michael Jordan,"
says Thomas L. Harned, city director of economic
development. Harned declines comment on Sterling's
situation in South Carolina. "The fact is that
Mr. Sterling is one of the preeminent industrial
recruiters in the country. We need the very best
available."
Henry County does need help. Since
1993 the county, with a population of 60,000, has
lost 9,000 apparel and textile jobs. Furniture,
its other major business, is reeling from recessionary
blows. A major apparel firm, Tultex Corp., shut
down in 2000. Last November, apparel maker VF Corp.
announced that 2,600 workers would lose their jobs
as it moved to close three of its four clothing
factories there.
As executive director of the Virginia
Economic Development Partnership before his second
stint in South Carolina, Sterling pursued a research-oriented
approach to recruiting business. As he said on more
than one occasion, he wanted to know more about
the prospect's relocation needs than the prospect
itself. Perhaps his most lasting legacy at the partnership
was creating a state-of-the-art presentation room
that could manipulate a vast database of location
data and display it on a wall-size screen.
For Henry County, he says he plans
a "very aggressive outreach program" that
will extend to U.S. cities and abroad. He says that
the skills of apparel, textile and furniture workers
are "easily transferable" into other manufacturing
industries. The trick, he says, is to "focus
on what the market tells us every day." While
he says there is no such thing as an ideal economic
prospect, his recruitment will be tailored to find
businesses that provide "stable and long-term
employment."
Doing so is no mean feat. With the
North American Free Trade Agreement in place, it
is much easier for major textile and apparel firms
to move their operations to Mexico and its low-cost
labor. Now that China is in the World Trade Organization,
it will enjoy trade privileges that will make it
easier to swamp U.S. markets with cheaper and well-made
products. Thus, the clothing sector offers little
hope for the future.
Consider VF Imagewear, a unit of
Greensboro, N.C.-based VF Corp., that announced
the latest round of layoffs. The downsizing is part
of a corporate-wide strategy of losing 38,000 jobs
and restructuring to meet tougher market conditions.
VF Imagewear communications director Sheryl Agee
says VF was forced out of the private label business,
where it made clothes for big name retailers such
as Nike, J.C. Penney, the Gap and Target. By taking
production offshore, she says, "They can manage
a lot cheaper costs and deal with intense pricing
pressure."
VF is trying to ease the pain by
offering laid-off employees severance packages.
The NAFTA agreement pays tuition for laid off workers
to study at community colleges for up to two years
and learn new skills. The problem is, there aren't
enough jobs locally to train for. Deborah Preston,
a VF worker due for lay off in April, says her husband
lost his job at VF in November. He's now at Patrick
Henry Community College studying law enforcement,
even though there aren't many suitable jobs nearby.
Many laid-off workers must commute
one hour each way to big cities such as Roanoke
or Greensboro, N.C. "The problem is, that once
laid-off people find work in North Carolina, they
often find themselves laid off again," says
Gary Shoesmith, a professor and economist at the
Babcock School of Management at Wake Forest University
in Winston-Salem, N.C. He notes that a North Carolina
newspaper published an extensive study of laid-off
textile workers. One third found better jobs; one
third found lateral jobs and a third found worse
jobs or are still unemployed.
Martinsville economic development
officials say that their people do have extensive
skill sets, such as knowing how to operate complicated
machinery. They are hoping that high-technology
firms will locate production facilities in their
area (see story, page 20). But high-tech manufacturing
is in a recessionary slump and may not be expanding
for months to come.
Last month, Henry County officials
announced some good news. Two furniture makers,
A.C. Furniture and Carolina Quality Compounds, would
open two new plants and hire 115 workers. While
the deals started being made before Sterling's arrival,
he's getting the credit for closing them quickly.
But, county officials concede, the jobs are a drop
in the bucket compared to the extensive layoffs
in other sectors. They had better hope that Sterling
can work his highly touted and highly compensated
magic.