speeches · April 11, 2023
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2023
Investing in Rural America Conference
Hotel Roanoke
Roanoke, Va.
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As I talk to employers considering expansions and as I talk to community leaders
trying to recruit �rms, there's an increasing focus on talent.
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Small towns are going to have to up their games on the attraction, development and
retention of talent.
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Small towns in our district are recruiting talent like they cultivate employers: they are
telling their stories, making moving easy, creating incentives and strengthening their
homegrown workforce pipelines.
Thanks for joining us today. At the Richmond Fed, we're committed to understanding the
unique challenges faced by small towns and rural communities across our district. We are
constantly on the ground with local stakeholders in these communities, learning about
their challenges and promising solutions. Once a year, we invite these leaders, along with
other rural development experts, to share their perspectives on a bigger stage. I hope you
come away from this event as energized and recommitted as we do each year.
Over the last few decades, we've seen small towns struggle, particularly those that lost
manufacturers who had historically helped build communities, employ residents and forge
local identities. As a natural reaction, economic development in small town America has
often focused on replacing those big employers in order to rebuild the tax base and
reemploy those displaced. These e�orts attracted heavy investment in time and money, but
success wasn't easy.
In the last few years, the focus of recruiting e�orts has shifted. We saw it nationally with
Amazon's HQ2 decision a few years ago. When northern Virginia won this very competitive
contest, the determining factor didn't seem to be the direct economic incentives but
instead the state's workforce and commitment to develop an even stronger employee
pipeline.
The same criteria are coming to smaller towns. As I talk to employers considering
expansions and as I talk to community leaders trying to recruit �rms, there's an increasing
focus on talent. You hear it most clearly in reshoring conversations; businesses question
how they could relocate when they don't have con�dence they will �nd the necessary
workers.
The importance of a robust, reliable labor supply isn't news to small towns. We all know
their challenges in workforce recruitment and development. But, especially now that the
pandemic has tightened the labor market further, smaller communities are going to have
to �gure out how to put their best foot forward. To win, small towns are going to have to up
their games on the attraction, development and retention of talent. What does that entail?
One way that I like to frame this challenge is by comparing it to cultivation of employers.
Small towns will need to recruit talent the way they recruit companies, which means
pursuing four strategies.
Small towns need to tell their stories. The last few years opened a door. Workers seem to
increasingly value what small towns o�er — space, a�ordability, the outdoors. And of
course, remote work frees workers to live anywhere. But open doors don't guarantee new
workers will walk in. Each town is now competing with every other small town. That's where
the story comes in.
These stories almost always start with a sense of place, and there are a lot of options. In
Lake City, South Carolina, for example, a nine-day art festival and competition has
expanded the creative economy and brought crowds to town. With displays in a wide array
of local venues, the town isn't just showcasing art, it's showcasing what Lake City has to
o�er.
Other towns create a sense of place by rehabilitating their downtowns and bringing in
shopping and restaurants. Danville, here in Virginia, comes to mind. It has developed its
riverfront, building apartments with nearby dining establishments and creating a lively,
downtown feel.
Towns can leverage nearby amenities. As Fayetteville, West Virginia, transitioned away from
coal, it turned to outdoor recreation, which in turn attracted entrepreneurial types who in
turn created an entrepreneurial culture that persisted.
If a town can't tell a story on its own, we are seeing regions work together to bundle one.
Southwest Virginia has The Crooked Road heritage music trail, the historic Barter Theatre in
Abingdon, the Spearhead Trails for adventure, and wineries, breweries and shopping for
after the adventure. In southern West Virginia, we've seen similar e�orts built around the
Hat�eld-McCoy Trails.
It's not always about starting something new to create a sense of place but about
successfully selling what you already are. We'll hear this afternoon from Colleen Roberts
who will share on the "If you build it, will they come?" panel about how New Bern, North
Carolina, survived a hurricane and found a compelling way to communicate its story.
These stories bring in new talent. But they also help keep kids from moving away. I grew up
in Tampa. In Tampa, the draw was clear. It's warm. We have beaches. We constantly asked
ourselves: Why would anyone leave? And really only I did.
In today's world, the ultimate barrier to moving is housing. Every town seeing success is
experiencing this challenge. Simply put, the math isn't working to put new residents into
a�ordable homes. We don't have enough supply. And building is getting ever more
expensive with construction, interest and labor costs up.
Small towns face their own issues. Their housing stock is often less contemporary. Rough
terrain and absentee landlords often inhibit construction. Developers often have better
options elsewhere.
But I ask myself: Why can't we change the math? If we can �nd the funding to create
buildable sites for businesses, why can't we develop buildable homesites for developers? If
cities can transform o�ce space into apartments, why can't small towns repurpose their
old commercial or municipal spaces into residences?
Carroll County, Virginia, did just that. Working with Virginia Housing Development Authority
and developer Landmark Asset Services, it transformed a historic high school into 51
a�ordable housing units. The county donated the school. Virginia Housing helped identify
Landmark as a willing developer and o�ered permanent �nancing at a below-market rate.
Landmark brought its expertise in adaptive reuse and a�ordable housing development.
Together, they made the math work.
This afternoon, we will hear from DeWitt House of the Harvest Foundation who will be
sharing how public-private partnerships can make the math work. They are standing up a
new neighborhood with a�ordable housing units in Martinsville, Virginia.
Making moving easy (for both workers and their spouses) also means ensuring access to
high-speed, reliable broadband. We've talked about this for years, but the last three years
really brought it home. Progress is coming, as the funds provided in the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act fully roll out. But the mere existence of funding is not enough — it
needs to reach the communities in need. At one of this morning's panels, you can hear
from Heidi Binko of the Just Transition Fund which is focusing on ensuring available public
funding makes it to such communities.
West Virginia is actually testing out a pretty direct incentive. Through their Ascend West
Virginia program, they are paying a select set of individuals to move to the state. The
incentives include $12,000 over the �rst two years, access to free coworking space, and free
outdoor recreation and gear rental for a year. We're glad to have one of the key architects
of the program, Danny Twilley, here with us today.
But there are other ways to motivate people to join their local workforce.
Let's start with child care because �nding and paying for high quality child care can become
so costly it makes more sense for a parent to stay home. United Way of Southwest Virginia
has leveraged state and federal funding to expand access to a�ordable child care by
creating a new facility, giving technical assistance to existing ones and building up the
sector's workforce — with the intent that local employers will support these facilities over
time. In West Virginia, the Chamber of Commerce worked to get legislation passed last year
to provide a tax credit to businesses that create a childhood facility on their premises.
Transportation is also a motivator to connect people to places of employment. It has
attracted some controversy, but beach communities have transported workers into their
markets for years. The city of Wilson, North Carolina, is trying a more tailored approach; it
has partnered with Via Transportation to replace its traditional bus system with an on-
demand microtransit service. This allows riders to get curb-to-curb rides for a low price,
saving time and expanding access to those who did not previously live near a bus route.
Approximately half the rides are to or from work.
Communities are also tackling more personal barriers to entry, like health or criminal
records. We will hear more in this morning's panel on drawing talent o� the sidelines.
Education and connecting locals to jobs is an evergreen challenge. But we are seeing a lot
of innovation in this arena.
GO TEC (which stands for Great Opportunities in Technology and Engineering Careers) is
helping build a pipeline of talent for Virginia's strategic sectors. Hoping to spark early
interest, the program exposes middle schoolers to various career pathways, such as
robotics and health care, as well as industry jargon and relevant equipment. Once in high
school, students have access to industry certi�cation programs, and may then pursue
postsecondary degrees. Telly Tucker, president of the Institute for Advanced Learning and
Research, is a key partner in the e�ort and is on one of our panels this afternoon.
The STEM East Network in North Carolina is training the key in�uencers in youth's lives —
educators — to understand the workforce needs of the region. The hope is they in turn will
help students visualize what participating in the local labor market could be like.
The Surry-Yadkin Works partnership, in North Carolina, allows high school students to
intern at local companies and access resources at their local community college. Students
earn a real wage, a transportation subsidy, work experience, and the opportunity to get
college credit and industry-recognized credentials. Nearly 70 percent of participants
continued to work on their internships after �nishing the experience.
To close, it's trendy to say that post-COVID-19 we are in a "new normal." But I really do
think, when it comes to small town economic development, the ground has shifted. The
focus that employers are placing on talent is palpable, and those who can supply that talent
will be the winners. The good news is that remote work puts a lot more small towns in the
competitive set, and that small towns o�er a sense of place and community that many of
today's workers want, so long as they can provide the housing, broadband and amenities
that these workers need.
I walked through some promising examples today of how communities are innovating, but
there are many more to share, and I look forward to learning from all our panelists. Now I
want to turn it over to U.S. Sen. Mark Warner. You all know him well, but I want to thank
him for setting me and the Richmond Fed on this journey supporting small towns. In my
�rst meeting with him, he urged me to dig into the di�erences in economic outcomes
between urban and rural markets, and between similarly situated smaller towns. He
inspired all we are doing, and I look forward to learning more from him now. Thanks, and
enjoy the rest of the day.
Employment and Labor Markets Small Town and Rural Communities
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2023, April 11). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20230412_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20230412_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2023},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20230412_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}