by Jim Tankersley
KANNAPOLIS, N.C. -- A red-brick symbol of North Carolina's economic transition is rising here, from the groomed dirt where 6 million square feet of textile mills once stood. Its pillars and crowning dome seem transplanted from the college town of Chapel Hill two hours north, which is entirely the point.
This is the first phase of the North Carolina Research Campus, a $1.5 billion plan to transform a small town outside Charlotte in the same way the state overhauled its economy: by building knowledge-driven industries amid the shuttered factories.
It's a formula that helped North Carolina's economy grow faster than the national average. But the innovation boom bypassed many. The poverty rate here exceeds the national average. Experts say a new sort of segregation has set in, with education levels, rather than race, barring workers from higher-paying jobs. Kannapolis officials estimate their health and biotech research campus will create at least 37,000 jobs. Those jobs are out of reach for some of the 4,000-plus workers laid off when the Pillowtex mill closed five years ago.
"North Carolina has made tremendous progress, and for the people who have been well-positioned, they've risen with the tide," said David Dodson, president of the non-profit MDC Inc., which champions economic opportunity in the South. "But for those people who don't have the skill set, the educational background, they are finding themselves locked out [economically] in a way race used to do."
For Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton, those workers' votes could make the difference in the state's presidential primary Tuesday--and in November.
Read all about it in today's Chicago Tribune.
Fifty years ago, North Carolina's textile-and-tobacco economy produced some of the lowest incomes per capita in the country. University, political and business leaders responded by creating arguably the most successful economic development project in U.S. history: the Research Triangle Park, 7,000 acres between North Carolina State University in Raleigh, Duke University in Durham and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The park's tenants, including technology giants, pharmaceutical makers and financial service firms, employ nearly 40,000 people. A robust banking industry has sprouted in Charlotte. State incomes have climbed.
The Charlotte and Raleigh areas now "are two of the stronger economies in the country," said Mark Vitner, a senior economist at Wachovia Corp. in Charlotte. But, he added, "Parts of the state ... have really been hit hard."
Replicating resurgence
When the mill that sustained Kannapolis for nearly 100 years closed, the town looked to replicate the Research Triangle Park on the mill's former grounds. The new research campus is backed by a $1.5 billion investment from David Murdock, the owner of Dole Foods. City Manager Mike Legg calls it "transformational."
For some former millworkers, transformation meant job retraining in service or support industries. Others ended up waiting tables.
Clinton is heavily courting such voters in hopes of an upset victory in the primary here. Polls show her running best in Charlotte and in the "old economy" towns in western North Carolina, which typically go Republican in general elections.
Obama's strength around Raleigh and among the state's sizable black population makes him the favorite, but to put North Carolina in play this fall, analysts say he needs working-class voters as well.
Ferrel Guillory, who directs the Program on Southern Politics, Media and Public Life at the University of North Carolina, said the state gives Obama "both a challenge and an opportunity to show that he's at least willing to get out there and talk to the kind of people who once worked in a textile mill and are now selling washing machines at Sears."
Others urge investment in community colleges and infrastructure programs--training and jobs for people who lack college degrees.
"We are not serious about mitigating the adverse impacts of global integration," said Rick Weddle, president and CEO of the Research Triangle Park. "We have this tendency to say, as a country, on average, it's been a good deal. Well, averages will get you in trouble. ... If you have one foot in boiling water and the other on an ice block, on average, the temperature's normal."







Comments
Unfortunately, it's NAFTA, again, and Senator Clinton, in her supposedly, advisory role to, then President Clinton, should have spoken out, loud and clear!! She should have spoken out about the catastrophic effects of this corporate contract would have on our economy, but she didn't!! It seems as though Senator Clinton has the bad habit of supporting initiatives that go south on her, not all of the time, but, sometimes!!
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE. NOW.
Posted by: Don Fitzgerald, Chicago | May 3, 2008 12:27 PM
Clinton Decries China's Acquisition of Indiana Company -- Ignoring Her Husband's Role in the Sale:
By JAKE TAPPER
Apr. 30, 2008
"As she campaigns throughout Indiana, Sen. Hillary Clinton has been talking quite a bit about Magnequench, a Valparaiso, Ind., factory that moved to China".
"We've got to elect a president next January who's going to remember Magnequench," Clinton told voters in Valparaiso on April 12.
"It seems, however, that when it comes to Magnequench there's quite a bit that Clinton has conveniently forgotten".
"We went to Valparaiso," Clinton told voters in Princeton, Ind., last night, "where there used to be a plant called Magnequench that made the magnets that helped to guide the precision-guided missiles, the so-called smart bombs. You've seen those they take off, they go down the chimney, they were incredibly sophisticated and these magnets, you know not the kind you put on the refrigerator, like we all do but these really sophisticated magnets were instrumental making that happen."
"Clinton continued, saying, "Well, a Chinese company bought Magnequench and then they decided that they were going to move the whole company from Indiana to China. Now the president of the United States has the authority to veto that kind of a move, but Senator [Evan] Bayh begged the Bush administration not to export it it was going to lose jobs but it was also going to lose the know-how, the technical sophistication that created those magnets. President Bush and his administration wouldn't, basically wouldn't even give Evan Bayh the time of day. Those jobs left, and along with them went the savvy to make the magnets."
"What Clinton doesn't tell voters is that Magnequench was originally sold to Chinese interests during her husband's administration, which okayed the move despite concerns about national security and eventual job loss. Experts say the Chinese acquired the "technical sophistication" that created the magnets long before George W. Bush took office."
"Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind,, Clinton's top surrogate in the state, often joins her on the stump in bashing the president for allowing Magnequench to move abroad. What Bayh doesn't tell voters these days is that he has blamed the company's moving on a 1995 decision made by Clinton's husband's administration."
Full Story here:
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/story?id=4757257&page=1
Posted by: John E | May 3, 2008 1:54 PM
Oh, just STOP it Don--you've said you'll let McCain win before you'll vote for Hillary.
Your hatred is so severe you do NOTHING but this blog attack on Hillary!
Even John (surrender monkey) Kerry --who's supported Obama (what's that tell ya) says NOBODY anticipated when they passed NAFTA that corporations would be so GREEDY.
At least HILLARY has talked about fixing it and knows how to-all Obama does is attack her.
Cut it ou!
Posted by: Sexist Pigs Blame Hillary First | May 3, 2008 3:14 PM