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Monday, February 7, 2011

Unemployment and Irrelevant Statistics - the scam most of us understand

Prologue: Below is an article from Paul Craig Roberts related to the latest Unemployment statistics released on Friday. Then there is also an article that was released on Friday. The bottom line is that these two articles go into further detail of what I have been addressing over the last 2 1/2 years. If the trends are allowed to continue, then we are going to see an exponential hockey stick curve of job losses continue to accelerate over the next couple of years. Of course the long term and permanently unemployed numbers will continue to increase, keeping the real unemployment rate artificially low, but these numbers are proving to be irrelevant and only cause the distrust of the government and their self-serving agenda to fester.

The PR stunt that is the production and communication of these delusional numbers are right out of the George Orwell 1984 playbook. These low numbers keep the government from taking the urgent action that is needed and necessary. The lack of empathy and honesty directed towards the working class is not going to end well for the rulers and narcissistic elite of the nation. Common Sense tells us that.

The Official Unemployment Rate;
an
"Official" Lie

KINGSTON, NY, 7 February 2011 — Do you believe Friday’s government report that the unemployment (U.3) rate fell last month from 9.4 percent to 9.0 percent? How could the rate decrease when January only saw a reported increase in payroll employment of 36,000 jobs when some 150,000 new jobs are needed to be created each month just to stay even with population growth?

According to Friday’s Bureau of Labor Statistics report, a 0.4 percentage point decline in the unemployment rate means “the number of unemployed persons decreased by about 600,000.” Where did the other 564,000 January jobs come from as they cannot be found in the reported jobs data?

The jobs are phantom jobs created by faulty seasonal adjustments. As statistician John Williams (shadowstats.com) puts it, “the extraordinary severity and duration of the economic duress in the United States during the last three to four years has destabilized traditional seasonal-factor adjustments and the related monthly reporting.”

In other words, the 564,000 people are, in reality, unemployed and are not employed in the non-existent seasonally-adjusted jobs that the government added to the numbers. Williams reports that the unadjusted data show that “the employment rate rose in January.”

It’s BLS magic. Unemployment rose, but the unemployment rate fell.

Washington pulled the same stunt last month. Using this government ploy, theoretically, the U.S. could have a zero unemployment rate while the entire population is out of work!

Don’t expect the financial press to tell you what this Trend Alert just told you. In response to the cooked numbers, Bloomberg quoted economists, whose job is to hype recovery, that “we’re setting ourselves up for a pretty strong improvement in payrolls.” (4 February 2011)

According to John Williams, even the measly 36,000 job gain is an illusion created by the faulty “birth-death” model, which guesses that new startups add more jobs each month than business failures subtract. This might sometimes be true, but not during an economic downturn. Without the jobs added by this faulty estimating technique, “the reported January 2011 payroll gain of 36,000 would have been a decline of 52,000!”

Indeed, the BLS “birth-death” model’s over-estimate of payroll jobs results in quiet annual revisions in the number of employed. In Friday’s employment report, largely unnoticed by the financial press, the BLS reports in its benchmark revision that there were 483,000 fewer people employed in December 2010 than previously reported.

The U.3 unemployment rate is the headline rate. It receives all the media attention, because it only measures 40 percent of the unemployed, thus making the recession look smaller than it really is. No discouraged workers who have given up looking for work are included. The government has a more complete measure of the unemployment rate known as U.6, which includes the short term discouraged (less than one year). That rate is16.1 percent. John Williams adds in the long term discouraged, which brings the true rate of unemployment to 22.2 percent.

Economists have no known way of explaining how an economy, in which millions of manufacturing and professional service jobs have been offshored, can compensate for the lost American incomes and purchasing power. The profits from offshoring flow to a narrow segment of the population consisting of corporate management, shareholders, and Wall Street. These income flows cannot replace the millions of lost incomes and careers of those whose jobs have disappeared. There is a limit on the ability of the mega-rich to buy and to consume. The consumption of a few people cannot drive an economy. This is why the concentration of income and wealth in a few hands kills an economy.

For a decade the American economy has been driven by private debt accumulation. Today policymakers in Washington are trying to drive the economy with public debt accumulation. The plan cannot succeed. The annual budget deficit of the U.S. government is being financed by the Federal Reserve by creating new money. For now, because of the impaired condition of U.S. financial institutions and the over-indebtedness of the American population, the money injected into the financial system by the Federal Reserve is not being lent. The banks need the reserves to bolster their solvency and consumers are too indebted to borrow. Thus, the money multiplier has collapsed, preventing the Federal Reserve’s money creation from resulting in rapidly increasing inflation.

More BS from the BLS Just as the unemployment rate is understated, so is the Consumer Price Index. The CPI no longer measures the prices of a fixed basket of goods, but assumes that people substitute cheaper items for those that rise more in price.

Moreover, inflation can also arise from decline in the dollar’s exchange rate vis-a-vis other currencies. With the dollar being the world reserve currency, many commodities are priced in dollars. As more dollars are being created than other currencies, food and commodity prices are rising as a result of the dollar’s falling exchange rate.


The Fed chairman says that he can avoid inflation when it appears by pulling the excess money out of the economy by selling bonds. But the Fed can sell bonds only by lowering bond prices, thus raising interest rates. What do you think happens to the depressed U.S. economy if interest rates rise?

Stocks and whatever remains of the housing market would collapse, as would the bond portfolios of whatever remains of Americans’ pension funds. The remnants of the investment incomes of ordinary people would be wiped out.

In other words, the Fed believes it can control the inflation, whose seeds it is planting, by wiping out the remnants of the wealth, and the income from it, of ordinary people.


This tells you all you need to know.

by Paul Craig Roberts

©MMXI The Trends Research Institute®


Find A Job? Good Luck In This Economy – 10 Reasons Why The Latest Unemployment Numbers Are No Reason To Cheer - The Economic Collapse Blog - February 4th, 2011
- The U.S. government is telling us that the unemployment rate fell all the way down to 9.0% in January. Should we all cheer? Is it now going to be a lot easier to find a job? Has the economy finally turned around? Are happy days here again? Well, it is a good thing to have a positive attitude, but the truth is that there is just not much to cheer about when you take a closer look at the recent unemployment numbers. First of all, the U.S. economy only added 36,000 jobs in January. Economists had been expecting an increase of about 145,000 jobs, and an increase of 150,000 jobs per month is necessary just to keep up with population growth. So why did the unemployment rate go down? Well, the government says that over half a million Americans suddenly dropped out of the labor force in January. That doesn't make a lot of sense, but this is how the government calculates their numbers. So what happened to those 500,000 Americans? Did they all win the lottery? Have they all become independently wealthy? Did they all die? No, the vast majority of them are still around and the vast majority of them still desperately need jobs. It is just that the government does not count them as "looking for work" anymore.

It would be great if the employment situation in America actually was getting better. All the time people send me absolutely heartbreaking stories about what they have had to endure in this economy. Soon I hope to share some of those stories with you all. It is hard to try to describe the absolute horror that many Americans are going through right now.

People would like to believe that things are going to get better, but unfortunately that is just not going to be the case. The government can try to massage the numbers to make them look better, but the truth is that the tens of millions of American families that are deeply suffering right now are not fooled.

The following are 10 statistics that reveal that the latest unemployment numbers from the government are no reason to cheer....

#1 According to CNBC, economists were expecting the U.S. economy to add 145,000 jobs during January. Obviously the 36,000 figure was a huge disappointment.

#2 Approximately 150,000 jobs need to be added to the economy each month just to keep up with population growth.

#3 The government jobs report also indicated that 504,000 Americans "dropped out of the labor force" in January. That may make the unemployment numbers look better, but the truth is that the vast majority of those 500,000 Americans still need incomes and still need jobs.

#4 According to the latest numbers from Gallup, the unemployment rate actually increased to 9.8% at the end of January.

#5 Gallup's measure of "underemployment" (those that are unemployed plus those that are working part-time but want full-time employment) was sitting at 18.9% at the end of January.

#6 As I reported yesterday, there are approximately 28 million Americans that would like full-time jobs but that don't have full-time jobs.

#7 According to Zero Hedge, the number of Americans that are "not in the labor force" but that would like a job right now has hit an all-time record high. If you add all of those people into the official unemployment figure it would jump to 12.8%.

#8 According to Calculated Risk, this is the deepest and most brutal employment downturn that the United States has experienced since World War II. The current employment downturn started 37 months ago and there doesn't seem to be any indication that we will return to pre-recession levels any time soon.

#9 The U.S. Labor Department has also announced that job growth during 2010 was much weaker than they had previously reported. The numbers for 8 months were revised down, and the numbers for 4 months were revised up. After all of the revisions are accounted for, it turns out that a total of 215,000 fewer jobs were created during 2010 than originally calculated.

#10 According to one brand new survey, 4 out of every 10 Americans are struggling "a lot" to pay the bills right now.

The situation is not pretty out there. The U.S. needs tens of millions more jobs than we have right now.

So where are all of our jobs going? The video posted below contains some very strong hints. The truth is that globalism is ripping our economic infrastructure apart, and all of the crazy rules and regulations we keep heaping on business are not helping either....

U.S. workers have been merged into a "global labor pool" where we are expected to directly compete for jobs with people making slave labor wages on the other side of the globe.

The more time you spend thinking about that, the more you start realizing that the standard of living of average American families is going to continue to decline.

Unfortunately, as I wrote about in a recent article entitled "Nothing Is Stable Anymore", the world is changing faster today than at any other time during our lifetimes. Everything that we used to assume about employment, money, our economy and our finances is being turned upside down. We now live in a world where very little can be taken for granted.

2011 has already been a very tumultuous year. The world is being transformed. Nobody knows for sure what is going to happen next.

One thing to really keep an eye on is the price of oil. Right now, large numbers of investors are betting that the price of oil will rise to $125 a barrel by May. Shockingly, some investors are even betting that the price of oil will rise to $250 a barrel by next December.

If oil starts to spike dramatically, it will have tremendous implications for the U.S. economy. Our entire economic system runs on oil. The price of oil affects the price of everything else.

If the price of oil keeps going up it is inevitably going to cause a slowdown in the U.S. economy and it will cause the unemployment situation to get even worse.

So be glad that the employment situation is at least somewhat stable for now, because if things take a bad turn for the worse in 2011 who knows what kind of unemployment numbers we'll be talking about a year from now.


detnews.com - Ford's most advanced assembly plant operates in rural Brazil

Friday, February 4, 2011

Texas Tea - When do we learn?

An article I contributed to the Hickory Daily Record in late August 2008:
We need more Energy

It’s sad when Paris Hilton makes more sense than government leaders. PickensPlan.com and AmericanSolutions.com have plans that do exactly what she espouses in her commercial. Read them and think about joining them.

Most everyone agrees that our current energy policies are unacceptable. Demonizing fossil fuels will not solve the problem. Look around you Plastic, Glass, Metal, Fiber, and Silicon all need Oil and Coal to produce. There is no Utopian alternative available. Admitting to having a problem is the first step towards solving it. We will have to utilize carbon-based energy for many generations to come. We have and will continue to become more efficient in its usage. The population continues to grow and immediate elimination of fossil fuels will lead to grave consequences.

We currently produce around 6% of our energy using renewables. We aren't going to find the other 94% overnight. I love Wind Turbines, Solar Panels, Hydro Electric, Nuclear, etc. and hope we find true breakthroughs soon, but I refuse to fall victim to the green rhetoric that is contributing to the stagnation, litgation, and burdensome regulation of our economy.

Creation and expansion of energy resources creates value. Our government (which is us) would be paid fees and royalties for the right to drill, which should be invested in renewable energy projects. Economics 101 shows that increased supplies of energy will bring prices down. It’s a win-win.

We must keep energy money in the USA, because it protects national security, keeps the dollar strong, and supports quality high tech jobs. As stewards of the planet, we are all environmentalists. We can responsibly use its bountiful resources.

James Thomas Shell

What has changed. Why did we not learn any lessons from $4 gasoline? Remember when the Hurricane hit the Gulf of Mexico in mid September that year and the gasoline lines?

Oil fell below $40 a barrel and hovered around $70 over the subsequent two years and everyone went back to sleep, because gas seemed affordable compared to those $4+ prices. Everyone seems to want to forget that period that kick started the economic slide that continues to assault the American middle class. You cannot wish these economic realities away and we have wasted time in we should have been fervently addressing these issues. The crescendo of these realities continue to build and anyone who cares to face the truth can obviously see that we still face the same issues today as we did 2 1/2 years ago.

Today Oil hit $103 per barrel. This steady march has little to do with what we see in Egypt. The main reason, in my opinion, for this progressive increase is the devaluation of our currency. But, what we see is our vulnerability in relation to the world economy. Just as we have seen the rise in staple food commodities and precious metals that I addressed in the article Icelandic volcano displays our vulnerability related to the World Economy. The United States needs to get its house in order and address the issues that it faces.

It is obvious that Egypt is a powder keg, even though most people don't really understand the forces at play under the current state of affairs. You can't really trust what you see and hear as relayed by our media, who never tells it like it is. We all know that they serve an agenda. Isn't that obvious? The media has joined forces with the people who they support in our government and that is the viewpoint you will get. There is no objectivity.

The problems with Egypt are fairly simple. They made a deal with Israel and have suffered some severe consequences as a result of that deal. The Arabs really don't want to help Mubarak or this regime, because of the deal they made with Israel. This deal got Anwar Sadat assassinated. Egypt fought wars against Israel in 1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973. The peace accords came in 1979 and Sadat was assassinated in 1981. The economy is terrible and the people are starving, because of the worldwide increase in food prices (Global Food Prices Hit All-Time High As Violence Erupts In Yemen - February 3, 2011 - Forbes.com).

The Suez Canal is the key in this whole scenario. Israel took control of the Sinai Peninsula after the Six-Day War in 1967. They occupied the entire Peninsula until the peace accords were signed in 1979. Egypt closed the Suez Canal after the June 1967 war and did not reopen it until June 1975.

The people of Egypt look at the United States as an entity that fostered the relationship between Egypt and Israel. Egypt's membership to the League of Arab Nations was suspended in 1979 after it signed a peace treaty with Israel; the league's headquarters was moved from Cairo, Egypt, to Tunis, Tunisia. In 1987, Arab leaders decided to renew diplomatic ties with Egypt. Egypt was readmitted to the league in 1989 and the league's headquarters was moved back to Cairo.

Many people in Egypt and around the world understand the power of the American dollar. The Dollar is the World Reserve Currency. Oil is traded on world markets in American dollars. The people of Egypt (and the world) may not completely understand the role of the Federal Reserve in the loss of value of the American dollar as a monetary instrument, but they understand its force as a means of trade. The loss of value of the dollar (inflation) has played a major role in the growing expense of food. This increased cost is not affordable to the poor people of Egypt. Do you not think that these people are going to blame us for this.

Strike three is the fact that these people see these ships flowing through their canal and they know where that oil is flowing to. Can you really not understand the thin ice that we are treading on? Isn't it time to stop the games and face the reality? Or are we going to still stick our head in the sand and pretend that these problems don't exist?

It is time to quit compartmentalizing these issues. They are all interconnected. It is time to face the challenges. We can achieve energy independence and defuse these time bomb situations. People talk about being self-reliant and at the same time they refuse to understand the context of this dangerous world and the challenges we face. We are vulnerable, because the vast majority of the people of this nation refuse to face the real issues of the day and therefore a day of reckoning is fast approaching. It saddens me to know this, but folks we are pushing a snowball up a hill and we better wake up or bad things we never fathomed being possible just a few years ago will not only be at our doorstep, they will happen!!!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Newsletter about the City Council meeting of February 1, 2011

This newsletter is about the Hickory City Council meeting that I attended this past week. City council meetings are held on the first and third Tuesdays of each Month in the Council Chambers of the Julian Whitener building.

At right of this page under Main Information links is an Hickory's City Website link. If you click on that link, it takes you to our city’s website, at the left of the page you will see the Agenda's and Minutes link you need to click. This will give you a choice of PDF files to upcoming and previous meetings.

You will find historic Agenda and Minutes links. Agendas show what is on the docket for the meeting of that date. The Minutes is an actual summary of the proceedings of the meeting of that date.

Here is a summary of the agenda of the 1/18/2010 meeting. There were a couple of important items that were discussed at this meeting and the details are listed further below:

Please remember that pressing Ctrl and + will magnify the text and page and pressing Ctrl and - will make the text and page smaller. This will help the readability for those with smaller screens and/or eye difficulties.

Invocation by Rev. Deborah McEachran, Associate Pastor of First Presbyterian Church

Consent Agenda:
A. Proclamation Declaring February 7 – 14, 2011 as “Congenital Heart Defect Awareness Week” in the City of Hickory

Mayor Wright addressed the attendees of the Council meeting concerning the subject of congenital heart defects. He spoke about how his daughter, when she was in her late 20s, found out that she had a congenital heart defect that was discovered while she was scuba diving. The procedure was done, which remedied the problem with minimal invasion.

There were a couple of children that came down and stood before the Council with their families. These were very young children (under 4 years old) who have these congenital heart defects. One of the children has had a couple of procedures already and is looking to have more procedures done in the near future. The other child is getting ready to enter treatment and have a procedure done.

The proclamation reads:
Whereas, congenital heart defects are the most frequently occurring birth defects in the leading cause of birth defects worldwide; whereas. Over million families across America are facing challenges and hardships of raising children with congenital heart defects; whereas every year 40,000 babies are born in the US with congenital heart defects, and some are not diagnosed until months or years after birth; whereas an undiagnosed congenital heart conditions causes many cases of sudden cardiac death in young athletes; whereas these statistics newborns and young athletes are not routinely screened for congenital heart defects; whereas a disproportionately small amount of funding is available for congenital heart defect research and support, scientists through the use of March of Dimes funds and other sources study genes that may underlie specific heart defects and identify new genes that may cause heart defects; whereas congenital heart defect awareness week provides an opportunity for families whose lives have been affected. To celebrate life and to remember loved ones lost. To honor dedicated health professionals and to meet others and to know that they are not long. And whereas the establishment of congenital heart defect awareness week will also provide the opportunity to share experiences and information with the public and the media to raise public awareness about congenital heart defects.

B. Approve Pyrotechnic Display Permits by Hickory Crawdads for Events Held at LP Frans Stadium - The Hickory Crawdads have submitted a request to obtain permission to allow Pyro Shows Incorporated to provide fireworks after the following games held at LP Frans Stadium: April 8, May 27, June 17, 24, July 4, 8, 22, August 12, 19 and September 2, 2011 with specific rain dates noted. The Fire Prevention Bureau will inspect the pyrotechnics display area prior to the events to ensure compliance with all guidelines.

C. Approve Submission of 2011 Urgent Repair Program Application for Funding to the NC Housing Finance Agency - The City of Hickory is required to submit an application for funding for the 2011 Urgent Repair Program to the NC Housing Finance Agency by March 7, 2011 and will apply for $37,500 in funds. These program funds will be utilized to assist a minimum of ten eligible homes with urgently needed repairs in an amount not to exceed $5,000 per housing unit. The City will provide $3,750 in matching funds available from Rental Rehabilitation Program income and there is a $50 application fee.

D. Approve City’s Offer to Purchase and Contract for Property Owned by the Estate of Pinkie Lou Mull Located at 807 3rd Street Place, SW in the Amount of $4,200 - The City’s purchase of this property will assist in the Citizens’ Advisory Committee’s work plan to provide affordable housing in the Ridgeview Community; it will promote City Council’s goal of promoting affordable housing in Hickory and it complies with Habitat for Humanity’s Redevelopment Plan for 8th Ave Dr, SW. The tax value of the property is $36,700 with a land value of $4,600. The vacant house on the property will be demolished and affordable housing constructed increasing homeownership within the City. The property will be purchased with Community Development Block Grant Funds. Staff recommends approval.
E. Request by Josh’s on Union Square for Use of Union Square for American Red Cross Blood Drive on February 14, 2011 From 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m

Budget Ordinance Amendments
1. To budget a $2,500 Library donation from Friends of the Library for preschool outreach books ($1,500) and senior outreach DVD’s ($1,000).
2. To budget a total of $265 of Library donations from various donors in the book line item.


Informational Items:
A. Report of Mayor Wright’s Travel to Raleigh, NC on January 20, 2011 to Attend the 2011-2012 NCLM Advocacy Goals Conference; registration - $75
New Business - Public Hearings:
1. Voluntary Contiguous Annexation of the Property of Martha Killian Located at 523 29th Avenue Drive, NW - A petition was submitted by Martha Killian for voluntary contiguous annexation for property located at 523 29th Avenue Drive, NW. This property is Ms. Killian’s primary residence and requests to be connected to the City’s water and sewer system. The 0.484 acres is currently located in the City’s extra-territorial jurisdictional area and zoned R-2 Residential with a tax value of $72,800. If annexed, the property will generate an additional $364.00 in tax revenues. The property meets all statutory requirements for voluntary annexation and adequate public services are available. This public hearing was advertised in a newspaper having general circulation in the Hickory area on January 21, 2011. Cal Overby Presentation. Council Unanimous Consent.

New Business - Departmental Reports:
1. Consider Nominating the Former Ridgeview Public Library to the National Register of Historic Places - The former Ridgeview Public Library was built in 1951 and moved from its original location to 415 1st Street, SW in 1998 for construction of the current Ridgeview Library. The building’s historical significance stems from its association with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of the City’s history. On January 25, 2011 a public hearing was held by the Hickory Historic Preservation Commission who voted unanimously to recommend approval of the nomination. The process begins with the submission of a nomination to the North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office and is scheduled for February 10, 2010. If approved by the National Register Advisory Committee and placed on the National Register of Historic Places, the property owner will not be required to have alterations approved by the Hickory Historic Preservation Commission unless the property owner wants the structure designated as a local landmark. Dave Leonetti Presentation. Council Unanimous Consent.
Ald. Meisner asked if Interfaith would be able to utilize tax credits (associated with this status). Mr. Leonetti stated that they would. Currently they have been paying property tax on the building, since they have owned it. Around 10 years can. That building is not central to their mission. Tax credits can also be sold on the open market.

Ald. Seaver asked if this was a first step towards revitalizing the building? Mr. Leonetti stated that it was. Mayor Wright stated that he believed that Council members should make every effort to facilitate this process for the refurbishing. He stated that he was going to give a donation and believed everyone else should take that into consideration.


***Persons Requesting to be Heard***
Proposed Cell Phone Tower behind Lakeview Baptist Church (The Mayor stated on Hal Row's show on 2/7/2010 that the property belongs to Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church)
Renée Eller was the first person to address the Council. Ms. Eller is a resident of Hunter’s Run. She stated that her reason for being here tonight was confusion. She received a notice in the mail about a planning commission hearing that would take place in January. She stated that there were no reasons on the notice about the reason for this special use permit hearing that was going to take place. She stated that this notice was one page front and back.

She stated that it appeared to her as a homeowner and a regular person that this was something that she should be concerned about, because it appeared on paper that this cell tower was going to be in her backyard. She added, but this was not something the screamed to her that this was going to be a final decision and she absolutely needed to hire an attorney, an appraiser, and get the neighbors all on board.

She went to the hearing and made a presentation. Parts of her presentation did not play. She had an actual video of American Tower Corporation's current tower off of Highway 127. It is the roosting location of a huge flock of Turkey vultures and black vultures. That tower is not maintained. That tower upon retrospect, and looking at the picture, started out as a pole very similar to what American Tower Corp. proposes to put on the lot behind her house.

She submitted a petition that reads that the residents of Hickory, North Carolina and elsewhere attest that they are in opposition of the installation of American Tower Corp.'s 185 foot tower on the properties located at or near 3710 N. Center St. They call on the City Council to request a moratorium. She states that she is not an attorney and she does not know the procedure and what became apparent to her in the days following the hearing is that almost nobody knows the procedure.

The basis of this argument is that expert testimony and legal counsel presented too much material at the meeting. That homeowners and planning commission members had almost no time to evaluate, review, or oppose the booklet. One commission member stated, I cannot consider it. Ms. Eller further stated, Given the fact that American tower had the time to consult, hire, and obtain the services of experts to testify and create supportive documents, she believes that opposing homeowners should need an adequate amount of time to hire their own experts....

She went on to add that the city's procedures in issuing a special use permit includes a statement that the proposed use will not cause substantial diminution and value of the other property in the neighborhood in which it is located. Adequate assurances of continuing maintenance have to be provided. Neither of these have been shown. The photos provided to the planning commission by American Towers are not an adequate representation of what the finished tower will look like.

Despite assurances about maintenance of the property where the current tower is located on Highway 127, it is clearly not maintained. They are concerned that the vultures may consider the new tower an appropriate roosting location and that American Tower Corporation's suggested method to eradicate vultures consists of hanging dead vultures on the tower. The installation of the cellular antenna is inconsistent with the character of the neighborhoods in the surrounding location. They hope that the city of Hickory will discourage antenna and tower proliferation and protect against visual blight and damage to the community aesthetics. She states that they believe that AT&T and other cellular companies need to find more appropriate locations in nearby commercial and industrial areas away from residential neighborhoods.

Perceived property values, when people go to buy a house, they don't get into a car with an attorney and a commercial real estate appraiser; they get into the car with a Realtor. 9 out of 10 of them are women. Women look at a cell phone tower and they have perceived health care threats for their children, whether or not that is valid, they believe something horrible is going to happen to their children, because of this cell phone tower….

We're Hickory North Carolina. I think of us as a progressive down. There are alternatives to what they have proposed. I absolutely support the church and their need for money, but I think that we need ordinances and requirements... we should encourage and require them (American Tower) to put in cell phone towers that are suitable and can blend in to the environment, which it is in.

David French also addressed the Council and reiterated the feelings of Ms. Elmore, who is his neighbor. He stated that he has been living in this home for three years. One of the things that is appealing is when you drive onto the block there are no power lines. Something like this pop up after you've moved into the neighborhood and it just seems so wrong.

Tammy Gunn next addressed the Council. She lives in the same neighborhood and she was at the planning commission meeting that night and said her piece. When she was looking up information, she Googled the cell tower site and the first thing that popped up was an advertisement wanting residents to put a cell tower in their backyard and make money.

We're in a bad economy right now in your going to have a lot of this coming up. This is a church, but you will have other people, wanting to put a tower on their property to make money... A lot of the committee members were confused and they didn't seem to know how to respond to it.
She doesn't think it was right that they voted that night. The residents are just wanting to have a re-hearing or just to look over it again. The vote was 5-4. She feels that if they would have had more time that they would've won that.

She doesn't know what the next process is, but we don't have the money to hire an attorney to represent us. What she was told is the next process is to appeal it to the Superior Court and they just cannot do that, because she doesn't know what that all goes into. She is appealing to the Council to just look at it again and communicate with the planning department or the commission and put something together so this doesn't happen again, because if they suffer with it, they don't want the next neighborhood to have to. We have a beautiful skyline right now. If you want to see these all over Hickory, then don't do anything. She feels that there's going to be a problem.

Dr. Birjis Shenoy next addressed the Council. He is concerned that they're setting the precedent of having the cell towers in residential type of neighborhoods.

A Mr. Carpenter, next addressed the Council and stated that he was unable to attend the planning commission meeting. He didn't realize that this procedure was going to be heard and passed that night without any opportunity do any research. He is concerned with the long-term effect of a cell tower being in his backyard.... He doesn't know if the planning committee had time to do their research. He is also concerned with property values.

Everyone's property value has taken a hit over the last few years. If it is like the tower on Hwy 127, I don't think that I would want to live there. If that is the case and my property value takes a hit, I think the city would be concerned about the revenue that they will be losing in taxes. You would certainly think that the planning committee would sit down and take all of this into consideration and do their research and not just have a cell phone company bringing their dog and pony show, coming in and selling something. And no one knows what's going on. The comments that he heard were that some of the people on the committee didn't have any answers and didn't know and couldn't answer. So they didn't have time to look at that. So how can you vote on something and pass it and not knowing what you are voting for? What they are asking for is to have this reheard. I know that the City Council said that they are separate from the planning committee, but you are all that we have . So we're asking for your help.

The Mayor commended the group. He stated that he went out and looked and tower is closer to Jenkins than the neighborhood, but it will certainly be within sight of the neighborhood. He stated that he would like Mr. Crone and Ms. Dula to take a look at this from the standpoint of the city and ask Mr. Berry to communicate with the neighbors.

Attorney Crone stated that he would urge them to seek legal counsel immediately. The jurisdiction is not with City Council at this point. It was a quasi judicial hearing. According to Ms. Dula, the hearing was properly advertised. There was a hearing and evidence was presented. The appeal process is to the Superior Court. There is some time limitations there -- 30 days from the hearing. We changed our process, about 15 or 16 years ago. We gave the responsibility of certain types of hearings to the planning commission. And that is one of those types airings. As to the facts of whether it is in a proper zoning area, I was not at the public hearing, but it does sound like some of the neighbors had a notice of the hearing and this type of hearing is unlike the types of hearings we (council) have as of the legislative nature. Unfortunately, you do not have the jurisdiction to do that (appeals process). The appeals process does not go to you as a City Council.

Ald. Meisner stated that he believes that Ms. Gunn made a good point. He doubts that there is any use other than our residential within 1000 feet of that tower. Maybe we need to look at that... remedying this in the future. And certainly if it is on their website that they are asking for people to make money, I am sure there is multitude of people that need money.

The Council further decided to look at this issue at the Council retreat, possibly at the next City Council meeting, Ald. Patton suggested speaking with the church, Ald. Lail stated that he would like further communication with Attorneys Crone and Dula over why the city as a municipal corporation would not have the right to appeal the decision of the planning commission. Attorney Dula stated that that was by statute. Ald. Meisner asked if the school board was present during the hearing to which Mr. Frazier answered no. Ald. Fox stated that she had a constituent that was very concerned, because the principal at Jenkins was unaware that all of this was going on. She had a concern that the letter may have been sent to the administration, instead of being sent to the school.

The Hound believes this is ridiculous. This is just like what we have seen in Washington. The planning commission either was not provided the relevant information related to this issue or they did not read the information that was provided to them. Either way, how can you make a decision such as this without having the proper depth of knowledge related to this issue. As Mr. Carpenter stated, how can you make this decision without having all the facts? Why did they vote that night?

I understand Attorney Crone's advice to seek counsel, but aren't we getting a little wary of all of the lawyering up? Is that not what has this nation stymied? Does this not make one feel that we have way too many public decision making bodies that are lost and have no clue about what one another are doing?

Let's look at the conflicting logic. The last two City Council meetings have addressed issues involving advertising signs and the need to limit the size and scope of these signs. Is the thought process surrounding this not related to visual aesthetics? And the signs are located in commercial and transportation corridors! Now we are talking about a residential neighborhood and it is alright to place a 150 foot pole with satellite dishes and transponders on it. Does this make logical sense? A 20 foot sign is too big for a road, but a 150 foot tower is alright for a neighborhood? I know that I wouldn't want one of these towers located near my house and I am sure most people wouldn't.

This is just another instance of a corporation getting ahead of the law and nudging the barriers of common sense, while hoping that they can float this under the radar and no one starts paying attention. This is exploitation. The governments related to the State of North Carolina need to get on top of this before it gets out of control. The church (and anyone else) needs to realize that they have a responsibility to be a good steward. They are in this area a few times each week, while this area is the home to many people. This should not be a money grab, because this will help in the short term, while affecting property values over the long haul. Think power lines and how they affect home values. These things need to be located in appropriate places. Would you want this in your backyard?

The Demolition of the Hickory Public Pools in Ridgeview and West Hickory

Larry Pope addressed the Council related to the swimming pools and an article that was written in the Hickory Daily Record. It was said in the paper by our city officials, that at the concerned citizens meeting last Monday night, the citizens were told when the demolition and filling in of the Ridgeview pool and George Ivey Weaver pool would be taking place. That was an outright untruth.

We were told it was going to happen, but we were not told when it was going to happen, and what we have found in the Ridgeview community is that the city government has said that the residents of the Ridgeview community did not express concerns about the demolition and filling in of the pool. I think that if you look at your records, plus your memories, you'll know how many times we have been here before you saying that we are not going to let the city take away something from the Ridgeview community that we wanted.

What I found tonight is that not only do you take away things from communities that want them, but you also place things in communities that don't want them. So the group that is here tonight , making comments about the cell towers, get with us, we can fight this together; because as my sign says, it is time for change, because city government, those who are supposed be working for us don't seem to care about what we want or don't want in our communities. So I will say to you as the City Council that unless we can start working together as a city and as a community and the city government, you will continue to have fights on your hands from now until... because we do not intend to give up the fight of stopping the City of Hickory from filling in the swimming pools.

And the other thing that I want to know is that at the last city Council meeting, the city seemed to be hiding as they used to say to us when I was little... bullies would say, you are hiding behind your mother's skirt. You had the assistant city manager talking about how you are going to go after federal dollars for an aquatic center, and I want to know where are you planning on placing that? Are you planning on placing that where it is accessible to West Hickory and Ridgeview? Or do you still have plans on placing that over at Highland Recreation Center? Because you are forever taking away from us, but not replacing things in our community and low income communities with something that would serve the entire city.

We are not going to leave our communities to go do something way across town, when you paid consultants taxpayer's money and they even said it needs to be in a major corridor area such as off I-40 and Hwy 321. What better location than 4th street and 7th ave, Southwest? If you can't put it there, then we will fight the city to put it anywhere. Because we will go after those federal and state dollars to stop them and keep you from building a facility in the city, somewhere that you are not making (the pool) accessible in a community that you are taking away from... we have done it too long and it is time to put a stop to it. And we will continue to fight you until the day stops.

The Hound says Amen to Larry. Larry might be a little radical for some people's tastes, but he always goes right to the heart of the matter from where he stands and I appreciate that. This issue will be an issue that the City will never be able to put behind them. It is not about the pools as much as it is about the process. This was bungled from the start and it shows the lack of experience and/or ability of those who initiated and carried out this process.

It is simple for people to see that there were alternative remedies that could have been initiated to deal with this matter, but a few stubborn individuals associated with the city decided to hijack the process and resolve it in a manner that suited them, but leaves a needless bad taste with many people.

This is a prime example of how not to build relationships with the community. This is a prime example of how to not build trust, faith, and develop connections with the community. When you need these people you have disenfranchised on board for something important in the future will they be there?

This is how you erect walls and there is one thing about walls of governance, no matter how high you erect them, they always end up being torn down. That is a waste of energy that could be used to move the community forward. Listen to this advice! The City of Hickory needs to make a genuine effort to tear down the walls.


I believe that a lot of the above goes to the heart of what I addressing in The State of Hickory 2011 and The Pursuit of Excellence.

***Matters not on the Agenda***
Ald. Patton stated that she had an article about the public library and in the article that is talks about a successful collaborative effort. And that is something that we keep talking about; is a way to maximize dollars. And that is a good thing to keep in our minds, of collaboration with other entities in the City of Hickory.

Mayor Wright went into the Readers Digest contest. The City of Hickory received $1,000 from Reader's Digest. We have a chance to get some real money out of this. We've gone from the 500s to where we're at 106 in the rankings. If we can move up a little bit, we will be in the money. They like us, otherwise why would they have chosen to come here out of the 7,600 cities and towns, who are getting votes, at a time when we are 400 or 500 in the standings.

Mandy Pitts showed how to access the site, which is linked below.
Vote for Hickory in Reader's Digest "We Hear You America" campaign (City of Hickory link)
We Hear You America (Reader's Digest Link)

The Mayor stated, someone is going get $40,000 cash. The total prize pool is $5 million in cash and promotional value. The Mayor feels that Reader's Digest is going to promote a few cities very heavily. They came here and they said that we had the greatest reception that they have seen at City Hall, when they brought the thousand dollar check.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

January Rant - The Pursuit of Excellence

The Tangled Web

Our governments have become dysfunctional from the top to the bottom. I am not saying that everyone associated with the government is bad. I know that there are people associated with the government who truly care about what they do. They want to create a better society. But, all it takes is a few bad apples to rot the bunch.

Fear is one of the common threads that keep people from acting upon any grievances they see. It isn't about sniping about a bad economy. It isn't about taking pot shots about every issue that we disagree about. It is about the "Us versus Them" attitude of many of the people from the dark side of governance. Those people who lose their way and become entrenched. The people who cannot even tell you their mission or their purpose; why they choose to serve. They look at many of the people they are supposed to be representing as enemies. I believe, if you aren't representing the interest of everyone, then you are serving against the will of the people! And that is a major problem.

If we look at local economic governance, we see very few of these people who have any educated understanding, rationale, or philosophy related to economics. Are they following the Austrian model? Keynesian? University of Chicago - Milton Friedman? Supply Side - Arthur Laffer? Where does their economic guidance come from? Would they have an inkling of an idea about what I am talking about?

I don't care if people mix the above philosophies, because as human evolution has taken place so have economic realities. I just believe there needs to be some deep thinking about the economic roadmap being laid out before us and the map is important on every level of the government. There needs to be some guidance and context associated with leadership's reasoning. And there needs to be communication with the citizenry about what the government is doing with the capital it takes in as tax revenues or borrows against future tax revenues.

There are problems in every part of this nation. We are seeing communities fall into disrepair as the fight against the forces of a mounting tsunami of debt are racked up from pushing systemic problems down the road. We are fast approaching a tipping point where these economic forces are going to crash down upon all of us. According to a US Census Data analysis, in 2010 nearly one in three working families struggled to meet basic needs. Under these mounting pressures, there are two approaches that will be displayed as we move forward. The easy route of human nature would be "Every man for Himself" as the panic sets in and we are already seeing the vestiges of this begin. The harder route will be the more moral route, the route of virtue, where we are all in this together.

Smaller government doesn't have anything to do with taxes, because as we see in this community we have a thriving bureaucracy. We see local governments looking to keep local taxes low, while requesting more money from Raleigh and Washington. What these local decision makers fail to understand is that the money comes from the same pie; the American People and their present and future earnings.

And it rolls downhill, because as we have seen before, when Raleigh falls short of revenue, then they look to the revenues of the counties and municipalities to make up the difference. When the State and Federal funds dry up, then there are holes in expenditures that have to be filled or vacated.

They are not going to say, "Hey, since you kept a solid financial structure, we're going to let you keep all of the money in your treasury account." They are going to expect as many pounds of flesh as from those who have spent freely. The State of North Carolina owes the Federal government $2.5 billion for unemployment insurance debt. Guess where most of that unemployment has occurred? Do you think that the State might want us to pay a higher weighted installment of this debt and the interest associated with it than areas with less unemployment? Would that not make sense?

Why are we here?

I understand all of the above fully, but what many don't understand is how to separate politics from economic realities. Simple politics is what is ruining this nation, because it does not provide leadership and it represents nothing. Basically, it makes no sense. The term used by Warren Pollock describes this perfectly, "Pseudoligica Fantastica" - Every Space dog has his Sputnik. This means Hyperbolic fake reasoning. Trying to sell people a load of B.S. and make them feel good about it.

The people of this nation need to man up and ask the politicos why they want to hold office and what actions they are going to take to implement their objectives. If they can't answer these questions with relevant answers that go beyond the prototypical soundbite, then they have no business holding office. The onus of self-reliance is always placed upon the American people. That we need to do our due diligence before voting, but what about those who represent us? If they can't be self-reliant upon their own brain to explain themselves and their core philosophy and values, then why would they want to hold a position of responsibility?

The Cause of the Mess

This is not about political party affiliation. This is about Individual Leadership and Responsibility. If the shoe fits, then you have to wear it. Look at the General Realities (as pointed out in the January 2010 Trends Research Institute Newsletter):

1) Both parties were party to the bailouts, so-called stimulus programs, and saving the too-big-to-fails (mega-bank Financial Institutions).

2) Both parties were party to renewing the (anti-liberty) Patriot Act, both supported intensified domestic spying, the torture of suspected terrorists, and the President’s right to order assassinations of American citizens.

3) Both parties maintained a bipartisan, unbroken silence on the crippling Pentagon budget and America’s ruinous “War on Terror.”

As the newsletter points out and I concur, many of the leaders of our government have a mindset structured around “glibness, manipulation and pathological lying to feed their grandiose sense of self worth, while callously lacking empathy for others.”

"Whether moral hypocrisy or mental pathology, until the United States acknowledges and comes to terms with its own reality, there can be neither salvation nor recovery. Until it honestly assesses its own behavior and motives, America will not find the truth that will set it free."

The Hound

No one needs to come preaching to myself or others associated with the Hound about our message. If you don't like what we have to say, you have no reason to shout us down or try to shut us up. You have as many, if not more, avenues to offer your interpretation of the times in which we live. Don't shoot down our message. Promote your own!

This isn't about mocking elected officials or people in the bureaucratic structure. There are issues where we firmly disagree with these people and it is not based upon pettiness. Where we disagree is that in the United States of America we are all supposed to be in this venture together. The people that I know aren't looking for equal outcomes, we are looking for the Pursuit of Happiness through Equal Opportunity.

If people would follow the philosophical principles of Honesty, Integrity, Honor, and Loyalty, then I truly believe that they would understand where I am coming from. I understand the need to look toward ones own interest; but in order to have depth as a human being, you have to look out for the well-being of those who surround you.

Pursuit of a cost cutting, "it's better than nuthin'," bottom line leaves you with a sense of emptiness and discontent, that you aren't fulfilling your destiny. Excellence is the only bottom line that I aspire to. When you take short cuts and compromise that bottom line, then you aren't creating good value. The pursuit of excellence creates beauty, which derives an innate pleasure and satisfaction. If you want to turn our fortunes around, then I ask you to join me in this endeavor.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

The State Of Hickory 2011

Trying to Evolve toward Modern Realities:

This is the third year in which I will try to describe the condition of Hickory, as the city and its surrounding area presently stand here in the year 2011. I tried to take into account opinions from across the socioeconomic strata and the demographics of this area. The Hound has definitely had an impact on local thought processes over the past two and half years. Many of the structures of governance of our area have fully embraced the legitimacy of the Objectives of the Hickory Hound. And I can show you areas where we have made a positive impact and contribution towards the future of Hickory.

I want to reiterate that this mission is not about any endeavor of personal ego or esteem. This mission is about the big picture. It is about getting Hickory back on track by bringing the local citizenry into the process of governance. A government of the people, by the people, and for the people with breadth and depth will most assuredly stand up on a firmer foundation. This foundation will allow us to have an economy and culture that is more resilient and able to weather tough times better than we have done over the last decade.

Over the last year, we have seen certain leadership entities continue to gain ground on positions that they have staked out in trying to resurrect the local economy back to a solid state. The Chamber of Commerce has continued to carry out actions related to creating new economic conditions of reality, while trying to retrench the manufacturing brands that the area has been known for.

Let's look at the associations that the Chamber has formulated related to Catawba Valley Community College, the Appalachian State partnership, Lenore-Rhyne University, the North Carolina Center for Engineering Technologies, the Small Business and Technology Development Center, and the lower levels of primary education through the efforts of the Champions of Education.

What we see is that the leadership of these entities has fully realized the need to craft a new paradigm of knowledge and education related to creative endeavors. This is what I tried to relate to the leadership and citizenry of this area, when I first entered into the fray related to the local economic-political-cultural arena.

What I related was that we had not modernized our manufacturing structure. We had rested on our laurels and expected the future to come to us. And what we found out is that evolution did come to us, and it was a harsh reality, because we were not prepared for it. I honestly believe that we have taken more than the initial steps over the last couple of years to address many of these issues, but we cannot stop here; because if we stop, then we are going to end up right back where we were or worse.

Economic Realities:

I believe that the most important accomplishment that the Hound brought to bear over the last few years was the lack of jobs and job quality in this community. I truly believe that the mindset has changed 180° from where it was in 2007. We have taken positive steps towards remedying many of the underlying systemic problems that created the environment that led to the economic malaise that we have faced over the last decade.

Statistics show that we lost nearly 25,000 jobs in Catawba County in the first decade of the new millennium and in the greater Hickory Metro the losses totaled over 47,000. Hickory was the worst area in the State in terms of job growth, we lost over 25% of our workforce. The next worst was Burlington, who lost nearly 16% of its workforce. Over the same period, both Raleigh and Wilmington added over 12%, to each of their workforces.

Currently manufacturing only makes up 28% of the workforce of Catawba County. Back in 1990 manufacturing made up 56% of our workforce. The median household income for Catawba County was $40,536 as of the 2000 census. The American Community Survey shows that median household income, as of 2009, is $41,116. This means that over a nine-year period the county only saw a growth in income for households of 1.43%. Over that same time, the Consumer Price Index in the United States grew by 23%. This means that to keep up with the cost of living, the year 2000 household income of $40,536 should be $49,950.38. What happened to that $8,834? Could you not use that money today?

We cannot go back and change history. We cannot change the unfair trade agreements that have damaged our area. What we have to do is understand the playing field. I did not express the above numbers as a way to cast aspersions or play the blame game. I just wanted to convey some of the contexts of the realities of the world in which we live. The world is changing at a fast pace and if you don't understand the rules, then you have zero chance of winning the game.

One of the things that stood out from these numbers, provided by Taylor Dellinger of the Western Piedmont Council of Governments in an address of Leadership Catawba, is that as of 2009 only 85.4% of total housing units in Catawba County are occupied compared to 92.7% in the year 2000. Over that time frame, the County saw total housing units increase from 59,919 in 2000 to 67,924 in 2009. The total number of occupied units is actually up by a little over 2,500. What this shows me is that we were definitely overbuilt during the decade. We were trying to build for growth that never occurred. As the economy has continued to sputter, a correlation in the tide of increased foreclosures has occurred.

What will occur if the community’s economy continues this malaise? People are already being forced to dial back and face economic realities. It seems to me that as more and more people grow frustrated with our community’s economy that they are going to be willing to walk away from their mortgage to move where they can live a more economically viable lifestyle. This will lead to even more excess capacity of unoccupied dwellings and housing values will at best be stagnant and at worst plummet.

Reality Sets In:

There seems to be a disconnect between local government and the marketplace. Who amongst our local leadership is communicating with local developers and real estate brokers to assess what is happening with the real estate market. Is this just a problem in the relationship between these two entities or is this how Hickory works with all sectors of the economy? Why aren’t City of Hickory officials going to experts and picking their brains about what is happening in the marketplace. That sure seems like a more logical process to assess the realities of current economic conditions.

In looking at local Hickory leadership, it seems like they have an excellent grasp of static accounting and finance, but they don't understand dynamic finance. Static accounting deals with ledgers and zero-sum (finite) budgets. Dynamic accounting and finance deals with investments in growth. Zero-sum accounting tends to be risk-averse and thus reduces the chance for losses, but it also minimizes the ability to grow. Zero- Summers tend to hoard things. Dynamic finance allows for the possibility of growth, while understanding that there are risks involved in any endeavors associated with less certain investments.

Our local government does not seem to have developed a sense of urgency. In other local communities that have seen some successes, it seems like their local leadership is more curious and aggressive in seeking information about making the marketplace work. The local community governments which seem to be struggling are led by administrators who are more worried about making the government machine work and keeping everything oiled and making sure the deliverables are delivered.

What you need is a team with all of the parts -- designers, engineers, and accountants. You have to make sure to not let any one of these forces take control. You need balance. Hickory is in good shape with short term finances, but it is not congenial with the other local communities. It is better than it once was, but it is not a deal making town. They don't know how to make a good deal.

The people, of this area, not just the government, have had an obsession with cost containment to the point of inhibiting growth. This mindset leads to low-balling people. Paying people less than they deserve, finagling contractors to do less than premium work to save a few bucks, cutting corners here and cutting corners there, etc... This is very much representative of the mindset and the direction I believe we have seen in this community.

It becomes a challenge to see what you can get out of others for as little as possible. That tends to P.O. people. The best deals are done to the benefit of both parties. Both parties need to get value out of the deal and when this happens further deals will be made. When you low-ball people, that might be good for one deal, but it tends to spoil the environment when it comes to making future deals and it builds a bad reputation and word gets out to where no one wants to deal with you in the future and there is no trust and/or faith that a good deal can be made, because the well has been poisoned. We can’t afford to burn bridges and unfortunately, in the past, we have seen people in this community who burned bridges for sport!

I don't say this to hurt anyone's feelings. I say this, because it is the perception of many of the people that I've talked to both inside and outside of this community. That perception has become a reality and it is going to take a lot of hard work to change the reality of that image. That is the reality of why a lot of people don't want to invest in Hickory.

The City Of Hickory:

The City of Hickory has shown that they are unwilling to listen. There have been many instances in the past, near and long tern, where professionals would have been willing to have a conversation about the important issues of the day. The City Council and City Staff always have had their mind made up before the processes even begin. The discussions become a charade, and people resent that.

As far as the people of Hickory, some people in this community want their point of view to be “THE” point of view and they aren't willing to have their point of view blend in and become part of the prevailing point of view. They aren’t willing to put in the intellectual effort needed to build a consensus. It becomes a game of petty politics.

We have an area that is right now at 1987 employment levels. While this did not happen linearly over the last decade, it also didn’t happen overnight. We got a big whack in 2001-2002 and then again in 2008. After 2001-2002, we continued to see some expansion. Houses were still being built and other economic expansion happened, including air service into the airport. Much of the bad news has happened in the last two years.

Where we are today is that we are a community that in the last 25 years has developed a lot of infrastructure and services in bulk to accommodate 186,000 jobs. And now there are only 130,000 jobs in the community. We can't shrink back to 1987. Our metro community is built out. Soon this infrastructure could be in danger of degrading; if we don't do something creative to start expanding economically again. There could be a problem with roads, because they must be maintained. Interstate 40 is a perfect example. Water and sewer -- we're in pretty good shape. In terms of capacity of natural gas, water, sewer, electricity; we are way under capacity in our utilization of these resources. And we have not done a good job of articulating that message.

Studies show Hickory at the bottom of the barrel of just about every national study that we have seen. We have lost the industrial base and the money that provided the capital for entrepreneurial activity to occur. Hickory satisfied an enormous market of furniture, textiles and hosiery, and later fiber optics. You can't expect those things to go on forever. You should expect them not to go on forever and we didn't expect either one. Our leaders weren’t making any plans to deal with the “what ifs.”

When one looks at progressive and well functioning entities, most of the organizations related to business in our area are dysfunctional.

If you wanted to make an immediate impact on Hickory under current circumstances, then you would have to get a couple of Fortune 500 companies the size of Century Furniture to relocate here. They would have enough political clout to be able to guide the city, but could our present leadership pull something like that off? This is fantasy stuff. What does a historical perspective show us? The thing you can do is that if you can’t change the minds of leadership, then you can change the leadership!

We don’t need leaders who are in the political arena to stroke their ego. We need leaders in this community who are thinkers and who are intellectually curious. We need leaders who know how jobs are created, because if they don’t, they could cause the loss of jobs and the empirical evidence of the last decade shows that this was a contributing factor in what happened to our job market. Our leaders lost sight of what businesses need to make employment viable.

Instead of working towards a vision of what could make Hickory better, it surely seems that we have seen Hickory City leadership more focused on their worries that they can make things worse. They have not inspired confidence. They give off a feeling that they don’t know the way out of this malaise. And it surely seems that there is an unwillingness to step up to the plate and say, “You know what… I may not know the way out, but maybe we can get closer to it, so follow me.”

I truly believe that if someone were willing to step up and actually show some real initiative, that even if it ended up being the wrong direction that it wouldn’t take long to readjust our sights toward the right direction. And I feel we would give that person (those people) a pass, because at least they’re willing to step up and say follow me. And at the end of the day, even though we may have found ourselves further lost, that leadership stood up and was willing to be held accountable. But, under our current circumstances no one wants to be held accountable, so we remain in the darkness.

When one looks at the City Council and the various Boards and Commissions that they stock, one sees participants who are very static and status quo. There is very little conversation that has anything particularly dynamic about it. Everybody is following each other, they go along to get along, and if someone pops up with something different it is dismissed. If someone plays the role of the devil's advocate and comes up with a different kind of idea, than what has been proposed, then it is deemed to be too controversial and that individual is quickly quieted and told not to make waves. If they continue on with their personal objective, then they are summarily ostracized.

Frankly, we have a lot of people in this town, who are place holders. They have been put into leadership positions based upon status. They were born into positions of prominence and they really have not earned the recognition that their stature holds. These people have not really shown the characteristics of success. They have inherited their position and they are expected to maintain what they have been given. Honestly, you never hear anything about these people's business acumen. What does this say?

I think that this contributes to the “Us versus Them” mindset that pervades this community. These people have a negative view of wealth. Money is not a means to an end for these people. It is an asset that must be hoarded and protected for ones own self interest. And it does not create more real wealth. It destroys it.

Many of the people in this community who were earning $100,000-plus a few years ago perceive that they are hurting financially. If they were making $150,000 per year and now they’re only making $100,000 per year, they will tell you how hard it is to live on $100,000 per year, when they are $50,000 short. Whose fault is that?

These people from the upper socioeconomic strata think they are hurting, but I honestly don’t think they understand or can empathize with how the middle and lower economic classes are scraping by. There is a difference between dialing back on luxuries and amenities and scratching out an existence. There are people who can’t afford healthcare. There are people who are skipping or eating inadequate meals. There are people who are living in cold houses this winter. They get no luxuries. And these aren’t ne’re-do-wells. These are people in this community just trying to survive this downturn!

I look at what has happened with the swimming pools in Ridgeview and West Hickory. And now there are rumblings that the city wants to close the Recreation Center in West Hickory. There is no plan to create any activity for the people, especially the youth, of these communities and the way that the situation was handled wreaked of intolerance. Our leaders in the past deemed these to be worthy investments, but today’s “leaders” don’t have the vision of our forebearers.

Again, we see an “Us versus Them” mindset from our leaders and that leads to an opposite and equal reaction of “Us versus Them” from the less privileged communities on the South Side of the tracks. Wonder what happens to the relationship of trust? During these hard times, when we need the community to be united, we see leadership that refuses to communicate with the people and a great disconnect that continues to fester right out in the open for all to see. Do you not think that people outside of this area take notice of this? Can anyone be that naive?

Asheville and Wilmington are two areas of the State that are still doing fairly well in this tough economy. There is lot of cultural diversity and acceptance in those two areas. These two areas have embraced tolerance. If you go to Wilmington or Asheville, you will see a much larger percentage of their restaurants are owned by local people and they have thriving, robust downtowns. Here in Hickory, the majority of our restaurants are corporate. I believe a lot of that has to do with this lack of cultural diversity problem that we see in this area.

What seems to have fostered this culture in the Hickory is the fact that only a few interests own much of the most viable business properties in the area. The path of least resistance was to bring the Chains in and get them to set up shop here. This earned those families a percentage of those corporate earnings, but it is hard for the mom and pops to compete against these huge corporations. I am not saying what is right or what is wrong. It is just an observation. This was the easiest thing to do. It was the path of least resistance. And it has created a climate where we see a huge disparity of income from the top to the bottom in this community.

We do not have an egalitarian culture or community here in Hickory. As a result of this dumbed down, cheap begets cheap mindset, the only people who benefit from this are the few people who own property in those strategic locations where they could funnel the local governmental interests towards their direction and take full advantage of their strengths of position and influence. This developmental progression fed off of itself until only a couple areas of the city experienced growth and most other parts of the city have become depressed. This has not been good for the structure of Hickory. It has created a corporate, top-down Boss Hogg culture.

Hickory’s loss of Relevance


Hickory's problem is that Conover is right down the road and Chronicle is right down the road from Conover. Do you know where Chronicle is? Chronicle, back in the history of Catawba County is an area that we loosely call today Sherrill’s Ford. In the past, the area at the junction of Highway150 and Highway 16 was called Chronicle. This is where the action is going to be in the future.

As Jay Adams expressed to me:

For years, with my transportation background and my real estate background, I have realized that the biggest and most thriving community in Catawba County does not even exist today and it is there (Chronicle). With the current economic situation, the circumstances are going to chill the expansion, and it is not going to happen as fast as I thought it would, but as the economy returns and as development occurs… and what we may see happening is that we may see a peer-to-peer lending mechanism emerge. And if that gets going, when the activity returns it is going to suck a lot of energy out of Hickory.
A key to entrepreneurialism is that you have to have some kind of a micro-lending function, because the people that create innovation, for the most part, are the hungry. That is where the expression comes from, “Necessity is the Mother of Invention.”

One of the issues with Hickory is that it is complete. This does not mean that it has to be the end of the story. What it means, is that from a commercial real estate point of view, Hickory has all it needs to satisfy what it is and until there are evolutionary changes, there is not going to be any more real development.

The people who long for what Hickory was, can't understand that we can't get back to what Hickory was demographically or structurally. Their longing for what we were is destroying our future. It is destroying our capacity to change. They are longing for that furniture and textile world. We can do more manufacturing, but it is going to have to be high tech manufacturing or unique craftsmanship. We won’t be building crate furniture or producing everyday textiles.

One of the major issues that the City and the County are going to have to take a stand on, is that if the Feds or the State try to impose regulations upon the local community, and they mandate that the local area enforce said regulation, then local administrations should not enforce that regulation, if it is not in the best interests of the people here on the local level. That is the attitude that it is going to take.

That kind of mindset might be beyond the grasp of the people in the Whitener building, because they look at the people in Raleigh as giving them the means to keep the bureaucracy alive. Hickory City officials seem to believe that Raleigh empowers them, while the officials in Conover are saying that business empowers us and Raleigh doesn't empower us. Raleigh, you empower Hickory, go empower Hickory and while you're doing that, we are going to be growing the business part of our community. Conover’s paradigm is the reality that needs to be embraced.

Look at the Manufacturing Solutions Center locating at the Conover Station. That is an LED of bright light for this area and that could be the genesis for a new kind of entrepreneurialism that we have not seen. And Conover grabbed ahold of it. Look at the Conover Station, Conover has a game plan designed for the future, while Hickory continues to grasp for the ghosts of the past.

In Defense of Hickory


There is a defense of Hickory. And we would do ourselves wisely, if we would articulate a message with some type of representation of what Hickory was and what Hickory is and can be in the future. Hickory was a remarkable place. It was not warm and fuzzy. In the 1990s, it was compared to Silicon Valley, because of its entrepreneurial spirit. Look at how fragile that was. Hickory is now a shell of what it once was. We have been hurt badly. A lot of it is just circumstance and we need to have an understanding for the reasons for those circumstances.

Hickory has been disparaged by all of the studies. Here's the study that says we're dumb. Here's a study that says we’re unhealthy. Here's a study that says we're not business friendly.

One of the things that we want to do is take it upon ourselves to make a counter argument to the studies that are out there. We want to reverse engineer those studies. We want to articulate: Are they measuring the wrong thing? What are their metrics?

Hickory is a very unique place. Look at a town such as Concord. It was a static, one horse town dominated by one business – Cannon Mills. It was a very simple life. If you weren’t in Kannapolis or Concord to do business with Cannon Mills, then you had no business being there.

Hickory, 25-plus years ago, was an area that offered unlimited possibilities for people who had an entrepreneurial spirit. It was a very aggressive and very innovative and very competitive environment. It wasn't a warm and fuzzy kind of place. It was a wide open business environment. We have lost so much of that tempo and that character over the last two decades.

Do you love Hickory? A lot of people just see what they can get out of it. To a lot of people it's just a place to live. If they loved Hickory, they would say, "I don't like the way this is happening and I think it can be done a better way," and they would take action to make the necessary changes that need to happen.

Let's come up with a way of defending Hickory. I believe that it is imperative that we defend Hickory and our honor. If people wake up and take it personally about the way we are being viewed by the outside world, then people who have an association with Hickory will, without even knowing it, begin to think about why they care about this community. And that is what we need to do. We need people to think about why Hickory is important to them?

Jay Adams conveyed to me about his father, a veteran from World War II :“
Post-World War II, my father worked in Kannapolis and was unhappy and then he got an opportunity to go into the fabric businesses and he found his way to Hickory. And when he brought me up here, first time in 1968, his enthusiasm for coming to Hickory was palpable. Dad was in his mid-30s in the mid 1940s when he came here and he loved Hickory, because it rolled. In the late 60s, Hickory was wide open. Dad said when he was in prison camp in World War II, the guys he was with just wanted to have the American dream. When we came to Hickory, Dad talked about the 250 furniture plants within 10 miles of where we were. He was like, isn’t that wonderful?

Dad said that Hickory was a place where a guy with a high school education can make a fortune, lose it, and make it again. He said, ‘show me another place like this.’ It was the land of opportunity and for dad it was the place that dreams were made of.” That is what it was.
As Scott Millar conveyed to the Future Economy Council last year:
“The people in this area back in the day had the entrepreneurial spirit, because they thought that they could do the job better than their boss. That is what caused most of the companies to start up around here. They didn’t get along with their boss.”
Today, we think that we need to educate the workforce, and we do, but is it the number one priority?. We are 14th out of 14 MSAs in the State in this regard. We are at the bottom. When we look at Raleigh, a university town, we see an area that manufactures “educated” people. These people are very uniform and structured. The Education system desires to impart the same uniformed “Structured” knowledge across-the-board. This objective means that everyone will come out with the same understanding of the same subject. Is that good for innovation and the creative process?

In the entrepreneurial town that Hickory was, people did not follow the above process. They would learn to do their job through on the job training. They would start thinking about ways that they could improve the product. They would go home and start tinkering and building a piece of furniture or two, then they would sell it. Next thing you know they had created a market for their product and they would have to find some people to help them, then they would have to find a bigger building to operate from, and next came the need for a new building – Bricks and Mortar. Look at all of the jobs that were created.

One thing that others have talked to me about related to our need to address our educational attainment issues relates to the possibilities of mashing up our innovative and entrepreneurial instincts to that deficiency and doing something that is not being done anywhere else. If we can do that, then we will have taken a big step towards showing the world why Hickory is not understood and we will have defined the value of Hickory as a center for innovation and ingenuity.

I do not want to limit the scope of possibilities, but when I think of a center of knowledge, I think of Thomas Jefferson’s original vision for the University of Virginia as an open center for knowledge. It was not to be devoted towards certifications, but instead a center for learning and finding information, where students were free to come and go as they wished. To me, lifelong access to extensive resources of knowledge at an affordable price should be the objective.

Hickory wasn’t a place 30 years ago where you came with education and made it. Hickory was a place where you came with initiative and made it. Your personal economic activity either paid off or it didn’t. And if it didn't pay off, then you learned from the experience, you weren’t disqualified. You got up on your feet and tried again. Hickory was the place where that could occur and that has great value. Harley-Davidson Skunk Works was here in Hickory. There was a reason for that!

In the End…

One of the biggest issues that I see is the lack of real congeniality and mutual respect amongst the people of this community. There isn’t an appreciation for one another’s roles in the make-up of the community. You need the people who supply the brains and you need the people who supply the brawn and both need to look out for one another’s interests.

You cannot mandate respect. This is not a new phenomenon. This has been going on for years. You have to have an appreciation for your fellow man in order to build a strong and viable eco-system. Experience shows that in order to be a good leader sometimes you need to dial back the intellect and be patient and listen more than you talk. Good listening skills are half of good communication. One needs be respectful and realize that the other guy, no matter their station in life, may see something that you have missed. You need to realize that if you earn their respect, they will be loyal to you and defend you. That is lost in Hickory.

You know, a lot of our fellow citizens have been beat down by the current economic challenges that we have faced in this community. They need their leaders to make them feel good about themselves. This does not come from gladhanding. They need to feel that they have the respect of the community and their contribution to making the City work is appreciated. People need that reinforcement of success, and we haven't had many successes in the community lately.

One of the things that I've seen from my experiences in life, is that if you go to work for a company and you have a bad apple in that company; the bad apple tends to stay, because the other people don't want to tolerate the bad apple, because they don't want to deal with them anymore. When you come into a community and there are a few bad apples that are keeping the community from progressing, those bad apples tend to stay, while the other people are picking up their bags and getting the hell out of there.

Unfortunately we are at that juncture and when the census data comes out, and if stories are written about Hickory's downfall, if that happens and there is a good possibility it will happen, then Hickory is going to be a poster child. Hickory could revert back and it is not out of the question that we could lose our MSA status. That would be remarkable and whether you judge it to be fair or not, it will have happened under the watch of Mayor Wright and City Manager Berry. It will be their legacy. It is the legacy of everyone who has been in power over this last decade, who has worked to maintain the status quo versus the need for urgent action.

As for the lesson to be learned; if you direct everything toward yourself and your thinking is that the whole aspect of any endeavor is to bring it home to yourself and not the greater community, it ain't good for the community. If your objectives are being misinterpreted, then you need to communicate better. But, insinuating that people's lying eyes are deceiving them goes against their better judgment and in the end no one is fooled.

In the past, Professional managers have come into the city and they have no ties to the city. There's not much commitment from these hired professionals. We need to have committed professionals in Hickory.

Hickory can’t be what it was, but it can be meaningful. It can be relevant. We must figure out how to take our available resources and optimize them. I believe that we can come up with innovations and make them go viral. It would be hard to pick out a community that has been hammered the way that Hickory has been hammered, but in spite of all the bad numbers and the ridicule, if you walk around this town, it does not feel all that bad. Hickory has stood on its own and will continue to stand on its own and we will continue to be a great place to live, if we address our issues with a sense of urgency, because if our structural economic issues are not addressed, then things can definitely get a lot worse.

Thank You and may God Bless this city and help us to help ourselves.

Special thanks to Harry Hipps, Joe Brannock, and Jay Adams. And to the others that helped contribute and influence this article.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Economy News Nightmare: 20 Things That You Should Not Read If You Do Not Want To Become Very Angry

From the Blog - The Economic Collapse - Link to Article

Today America is very, very frustrated. In fact, we probably have not seen this level of anger in the country since World War 2 ended. So why are so many Americans so frustrated and so angry right now? Well, for most Americans it comes down to the economy. Very few things are more frustrating than not being able to find a job that will enable you to pay the mortgage and feed your family. Middle class Americans that do have a little bit of money are digging into their savings and investments at a staggering rate as they desperately try to keep their heads above water. Millions of other families that do not have a "safety cushion" are on the verge of losing their homes or have already been callously tossed out onto the streets by big, greedy banks. Meanwhile, our politicians continue to burden us with increasingly larger amounts of government debt and they stand idly by as our jobs and our industries are shipped overseas. So even though the mainstream media seems absolutely puzzled by the growing anger in America, the truth is that it is not a great mystery. The economy is an absolute nightmare, and if it gets even worse people are going to become even more angry.

The mainstream media and our top politicians are running around proclaiming that the economy has turned around, and yet all of the important long-term economic numbers continue to get worse. Do they think that the American people are stupid?

Perhaps they are just trying to be "optimistic" and are trying to get us all to "believe" in the economic recovery.

Well, while it certainly does not hurt to "stay positive" and to "have faith" when there is some basis in reality for doing so, but what the mainstream media is asking us all to do is to stick our heads in the sand and to pretend that all of our horrific economic problems are not even there.

Until we recognize exactly what our problems are and how bad they have gotten we will never be able to come up with the appropriate solutions.

Our economy does not just need a "tweak" or two. Our economy is a total nightmare at this point.

The following are 20 things about our nightmare of an economy that you will not want to read if you do not want to become very, very angry....

#1 Today, millions of American families are digging deep into their savings and investments in a desperate attempt to stay afloat. Over the past two years, U.S. consumers have withdrawn $311 billion more from savings and investment accounts than they have put into them.

#2 15 billion dollars: the total amount of compensation that Goldman Sachs paid out to its employees for 2010.

#3 The number of American families that were booted out of their homes and into the streets set a new all-time record in 2010.

#4 Dozens of packages that we buy in the supermarket have been reduced in size by up to 20%. For example, there are now 2 less slices of cheese in a typical package of Kraft American cheese, and there is now 9 percent less toilet paper in a typical package of Scott toilet paper. So now, you may think that you are paying the same amount for these items that you always have, but the truth is that you have been hit with a large price increase.

#5 One Canadian company is making a ton of money shipping "millions and millions of dollars" worth of manufacturing equipment from factories that are being shut down in the United States over to new factories that are being set up in China.

#6 In America today, the wealthiest 20% own a whopping 93% of all the "financial assets" in the United States.

#7 Only 35 percent of Americans now have enough "emergency savings" to be able to cover three months of living expenses.

#8 47 percent of all Americans now believe that China is the number one economic power in the world.

#9 If the U.S. banking system is healthy, then why does the number of "problem banks" continue to keep increasing? This past week the number of U.S. banks on the unofficial list of problem banks reached 937.

#10 According to former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich, the wealthiest 0.1% of all Americans make as much money as the poorest 120 million.

#11 U.S. housing prices have now fallen further during this economic downturn than they did during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

#12 According to some very disturbing new research, 45 percent of U.S. college students exhibit "no significant gains in learning" after two years in college.

#13 Americans now owe more than $884 billion on student loans, which is a new all-time record.

#14 The United Nations says that the global price of food hit an all-time record high in December, and the price of oil is surging towards $100 a barrel, but the U.S. government continues to insist that we barely have any inflation at all.

#15 The more Americans that are on food stamps the more profits that JP Morgan makes. Today, an all-time record of 43.2 million Americans are on food stamps, and JP Morgan is making a lot of money processing millions of those benefit payments.

#16 Back in 1970, 25 percent of all jobs in the United States were manufacturing jobs. Today, only 9 percent of the jobs in the United States are manufacturing jobs.

#17 Dozens of U.S. states are either implementing tax increases in 2011 or are considering proposals to raise taxes.

#18 The United States has had a negative trade deficit every single year since 1976.

#19 The U.S. national debt has crossed the $14 trillion mark for the first time, and at some point during 2011 it will cross the $15 trillion mark.

#20 What the U.S. economy really needs is for the government to get off all of our backs, but instead they continue to tighten their grip on us. In fact, the Obama administration is proposing a "universal Internet ID" that would watch, track, monitor and potentially control everything that you do on the Internet.