Monday, April 20, 2009

As small towns struggle, people lose

I returned Sunday afternoon from what might be my last visit to Laurinburg, N.C., a pleasant little town that extols its Scottish heritage (the Mc--- section of the phone book goes on for pages and pages) and banks on community pride and civic involvement. My daughter and son-in-law have made their home there for seven years, and my wife and I enjoyed our visits. We met gracious and friendly people who made us feel welcome, and my daughter and her husband enjoyed a large network of close, dependable friends.
But now they're moving away, bidding goodbye to close friends and looking forward to putting down new roots in a place where they will raise their children.
Laurinburg was named an All-America City the same year that Wilson won the honor.
But like a lot of towns of its size (15,000),  Laurinburg is facing difficult times. Scotland County's unemployment rate led the state for months. A number of major industries closed, and some stores shuttered. The county was home to a thriving agricultural economy in the early part of the 20th century, and there's still a good bit of farming going on, but agriculture has undergone a drastic change.
The city still has its charm. Last weekend, the dogwoods and azaleas were all in bloom, and some quiet streets were ablaze with color. Residents strolled the neighborhoods and stopped to gab with neighbors. The downtown is still vital with some specialty shops, a successful coffee shop/luncheonette and the newspaper office. Still, it's hard to escape the shadow of economic foreboding. With agriculture withering and industries moving overseas, where will the jobs come from to maintain the stylish homes and pleasant gardens that dot the town?
Laurinburg is like a lot of other small towns — I'm thinking of Wendell, Farmville, Stantonsburg and others — that once thrived but now struggle. Unless these towns are close to a larger metropolitan area, as Wendell is close to Raleigh, and can take advantage of the spillover of residents and income, they will have a difficult time. Americans are not only moving from the country to the city, they are moving from small town America to metropolitan America. I cannot count the number of my high school classmates who moved quickly to Charlotte or the number of my children's classmates who made their homes in Raleigh. Small towns across North Carolina are struggling to retain their identity and their economic viability after being bypassed by new highways and having their most promising youth sucked away by larger cities. In the Midwest, I'm told, it's even worse as tiny farm markets shrivel out of existence.
The loss of small towns has an impact deeper than the disappearance of a few jobs. Small towns have nurtured American civic-mindedness, community pride, cooperative spirit, friendliness, patriotism, spirituality and creativity. They have given Americans a chance to slow down and enjoy the azaleas in the springtime or a maple-lined street in the fall, without the jangled nerves of a traffic jam or the bustle of an unforgiving, tight schedule. 

2 comments:

di Bivar said...

As true as that might be, small towns also have a reputation for nurturing ignorance and cronyism. Historically, that's also been a reason for the exodus. And lack of resurgence.

Which brings me to my next question. If a town of only 15 thousand or less people can have a relatively vital core, despite tough economic times, what's the reason a town of almost 50,000 people, and what we are being told (or sold) as having a comparatively sound fiscal infrastructure and unbridled growth in the retail and real estate sectors, can lag so far behind in accomplishing just that? Or do we need a study??

"Scotland County's unemployment rate led the state for months. A number of major industries closed, and some stores shuttered"

Sounds familiar. For the life of me, I don't understand how a City as large and allegedly community minded, and fiscally solvent as Wilson can share, or come close to sharing those distinctions? The meager increase in business we are seeing Downtown (a small town in itself) is where we should have been 10 years ago.

There are lessons to learn in all this. First, let us not continue down this road of playing house with misguided priorities.

And, PLEASE Dear God...Let us stop with the "studies" to study studies Wilson is soooo famous for.

And, let us not be too quick to label those who ask pertinent questions as "malcontents". If any progress is made it is because of people asking questions, sifting through the BS-- and expecting answers.

PS....the All American City award? Let's be realistic for a change. How could Wilson's Downtown, with its decrepit wig-shops, boarded up businesses, weird storefront churches and faux department stores with not a soul on the streets after 5 PM and rarely on the weekends, have been awarded such?

Anonymous said...

I think "malcontent" refers to the attitude, not the questions. Citizens should ask questions, but should do so with a willingness to disagree without being condescending.