The two big lessons my wife and I keep encountering in http://www.theatlantic.com/special-report/american-futures" rel="nofollow - our travels
are these: First, the profound economic and and cultural effect of
immigration even in places where you might not necessarily expect that.
For instance, the Somali, Sudanese, Nepalese, Bhutanese, etc presence in
Sioux Falls, South Dakota, that http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/09/whens-your-birthday-january-first-report-from-sioux-falls/279441/" rel="nofollow - my wife described yesterday.
http://www.theatlantic.com/special-report/american-futures" rel="nofollow">
Reinvention and resilience across the nation
http://www.theatlantic.com/special-report/american-futures" rel="nofollow -
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And second, the importance of locally based money and corporations in
making some cities very different from others that merely
have branch-office status. That was the theme of this report http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/09/the-next-lesson-from-holland-why-local-money-matters/279251/" rel="nofollow - from Holland, Michigan , and this one http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/08/rapid-city-report-what-does-green-mean/279115/" rel="nofollow - from Rapid City, South Dakota
-- the latter about an Indian / Congolese / South Dakotan family that
converted a franchise Radisson into an eco-hotel that mainly bought from
local suppliers.
Here is a report from a reader named Dennis Foley, who now lives in
Holland but grew up in a similar manufacturing-centered small Midwestern
town. That was Middletown, whose big local industry there was Armco
steel, now AK Steel. Foley describes the difference Armco made, and what
that means in today's corporate environment. I turn it over to him:
I grew up in Middletown, Ohio. Birthplace of Jerry Lucas. But, more
importantly, the home of Armco Steel, now the location of an AK Steel
plant. AlthoughMiddletown had several paper mills, the largest employer
by far was Armco Steel. Armco invented continuous rolling of steel,
which transformed the production of steel, making it more uniform and
less expensive. That invention was inspired by the process of making
paper into rolls. Middletown was a company town.
During my youth, the benevolence of Armco toward the community was
evident everywhere. As an example, I was the recipient of the George M.
Verity Scholarship, named for the founder of Armco. Baseball diamonds
were donated by Armco. Sports teams were sponsored by departments at
“the mill”. There were free matinees for kids underwritten by Armco on
Saturday afternoons at the local theater. Armco’s headquarters were in Middletown and all of its executives lived in Middletown.
At some point in the sixties, things started to change. The company was incorporated in Delaware for tax purposes. The headquarters were relocated out of town. The company started to diversify into things like train car leasing. Executives no longer lived in town. Importantly, absentee ownership changed everything. [The Middletown works http://www.coalcampusa.com/rustbelt/oh/oh4.htm" rel="nofollow - recently .]
When I was growing up, the air and water in Middletown weren’t the
greatest because of the paper and steel production in the city. But the
owners of those companies had to breathe that same air and drink that
same water that my family did, and they worked to improve it. Same for
the schools and the parks and the roads. When those executives
became absentees, Middletown became just another page in the ledger
book, and the town began a decline that continues today. That
decline was accelerated by wealth that the enterprise created ending up
in a different town—New York or some other wealthy enclave.
That leads me to another observation. I lived for a time in
Mattapoisett, Massachusetts, which is on Buzzard’s Bay, near Cape Cod. [Below, from http://newenglandboating.com/destinations/focus-on-mattapoisett-massachusetts.html" rel="nofollow - New England Boating .]
Mattapoisett is a small port, with a history of building whaling
ships, including the Acushnet of Moby Dick fame. Mattapoisett is a few
miles from New Bedford, the home port of the Acushnet. In the heyday of
whaling, New Bedford was the wealthiest city in America. Most of that
wealth flowed through New Bedford into Newport RI and New York. Some of
it still remains in Nantucket.
Today, New Bedford is a depressed area. There is a lesson to be
learned from New Bedford about reinventing a community and reinvesting
in a community. (Actually it’s about NOT reinventing and reinvesting.)
New Bedford was a thriving community whose future potential was
squandered, whose resources of location and people were plundered. The
absentee owners didn’t enrich the community.
Back to Holland, there is a tradition of giving back to the
community. You used Ed Prince as one example. [The late industrialist,
who was a significant force behind the http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/08/holland-snowmelt-patient-capital-and-the-revival-of-downtown/278730/" rel="nofollow - "snowmelt" project
and the renovation of downtown.] But also people like me. I’m a
designer and I volunteer in the city for various organizations, like
being on the board of the Holland Area Arts Council. I have found that
my neighbors are very generous with their time and talent. It’s also
true that wealthy Hollanders give money to civic enterprises.
I’ve often thought that if what occurs voluntarily in Holland could
be institutionalized, towns like Middletown and New Bedford would do
better. For example, could a community resource tax be levied on
businesses to provide the niceties and forward thinking that separate
Holland from Middletown and New Bedford?
I hope this note is helpful in some way. I’d like for other communities to have what we have in Holland.
The point the message ends on is the challenging one: whether there
is any way to recreate the beneficial effects of local ownership (which
also has its http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/09/american-futures-grand-finale-holland-palooza/279293/" rel="nofollow - drawbacks ), in the globalized-capitalism age.
Two other closing items before we shift to Sioux Falls. First, the
effect Dennis Foley describes about Middletown -- that Armco execs had
to breathe the same air as everyone else -- is a major force for
environmental action in China. No matter how rich or powerful, no one
can escape the air. Second, why the stock certificate at the top? When I
was a kid, my fervent Republican small-businessman Uncle Joe gave me as
a birthday present a few shares of Armco stock, worth maybe $50, to
whet my interest in American business. Mainly I remember the beautiful
engraved stock certificates, which I still have somewhere. This partial
image http://scripophily.net/arsteelcor.html" rel="nofollow - from Scripophily . I have also put up a companion posting, with maps, on our Esri-geoblog http://www.theatlantic.com/special-report/american-futures-geoblog" rel="nofollow - site .
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/09/why-local-money-matters-the-middletown-story/279443/
Copyright © 2013 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved.