N.C. residents' question: How much is 'bathroom bill' going to cost us?
Loading...
| Forest City, N.C.
Just down the road from where an old-time AM station pumps out 鈥10,000 watts of gospel power,鈥 the thumbs-up 鈥渓ike鈥 symbol of the global social media giant Facebook adorns a sprawling data storage complex 鈥 a nearly half-billion dollar investment in one of the poorest corners of Appalachia.
Facebook鈥檚 spending is a sign of North Carolina鈥檚 pull on corporate America, boosting it to the second-largest state economy in the Southeast, behind Florida and ahead of Georgia. But that strong economic foundation, built over decades, is showing signs of cracks, observers say.
The cracks appeared even before a hastily passed law that critics say discriminates against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and especially transgender Americans 鈥 a law that means North Carolina 鈥渏ust became the Bull Connor of the tech industry,鈥 says Mike Capra, an Internet talk show host, referring to the civil-rights-era Birmingham, Ala., official who used his authority to block racial integration.
To critics here in the Tar Heel State, House Bill 2 flies in the face of a long-cultivated image of North Carolina as a reasonably welcoming Southern state with growing, thriving urban areas 鈥 a success attributable to聽heavy state investment, particularly in education and training, which had the knock-on effect聽of attracting more top-end talent. The state is the nation鈥檚 top importer of educated people.
But that investment began to erode in 2010, when tea party Republicans rose to power in Raleigh. An emphasis on cutting spending programs, including for public school children, caused concern even before the combustible element of the culture wars were added. Despite economic growth in cities like Raleigh, Charlotte, and Asheville, two-thirds of North Carolina counties have seen poverty intensify since 2010.
Now, North Carolina has become a crucible for more than just gender identity rights but how economics mix with attempts to legislate morals. What happens next may be ultimately defined not just by moral strictures in the most socially conservative corners of America, but by the thirst for economic salvation from devastating levels of poverty.
The region as a whole is watching to see if conservative principles cost North Carolina its comeback.
鈥淲e鈥檙e talking billions and billions of dollars at stake here,鈥 says Andrew Brod, an economist at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e playing with fire.鈥
鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥
Gov. Pat McCrory has dismissed dissent from the state鈥檚 corporate citizens as a 鈥渃oordinated 鈥 slander鈥 campaign built on a misrepresentation of the law.
Indeed, the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act is long and complex (it includes a section on the minimum wage). And it鈥檚 true, as supporters say, that 29 states and more than 10,000 United States locales also don鈥檛 offer antidiscrimination protection to transgender people.
Yet North Carolina鈥檚 law has been targeted by corporate America because it was the first to demand that people be prepared to show their birth certificate in order to use the bathroom. The law 鈥渋s not a direction in which states move when they are seeking to provide 鈥 thriving hubs for business and economic development,鈥 wrote Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a signed letter 鈥 though the company hasn鈥檛 signaled any definitive moves around future investments.
Moreover, this is still the South, where memories haven鈥檛 faded regarding other famous civil rights battles over bathroom and water fountain eligibility that took place here.
Not too far away, Mississippi鈥檚 recently passed law goes even further in allowing businesses to refuse service to LGBT people based on 鈥渕oral鈥 objections as well as 鈥渟incerely held religious beliefs.鈥 Six other states are considering similar bathroom measures.
North Carolina, however, has more than most to lose. Less than a month after the bill was passed, the Center for American Progress estimates that the state has already put $500 million in corporate investment and tourism dollars in jeopardy. Putting an exclamation point on the tourism issue, Britain鈥檚 Foreign Office has issued a travel advisory warning its LGBT citizens traveling to North Carolina or Mississippi.
A growing boycott campaign now involves perhaps as many as 1,000 high-paying jobs lost, including 400 from PayPal canceling a multimillion dollar expansion. The list of canceled concerts and shows 鈥 including Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam, Ringo Starr, and Cirque de Soleil 鈥 so far have cost millions of dollars in lost revenue. Thursday, the National Basketball Association said that the 2017 All-Star Game won鈥檛 be played in Charlotte unless the law is changed.
Over the weekend, the annual High Point furniture market, still a cornerstone of the state economy, saw "hundreds, even thousands" fewer buyers than usual. Lionsgate says it won鈥檛 make more movies or TV shows here, composer Stephen Schwartz won鈥檛 allow any of his musicals, including 鈥淲icked,鈥 to be performed in the state, and Google won鈥檛 pour any venture capital into the state until lawmakers repeal the law. Corporate recruiters say they鈥檙e getting pushback over the law from potential hires.
Total losses are difficult to quantify, especially as no one can measure what Allen Freyer of the North Carolina Justice Center calls the 鈥渟ilent protest鈥 of companies and entrepreneurs quietly scratching the state off their list.
But there is evidence that the losses could be significant. After a controversial religious liberty bill passed in Indiana a year ago, the state lost $60 million in convention business before lawmakers watered down the law. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal (R) cited corporate investment in vetoing what he called a 鈥渄iscriminatory鈥 religious liberty bill last month.
鈥淭here鈥檚 something fundamental about discrimination that keeps capital and talent on the sidelines instead of actively engaged in growing the economy,鈥 says Mr. Freyer. He blames Republican gerrymandering, which he says has divided the state into distinct ideological factions that make debate and compromise difficult at the statehouse.
Some proponents of the bathroom bill say much of the corporate rhetoric is bluster. 鈥淢y sense, as a dilettante economist, unless we become the only state to maintain gender-specific public accommodations, I think [the controversy is] likely to blow over,鈥 says Eric Dent, a freelance op-ed columnist.
At the same time, clearly feeling the pressure, Governor McCrory last week added some protections for LGBT state employees with an executive order, and urged the General Assembly to reconsider a provision that bars discrimination complaints in state courts. (So far, the General Assembly has not indicated a willingness to do so.)
For many, it wasn鈥檛 enough.
鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥
In an election year, the support of the law will be tested in places like Forest City, where most folks support barring transgender people from women鈥檚 bathrooms.
According to a 2013 Credit.com survey, North Carolina has three of the country鈥檚 10 poorest cities, and Forest City is among them.
Everybody here 鈥済rew up on cotton,鈥 says Tony Heffner, a pawn broker in a soiled white T-shirt. But textile mills and greeting card printers are long gone. Now, the biggest draw to downtown is Smith鈥檚 Drugs, where waitresses call patrons 鈥渂uddy鈥 and sling liver mush, a cornmeal-infused m茅lange of pig parts. Mr. Heffner says he doesn鈥檛 even sell gold anymore, because all people do is look at it.
鈥淭he money all went away,鈥 he says.
Nevertheless, many residents, including Mr. Heffner, struggle to tie global corporate complaints about discrimination against LGBT people to the poverty all around them. For many, that shiny Facebook facility might as well be in Kalamazoo for all its local economic impact.
Instead, many here see the backlash as a bullying tactic. 鈥淵ou give them an inch and they try to take a mile,鈥 says Kay, a local antiques dealer who offered only her first name.
Squaring one鈥檚 bedrock Baptist faith with shifting cultural mores is difficult, but can鈥檛 be avoided, says a woman shopping in Kay鈥檚 store. She says that despite the Bible鈥檚 admonitions against homosexuality, 鈥淚鈥檓 friends with a lot of gay people.鈥
Though she has concerns about men exposing themselves in women鈥檚 bathrooms, the bathroom bill, she says, 鈥渕akes me think of a wise man who once told me that more rules equal more misery.鈥
For others, the economic connections are clearer.
Rhonda Thompson is a devout 海角大神 who runs the Iron Ink tattoo shop. Her clientele, she says, is largely poor, scraping together tax refunds for more skin art. Meth is a scourge, as are 鈥渒itchen job鈥 tattoos that her artists get hired to repair.
As with many here, she doesn鈥檛 see why barring people born with male genitalia from women鈥檚 bathrooms is such a big deal. But she does question whether the state鈥檚 leaders are making a mountain out of a mole hill by taking a stand that disregards the complaints of those willing to invest in the state and its workers.
鈥淚t just seems like with everything they do, poor people are struggling even more,鈥 she says.
鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥
Even more so than Georgia 鈥 which hosted the Olympics in 1996 鈥 North Carolina gave America the template for a New South where the transformation from manufacturing economy to a knowledge economy could be glimpsed, and, perhaps, realized. Most critically, it was the first Southern state to invest heavily in public and secondary education.
And it largely worked.
U-Haul moves more households, on net, to North Carolina than any other state. Thanks to northern transplants, the Triangle region of some 1 million people has more hockey rinks than the 5 million people Atlanta metro area.
And after Republicans took over from a scandal-plagued Democratic Party in 2010 and McCrory was elected in 2012, the legislature has balanced the state鈥檚 books and filled up the rainy day fund, all of which has been rewarded with a triple-A bond rating from Moody鈥檚. McCrory has called it a 鈥淐arolina Comeback鈥 based on conservative principles.
Though a significant state income tax cut has likely helped the economy to some extent, North Carolina State economist Michael Walden says the gradually improving national economy has played the biggest role in the state鈥檚 shored-up finances.
And comparatively, the North Carolina recovery has been lukewarm, as the state continues to lose ground to other Southern states, including Florida and Georgia. North Carolina鈥檚 poor, especially, are taking a hit, as the gap between national average earnings and what鈥檚 in their pocket has widened under Republican leadership.
In balancing the budget, Republicans particularly targeted services for the poor, slashing unemployment benefits, refusing to expand Medicaid, and slashing per-pupil spending by $500 since 2008. There鈥檚 a sharp ideological edge to the cuts, critics say.
鈥淭hey are sort of systematically dismantling the institutions that let North Carolina be a leader in the New South on education, investment in public institutions, and now this discrimination bill is sort of the culmination of how much the state has changed,鈥 says Chris FitzSimon, director of the progressive NC Policy Watch. 鈥淭hey continue by their actions 鈥 not just their policy decisions 鈥 to dabble in vengeance and revenge, a kind of meanness that鈥檚 damaging the brand of North Carolina that people have spent decades to build.鈥
Earlier this year, Standard & Poor鈥檚, the bond rating agency, wrote that North Carolina鈥檚 鈥渇avorable鈥 economic climate 鈥渉as spurred strong domestic in-migration, which has been good for population and economic growth.鈥
But the reference to in-migration also exposes the state鈥檚 vulnerability to branding and perception, says Mr. Walden, the North Carolina State economist.
鈥淭his legislation, whatever the merits or demerits, appears to have tarnished the state鈥檚 reputation in the short run, which could manifest itself in economic losses,鈥 he says.
鈥 聽鈥 聽鈥
If the state capital of Raleigh has come to represent a moral uprising against things that 鈥渄efy common sense鈥 (which is how McCrory framed transgender bathroom use), the Blue Ridge mountain city of Asheville is the antithesis.
It has become a haven for LGBT people, ranked among the top 10 places for homosexual couples to retire. But many legislators in Raleigh don鈥檛 see an economic beacon where Louis CK plays the Orange Peel, Matt Damon is a new resident, and where the brewery New Belgium is putting a major new facility expansion. They see it, as one state legislator said, as 鈥渁 cesspool of sin,鈥 where a larger battle of Biblical morality is playing out in real time.
Despite Asheville's local reputation as a bastion of acceptance, a company that had been considering bringing 500 tech jobs to town said it was ruling out Buncombe County unless HB 2 was changed, the president of the Asheville Chamber of Commerce .
A WRAL poll showed the North Carolina public evenly split over the question of which bathroom transgender people should use. But while 4 in 10 North Carolinians worry that the law will have a negative economic impact, just over 1 in 10 believe it will have no effect.
For farmer Steve Messer, the acceptance of alternative lifestyles means growing business for his farm stand, located next door to the Mountain Mojo coffee shop, where long-haired young men in Carhartt pants pull up in beat up Toyota trucks.
Yes, Mr. Messer worries about the safety of children in public restrooms. Yet understanding those who walk a different path is also a Biblical virtue, he says.
鈥淢e being from the mountains, I think I speak for a lot of folks when I say I honestly don鈥檛 care who is in the next stall,鈥 he says.