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Related
story:
- Grandson of a tobacco
farmer runs day-to-day operations of commission
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Some
investments don’t pay off
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One
success story: Racetrack drives industrial development
Virginia
Business
February
2004
Ed
Wegener, a top executive of AFG Industries, was looking
for the best place to build a glass-coating plant when
he visited Washington County in late 2002. Eager to
make a good impression, county officials took him to
the Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center, an ultramodern
facility with a gleaming glass facade. “He took
one look at the building and said, ‘If this glass
has AFG on it, you’ve got a deal,’”
recalls Rachel D. Fowlkes, the center’s executive
director. Fowlkes and Assistant County Administrator
Christy Parker held their breath while Wegener inspected
the glass. “Yep,” he said, “this is
AFG.”
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Wegener
was clearly impressed, but it took more than a serendipitous
discovery of his company’s glass to attract AFG’s
$30 million plant. The real deal-clincher was a $2 million
incentive package that included a $350,000 grant from
the Virginia Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization
Commission. “I think that every bit of that [grant]
was needed,” Wegener says. “But our decision
was not just based on incentives. No amount of money
can make a bad place a good place.”
Attracting new companies to the struggling Southside
and Southwest regions is a key goal for the 31-member
tobacco commission. In four years it has spent more
than $278 million to compensate tobacco farmers for
their losses and to pay for hundreds of community revitalization
projects.
The hope is that the money will help overcome the staggering
losses these regions have endured. For generations,
people here have earned a living growing tobacco, mining
coal or working in local textile and furniture plants.
But these mainstay industries have sustained severe
job losses — victims of reduced tobacco quotas,
overseas manufacturing and factory automation. What
the commission has been charged by law to do is nothing
short of huge: turn these economically depressed areas
around.
“... We can sit back and wait for these traditional
industries to come back — which they will not
— or we can set all of that aside and try to reinvent
our economy from the ground up,” says the commission’s
chairman, state Sen. Charles R. Hawkins, R-Chatham.
Yet, decreasing Virginia’s dependence on the golden
leaf, still the state’s largest cash crop, will
take time. And some people question the very premise
of reinventing a regional economy. “Attempts to
figure out what these regions could do best now that
what they used to do is no longer viable … is
like pushing a boulder up a steep hill,” says
Russell Roberts, a professor of economics at George
Mason University.
It’s hard to say exactly how well the effort is
going — now in its fifth fiscal year — because
there’s no data on the total number of jobs created,
workers retrained, investment by outside businesses
or tax revenues generated. The commission’s seven-person
staff has not tallied such information, now scattered
throughout hundreds of files, a situation the commission
plans to remedy with new computer software and the recent
hiring of additional staff. However, it does have figures
on one of its largest job-creating programs, the Tobacco
Region Opportunity Fund, a deal closing fund similar
to the Governor’s Opportunity Fund. To date, $8.3
million spent from this fund has assisted with the creation
of 5,751 jobs, facilitating $367.4 million in private
investment.
Commission members cite several examples of how their
efforts are making a difference. The AFG plant, for
instance, is hiring 70 workers at wages averaging $15
an hour. The commission is in the enviable position
of having plenty of money to finance projects. Funds
come from a master settlement agreement between 46 states
and four major cigarette manufacturers. In 1998, the
companies agreed to pay an estimated $206 billion over
25 years to cover the states’ health care costs
related to tobacco use.
Virginia’s share of the settlement is about $4
billion, and half of that goes to the commission. Another
40 percent goes into Virginia’s general fund and
10 percent goes for tobacco prevention, primarily efforts
to curb youth smoking. The legislation that allocated
the money and created the commission was endorsed by
a coalition of tobacco farmers, health advocacy groups
and economic developers and won unanimous approval from
the General Assembly in 1999.
In its first year, the commission spent 80 percent of
its $74 million budget on payments to tobacco farmers
and quota holders. Commission members admit that those
payments helped the “old economy” more than
the “new economy,” but insist the payments
were necessary. “We would have lost a lot of family
farms,” says Hawkins. “A number of them
would have ended up in bankruptcy.”
One of them might have been the farm of Robert Robertson,
62, who has grown tobacco for decades. “In 1998,
it started going downhill, and now I have about half
of what I did,” says Robertson, who owns a 250-acre
tobacco farm near Danville. “I put my life savings
into it, and it has just disappeared.” His dream
was to acquire enough tobacco quota to support himself
and his children, but his quota acquisitions have been
offset by government cuts — more than 10 percent
for flue-cured tobacco this year — and his children
have long since moved away to pursue careers elsewhere.
In addition to his shrinking tobacco quota, Robertson
struggles with higher prices for labor, equipment, fertilizer,
chemicals, electricity and natural gas. Meanwhile the
price he receives for his tobacco has declined. Robertson
also grows wheat, but says the economics of that crop
have been even worse. “People say farmers are
making a killing, but they are not.”
Robertson got $8,000 from the commission last year,
plus $20,000 from a separate legal settlement between
the cigarette manufacturers and 14 tobacco-producing
states. That’s more than most farmers and quota
owners received last year, when the average payment
was $826. The largest check was $101,279, and the smallest
payment was 7 cents. “If it wasn’t for the
checks that I get, I just couldn’t make it,”
he says. Robinson already works full-time at Collie
Equipment Co. in Danville. He’s getting his general
education diploma and plans to study agribusiness at
Danville Community College.
Hard-working farmers such as Robertson are a valuable
resource for the region, says Paul Combs, director of
the Appalachian Regional Development Institute at Appalachian
State University and a retired economics professor.
“Farmers are very entrepreneurial,” he says.
“They are used to running their own businesses.
They are willing to take risks.” The commission
should put money into building support structures for
entrepreneurs who want to remain in the region, Combs
says, because, unlike younger workers just entering
the job market, they’re less likely to leave the
region for jobs elsewhere. “The social and psychological
costs are just too high,” Combs says. “People
are more likely to look at something else [locally],
where they are a little more in control of their own
destiny.”
The commission is funding research into agricultural
alternatives to tobacco. It gave $500,000 to the Southside
Value-Added Beef Initiative, a regional effort to improve
the production, management and marketing capabilities
of beef-cattle farmers in Halifax, Mecklenburg and Pittsylvania
counties. If it’s successful, the pilot program
could be expanded to all of Southside and possibly Southwest
Virginia. The best way to diversify rural economies,
agrees Carthan F. Currin III, the commission’s
executive director, is “to develop a climate that’s
more conducive to entrepreneurial growth.”
After those initial payments to tobacco farmers and
quota holders, the commission has been investing a greater
percentage of its money in long-term economic development
initiatives. In its first four fiscal years, it has
spent $148.6 million on indemnification payments and
$125 million on economic development. Of that latter
amount, $56.6 million has gone for education and training
and $49.4 million for infrastructure such as industrial
parks, sewer lines and telecommunication networks. It
also includes $8.2 million for deal-closing incentives
like the one that helped bring AFG Industries to Washington
County. The Virginia Tobacco Settlement Foundation,
a separate organization, has spent $37 million on efforts
to curb smoking.
Most of the commission’s investments are long
term, so it’s too early to say if they’re
working. GMU professor Roberts says that successful
economic makeovers are rare, but even he concedes that
it is politically impossible to write off entire rural
regions. “The money to the tobacco farmers at
least does what it was intended to do,” he says.
“Infrastructure is a good idea, and education
per se is always good, but you have to look at individual
programs to see what kind of bang you are getting for
your buck.”
One way to encourage entrepreneurial activity in rural
areas is to build advanced telecommunication networks,
says Combs. The commission is spending tens of millions
of dollars to establish high-speed Internet access and
better cell-phone coverage in both regions. “They
are just as important as water and sewer were 20 years
ago,” Currin says.
The commission also is trying to create entrepreneurial
opportunities at the Institute for Advanced Learning
and Research. It has invested $12.7 million in the institute,
which is scheduled to open early this year in Danville.
Virginia Tech will manage the institute with help from
Averett University and Danville Community College. The
facility’s faculty and graduate students will
focus on research that builds on existing assets, including
advanced polymers, motor sports, robotics, biodefense,
bioinformatics, horticulture and forestry.
Motor sports research, for example, will be a partnership
between the Department of Mechanical Engineering at
Virginia Tech and Virginia International Raceway in
Halifax County. (See story on page 11.) The institute
hopes to attract intellectual talent and entrepreneurs,
says Timothy V. Franklin, executive director of the
institute and of Virginia Tech’s outreach programs
in Southside. The approach is similar to Tech’s
Corporate Research Center, which has grown rapidly in
Blacksburg in the past 18 years.
Combs says he would propose shifting some of Virginia’s
infrastructure dollars into education, although he realizes
that educated young people are more likely to move away
from rural regions. “It’s a Catch-22,”
he says, “but building that education base is
critically important.”
The region has strengthened its education offerings.
Nancy Breeding, who grew up on a tobacco farm, returned
to the region a few years ago when her husband retired
from the State Police and took over his father’s
tobacco and beef-cattle operation in Russell County.
Her tobacco ties qualified her for a tobacco-commission
scholarship. She earned her master’s degree in
education from Virginia Tech by attending classes at
the Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center and by
working online.
Breeding, 53, wanted to use that degree to become an
agricultural extension agent, but state budget cuts
eliminated her position with the Virginia Cooperative
Extension Service. She found a temporary job —
filling in for a secretary in the extension service’s
Wytheville office — but the daily commute was
90 miles one way. “It was either that or go home,”
Breeding says. “Jobs just aren’t that plentiful
in Southwest Virginia.”
Eventually, Breeding’s master’s degree helped
her secure a better job at the Higher Education Center.
She now manages the same scholarship program that helped
her three years ago. So far, it has awarded 787 grants
to students from tobacco farm families. Breeding received
$500, and current recipients receive $1,200.
Students in the program may attend any accredited college
or university, but they must complete a career-planning
workshop that highlights job opportunities in Southwest
Virginia. Breeding also runs a loan-forgiveness program
for 725 aspiring teachers, who qualify for $4,000 in
annual loans to pay for schooling but can have that
amount forgiven for every year they teach in Southside.
Breeding wishes more people would take advantage of
these grants and loans, but many tobacco families do
not value formal education, she says. “And you
can’t want what you don’t know.”
The region’s education problems could be eased,
Combs says, by attracting talented people who want a
rural lifestyle. With high-speed Internet connections,
some of the people who can work anywhere will choose
to work in Southside and Southwest Virginia, he says.
In fact, investments in telecommunications make more
sense to him than pumping money into small industrial
parks in every locality. “Throwing money at infrastructure
in the hopes that it will generate economic development
can be futile,” he says. “If every little
community is going to do that, then no one is going
to succeed.”
The commission has assisted more than 40 industrial
parks in various stages of development, generally providing
higher levels of funding to regional industrial parks
that benefit several localities. Todd M. Yeatts, Danville’s
director of legislative and public affairs, praises
the commission for fostering regional cooperation. “It’s
a tool that helps us help ourselves. This way we don’t
have to go begging to Richmond.”
Maybe not, but the beneficiaries of the tobacco money
realize that it would be easy for the governor and the
General Assembly to grab a greater share of tobacco-settlement
payments at any time, particularly as they try to close
a budget gap this year of $1.2 billion. Many states
are using tobacco-settlement funds to balance their
budgets. North Carolina, for example, has raided the
fund it established for its tobacco farmers, and Tennessee
has used all of its tobacco-settlement payments to balance
its budget. In 2001, Virginia used $15 million from
the state’s tobacco settlement foundation to address
budget shortfalls — money that has not been restored
for smoking prevention.
So far, Gov. Mark R. Warner has resisted that temptation,
and commission members predict that he will stay the
course in this year’s General Assembly. Still,
there’s always some risk that the funds will be
taken away, and as urban areas gain more representation
in the General Assembly, that risk may grow, says Michael
J. Schewel, a member of the commission and Virginia’s
secretary of commerce and trade. “But as long
as this governor is governor, there’s not much
chance of that. He has a commitment to use this money
to help Southside and Southwest Virginia.”
That party line has remained the same no matter which
party occupies the governor’s mansion, and members
of the commission say that commitment will continue
as long as they keep partisan politics out of their
decisions. “This commission was forged with a
bipartisan approach,” says Del. Joseph P. Johnson
Jr. (D-Abingdon). “We came together to do the
right thing. … The states that put their [tobacco
settlement] money into their budgets — it’s
gone, while ours lives on.” So do the challenges
of these struggling rural areas.
Return
to Virginia Business - February 2004
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