Small-town America鈥檚 most precious resource
Loading...
Small-town America has always been more than a place. It has been an idea. Main Street. Picket fences. Parades. Corner stores and cashiers you know by name. America is many things, but since its founding, its small towns have incubated no small part of the nation鈥檚 sense of itself.聽
In this week鈥檚 cover story, Doug Struck winds his way across the United States to answer the question, What is small-town America incubating now? The usual portrait we see is often not an optimistic one.
In May, The Wall Street Journal published a report titled 鈥淩ural America Is the New 鈥業nner City.鈥 鈥 Its findings were as bracing as the headline. Small-town America is in crisis. Just as inner cities were rife with unemployment, crime, and drug use in the 1980s, so rural America faces these problems today amid economic change and an opioid epidemic.
Just look at some of the statistics from that Wall Street Journal report: From 1992 to 1996, counties with a population of fewer than 100,000 accounted for 32 percent of the country鈥檚 business creation. From 2010 to 2014, they accounted for zero percent. (In fact, their rate of business creation was negative during that time.)聽
The story is the same with job creation, where these counties鈥 share of the nation鈥檚 total has dwindled from 27 percent to 9 percent.
Consider: In Oregon, more than half the jobs are in only three of the state鈥檚 36 counties, according to a report in The Atlantic. In rural America, 鈥淢ake America Great Again鈥 is not a clever slogan, it is a desperate plea for survival.聽
So often, the proposed answers seem to be some version of turning back the clock. Many 鈥渋deas revolve around restoring how things used to be 鈥 attracting a new lumber company or factory or whatnot,鈥 notes The Atlantic in its report on rural Oregon.聽
Yet there are notes of defiance in small-town America, too.聽
Look at what the mayor of Peru, Ind., is doing in Doug鈥檚 story. He鈥檚 trying to change the terms of the battle. It鈥檚 not about getting back an old factory; it鈥檚 about building a better quality of life to tempt city-dwellers to move farther out. 鈥淲hat we are fighting now is a battle for people,鈥 he says.
Or look at what Debbie and Bill Gardner are doing in Draper, Va. They bought the old mercantile building and turned it into a bakery and bookstore, old potbellied stoves included. It has added 50 jobs, according to The Washington Post.聽
鈥淪mall towns on the upswing often have a cast of characters who spot potential where others see nothing,鈥 the Post writes. 鈥淭he risks of a few ... lay the foundation for a resurgence.鈥
For generations, much of America鈥檚 opportunity was in its boundless rural landscapes 鈥 its rich soil and coal seams. But as that shifts, a new commodity is coming forward as even more valuable to the future of small towns from Storm Lake, Iowa, to Coeur d鈥橝lene, Idaho: new thinking.