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High Gas Prices Threaten to Drain Small Towns' Populations

by: Donald Bradley  |  Visit article original @ The Kansas City Star

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A road going to Leeton, Missouri, population 619.
(Photo: jelene's photostream)

    Leeton, Missouri - In this small town south of Warrensburg, directions usually begin with, "From Casey's, you go ..."

    That would be Casey's General Store, the only gas station in town. It's where folks fill up while talking about goings-on, politics, weather and who's got the best-looking tomatoes.

    These days, they're also cussing and shaking their heads about the price of that gasoline. People are doing that everywhere, but in small towns such as Leeton, population 619, it's even more of a gut punch because nearly every working adult commutes to jobs elsewhere.

    These days, there had better be a really good job on the other end of that trip.

    Don Campbell's daily commute to Kansas City - about 100 miles each way - costs him roughly $866 a month at $3.90 per gallon. But he's a union iron worker and says he can make the math work.

    Most of his neighbors can't. For them and thousands of other small-town residents across the country who drive long distances to jobs that pay little more than minimum wage, the high cost of gas is making that daily commute cost-prohibitive.

    So much so that economists predict that over the next few years, the country could see a migration that would greatly reduce the population of Small Town America - resulting in a painful shift away from lifestyle, family roots, traditions and school ties.

    "This town's the only place I know," said Louie Rector, who drives 35 miles to his job at a window factory from his home in tiny Dixon, Mo., about 20 miles west of Rolla.

    "I grew up here ... raised my kids here. I got my family and friends all here. I don't want to pack up and leave. But it's getting to the point where a fella can't afford to drive to work, and that don't seem right to me."

    A Common Fate

    Towns such as Dixon and Leeton are everywhere in America. Many don't have much beyond a post office, a grocery and maybe a school. Economists use Wymore, Neb., as an example in that 68 percent of working adults in town commute to jobs elsewhere, most to Beatrice, Neb.

    The expected exodus from small towns, said Don Macke, a widely considered authority on rural economics and head of the Center for Rural Entrepreneurship in Lincoln, Neb., will be far more profound than the gradual erosion that has been going on since World War II. That decline was due to the country's shift away from an agrarian economy and a choice for convenience: People wanted to be closer to jobs, shopping and entertainment.

    The new flight, Macke thinks, will be more out of necessity.

    Most commuters from small towns are high school graduates. They are driving 50 miles or more to work as school cooks, hospital aides, office workers, dental assistants and unskilled factory workers.

    "The reality is that those jobs don't pay all that well," said Macke, who is also a visiting scholar with the Rural Policy Research Institute at the University of Missouri. "They're spending up to $500 a month on gas. A third to half is already technically working poor.

    "And as gas goes higher, they will get poorer and these towns will soon struggle to hold on to these people."

    David McGranahan, a senior economist with the Economic Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, added that the decline would not be entirely longtime residents moving away.

    "Young people who leave these towns to go off to college or the military may decide not to go back - as many have always done in years past," McGranahan said. "Also, fewer people will leave the city to move to small towns in search of a quiet life."

    But nobody is writing off small towns. Who knows what type of vehicle will come along next? There's carpooling. Computer technology increasingly allows people to work from home. And some communities are working on ways to provide jobs in town.

    "I have a lot of faith in ingenuity and the entrepreneurial spirit," Macke said.

    That rescue better happen fast, said Leeton Mayor Larry Mudd. He has lived all his 62 years there and used to commute to Kansas City to work as a school administrator - back when gas was cheap.

    He hears the talk around town and he expects to see people, particularly young families, move away.

    "People are mad as hell, but they don't know who to blame," Mudd said. "I know we got people here who are buying gas instead of paying bills.

    "What a lot of towns are going to end up with is a bunch of empty buildings and empty houses."

    Open Space, Cheap Gas

    Since the advent of the automobile in the early 20th century, the American rural landscape has been one of spacious land and cheap fuel.

    It was commonplace for people to drive long distances for jobs. In isolated areas, such as western Kansas, the drive could be 100 miles or more. Those commuters may have complained about the time in the car, but seldom about the price of gas.

    Throughout that period, too, many towns had a factory, and mom-and-pop stores lined main streets.

    That has all changed.

    Factories in many towns closed years ago as small companies folded or manufacturers sent jobs overseas. Mom-and-pop stores gave way to Wal-Marts in bigger towns. When those changes occurred, jobs and shopping required trips out of town.

    And now, gas prices are at all-time highs.

    Brian Dabson, co-director of the Truman School of Public Affairs at the University of Missouri, said the new financial reality has changed the parameters of "rural poor."

    The term used to apply mainly to pockets of poverty in Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta, Indian reservations, and the Texas-Mexico border area.

    "Now, it's everywhere - Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska," Dabson said. "The price of gas has redefined a 'sustainable wage.'"

    There is little public transportation in these rural areas. And there is less pubic assistance today. Farmers make more money from corn because of its use to make ethanol, but towns aren't sharing in any windfall because the cost of farming has gone up, too, and there are fewer farmers.

    No question that gas prices will chase some people closer to urban areas, Dabson predicted.

    "There is no hiding place from global pressure," he said.

    So why isn't the same thing happening in Europe, where gas prices are even higher?

    Because trains connect almost every town there, Macke said. And yes, some people in urban and suburban areas in this country drive 30 miles to work, too, but they tend to be more affluent.

    It is in rural America where lives are being turned upside down.

    "This country had not planned on a big jump in fuel costs," Macke said.

    "No Jobs Here"

Well I was born in a small town,
and I can breathe in a small town.
Gonna die in this small town,
and that's probably where they'll bury me.

- John Mellencamp, "Small Town," 1985

    The classic song was seemingly written for guys like Rector of Dixon. He never figured he would ever leave his hometown on the edge of the Mark Twain National Forest.

    According to Dixon's marshal, Clifty Yoakum, most every working adult leaves town each morning for jobs in other places, such as Rolla or Jefferson City.

    "They have to - no jobs here," Yoakum said.

    For 29 years, Rector has driven to the Quaker Window factory in Freeburg, 35 miles to the north. The factory is unusual in that it has more employees than that town has people.

    "We got about 450 workers and they come from all over, probably six or seven counties," said owner Mike Knoll. "We pay $8 to $10 an hour - better than minimum wage - but I know my people are really feeling the gas crunch."

    He recently ordered a switch to four 10-hour days to save his employees a day's drive.

    "That's one day we don't have to pay $20 for gas," said Rector's daughter, Tracy, who also works at Quaker.

    "Everybody is feeling what's going on. They're cutting back at the grocery store, not going out to eat. But even with that, when you get your check there's nothing left. Gas goes much higher - people are going to stop going to work."

    Her father may leave Dixon and move closer to Freeburg, but Tracy Rector isn't yet ready to commit to such a drastic move from her hometown.

    "But I'm like most people - I don't know what to do."

    Back in Leeton, school Superintendent William Nicely knows he could see a drop in enrollment if families leave. It's a highly accredited school and this year graduated 19 seniors.

    But he knows why it would happen because he commutes the other way.

    "I live in Sedalia and drive here every day - I know what families are going through," Nicely said.

    Resident Jerry King doesn't have to worry about it. He's retired. He used to work at a tire shop in Sedalia.

    "I wouldn't want to be making that trip these days, not with gas where it is," King said. "Heck, I don't even want to drive to Windsor for groceries."

    Mudd, the mayor, worries that younger residents will start thinking the same way.

    "When people move away, towns lose their tax base," Mudd said. "Then you can't fix streets ... you can't do much of anything. That makes even more people leave.

    "Pretty soon, won't be much left in these old towns."

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Comments

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Last line of the article: "

Last line of the article: " "Pretty soon, won't be much left in these old towns." If everybody has to leave town every day to work, then there hasn't been much left in town for a long time. A town with no industry or commerce is dead, it just took a spike in travel costs to make it obvious. Sad, but bedroom communities are a luxury that we can't afford anymore.

Nothing that a little bit of

Nothing that a little bit of innovation in mass transit can't remedy. Carpooling can fill the gap until a people mover van or an entrepreneur can start up their own transportation service. No doubt, there has to be a vast reworking of transportation in our entire countryand big government investment in this, but it is bound to happen.

Why do they stick with OstrichMobiles?

Why don't these people dig out motorbikes, VW beetles, old WWII jeeps etc. that always got good mpgs and are often laying in sheds & barns? I know even here in downtown Richmond VA., I just saw five 1970s Honda CX500s and two classic '73 Honda CB350s in ONE WEEK. More classic bikes than I'd seen any previous year going back into the 1980s! I'm going to fix the valves on my Kawi 750 and regear it for MPGs.

The rural commute (As

The rural commute (As opposed to a 'Bedroom Community) is not always to a bigger town. In the far Northwest (Oregon,Washington, Idaho, Montana etc.), many commute to jobs at ranches, construction sites, schools, county, State, mining and forestry jobs. The commute for food, hardware, medical services, etc., are often sixty to a hundred or more miles. The availability of fuel is marginal at best and far more costly then in urban areas. Couple that with low wages and the typical rural vehicle (Big pick-up trucks) and you have a real costly commuting situation. One that isn't going to be rectified by car pools or mass transit. These people have a real problem on their hands and those rural communities, already marginally viable, are facing extinction. When they disappear, we will have lost a truly unique American lifestyle. A KNESAL PDX, Oregon

Global oil production is now

Global oil production is now declining, from 85 million barrels per day to 60 million barrels per day by 2015, while at the same time demand will increase 14%. This is like a 30% drop. No one can reverse this trend, nor can we conserve our way out of this catastrophe, because the demand is so high that it will always be higher than production; thus the depletion rate will continue until all recoverable oil is extracted. This means recession, mortgage defaults and many houses on the market, and few people will be able to sell and move. The small towns will remain as they are for population. But, we are facing the collapse of the highways that depend on diesel trucks for maintenance of bridges, cleaning culverts to avoid road washouts, snow plowing, roadbed and surface repair. When the highways fail, so too does the power grid, as highways carry the parts, transformers, steel for pylons, and high tension wire, all from far away. With the highways out, there will be no food coming in from "outside," and without the power grid nothing works, including home heating. This is documented in a free 45 page report that can be downloaded and distributed/ emailed: http://www.peakoilassociates.com/POAnalysis.html

If people had adjusted in

If people had adjusted in the 70's instead of falling back asleep with Reagan, we would not be in this pickle now.

when the federal government

when the federal government complied with the automotive and airline deep pockets to remove competition of mass transit the stage was set. and now the last act is here. simple bus lines would keep populations in place. but simple bus lines do not have deep pockets. I would suggest the school buses be used to get people where they need to go during off peak hours. my town lost two gas stations and got a convenience store pump but we, local citizens, also worked to get a small bus line that keeps the south part of the county in touch with hospitals, the county seat and links to other transit. we rewrote the last act.

"$866 a month at $3.90 per

"$866 a month at $3.90 per gallon" If The monthly milage is around 4100, I make that roughly 20 to a U.S gallon. Here in Europe you can get small cars that do 50+ m.p.g on a long journey.

-If we upped the average

-If we upped the average fuel economy of all vehicles manufactured (or even allowed into the country), with NO EXCEPTIONS for SUVs, et al, -If we actually invested a tenth as much as we waste on the latest needless war on alternative energy and basic research, -If the country as a whole finally admitted that we need to limit immigration AND population, -Then we could easily get a handle on this. It won't happen. We waste fuel and other resources like there are no limits. We breed like flies, and get all indignant if anyone even brings up the idea that we ought to stop doing so. Limited resources + increasing population = less resources per capita, get it? We move more and more towards religion and superstition, and further from Science and Reason, every year. We treat the only planet we have to live on like a toilet. We could have had light rail and hybrid cars back in the 70s, but the oil and car companies blocked it with the help of their Washington toadies. And WE KEPT VOTING THEM IN. Corporate media demonized environmentalists, and We sucked it up. We are a nation of morons, ripe for the really big fall.

Yep, it happening. But

Yep, it happening. But don't worry. Soon those jobs in other cities will be gone. my recommendation is that folks get themselves a cheap rooming house close to work and come home on the weekends. That's the way we did it back in the 40's and 50's. Once the jobs are gone they will be glad they didn't leave the country for the city, because you don't want to be in the city with what is about to come down. Stay in the small communities, everyone knows you, gardening and farming skills are known, and churches and other community organizations will prove to be valuable. Don't move yet. This thing is going down faster that even the most pessimistic could have predicted.

A big part of our country's

A big part of our country's housing has been designed on the idea that we would always have cheap oil. No problem that you have to have two or three cars to get your family here or there. No problem that you get into your SUV and drive five miles for a quart of milk. No problem that you commute a half hour or even an hour to work and then back. You live over there in that nice subdivision, and the shopping and services are way over there with no way to get there except by car. Well, guess what: it is a problem. We're in for our comeuppance.

In our small rural Oklahoma

In our small rural Oklahoma town we have been hit from both sides of the gas gouging. We have a ConocoPhillips refinery in our town. However, we pay more per gallon than other small towns in the state. And to make matters worse, ConocoPhillips has drastically cut the amount of community grants given. We are not talking small change here. Several agencies and non-profits would received as much as $20,000 per year in grants from ConocoPhillips. To make matters worse, ConocoPhillips is not annexed into city limits. Therefore our city does not receive tax revenue from ConocoPhillips. I say annex them in and reap some of their profits for our town.

Okay, some of you are

Okay, some of you are posting your comments without actually READING the article, I think. We are discussing RURAL areas. MASS transit doesn't WORK in rural areas. Why? Because there are no MASSES to transit. For example, between Dixon, MO (population around 1800--I lived just outside of it about 10 years ago) and that window factory in Freeburg, MO, are (depending on your route) 1 or 2 other towns. The biggest of the possible other towns is 600 people--the county seat of a county with a TOTAL population under 9000. Carpooling is occasionally an option--but those that could have been since gas hit $2/gallon. "Buy a smaller car" is not a really viable option here, either. One: if we're talking about a rural family, they are probably working and farming both, & need a truck for the farming part (The MO Ozarks is one of the bigger beef-producing regions in the country--and your typical cattle farmer there is in just this situation). Two: The "dusty vehicles in his barn" are probably old trucks, not some mythical resurrectable, good-mileage car). Three: Yes, there are new efficient new cars on the lots, sure. And, at $8.50/hour, minus the payments if they guy's truck happens to be newer (remember he does need the truck, so can't just trade it in), he's gonna buy another car with what? Three: It's far from unlikely that simply getting to his house requires a vehicle with higher ground clearance (i.e. a truck or SUV), especially in wet weather. He might live 5 miles down a dirt road, with a creek or two to ford before he gets to his house. I lived in the Ozarks for 13 years--all of this is common scenario. For that matter, we moved away because even a lot of tech jobs in the bigger midwest cities have been outsourced now--so we had to move to Silicon Valley to find work. Your stock answers work in cities, and, to a certain extent, in suburbs. Not in the country. The only thing I can see that would help in the country is to find a way to get back the small factories that each town used to have--which have mostly left for other countries.

I dont like Europeans

I dont like Europeans writing in to these posts when they havent the slightest idea of what people in America go through. Maybe they are able to buy new gas efficient cars in their country,but in the USA it is probably not an option for someone making near minmum wage, which for the people who dont know is about $7.00 an hour. Also, we dont have FREE healthcare like they do in Europe. Nor do we have a lot of the benefits that European companies offer. Please find out the facts before you write in to these posts if you are not living in the USA. By the way, I lived in Europe for 10 years so I do qualify to say this. As RUBE CRETIN said above, this is just the beginning, it is going to get much worse. Stay away from the cities, it will be a dead end when things really get bad.

This is a real poignant

This is a real poignant article by Donanld Bradley from the KC Star. I really see the situation as possessing the makings of a novel, probably by Steinbeck. The spawling lightly populated hinterland was made possible by cheap transport and cheap petroleum. The converse is obvious:impossible with high energy costs.If you have lived abroad as I have , you can see what a mess we have made of our beautiful country. The automobile and the highway infrastructure, the single fact which permitted this buildout will soon disappear. The roads will soon turn to gravel or be abandoned.The good news is that the essential towns with good hub networks may see a revival of manufacturing because fuel costs will eventually abrogate overseas exports of bulky products. The final nail in the coffin wont be $5 gas or $20 gas but no gas brought on by any number of factors.

Don't go running to the city

Don't go running to the city yet. If you have to spend a few nights a week at a co workers for half the cost of the gas you would use. Pack your lunch and dinner, and get a really, really good garden spot in. Also get some chickens and feed them scraps from your own dinners, and maybe get a couple of meat rabbits that you can keep going on stuff you can get from the woods. It's going to get much worse than high gas-soon food is going to be harder to buy than gas is now...... As far as the problems with small towns and viability-you can thank the WTO for all the production being exported to less developed nations. Get the US out of that and we might get some industry back. Let people buy directly from the farmers producing their food without governmental intervention and everyone would be better off as well. We're staying here and those horses that aren't worth anything monetarily due to the foolishness of the Anti Horse Slughter bill, may be the real wave of the future of transportation soon.

There will not be a rush to

There will not be a rush to the cities. Well, a few dopes who are note clued into peal oil will rush in and then find that they have no job and no land on which to grow food. You see, we will see more people moving into small towns in the next 20 years. It will have to happen. We will need small communities with localized economies that are largely self-sufficient. Those people who manage to stay and grab onto the cheap land will be the future land barons of the country. They will be the new Rockefellers. There will not a be a replacement fuel of any kind that matches oil. NONE. ZERO. So give up that techno-fantasy. Many people will, strangely enough, deny the basic physics here due to the Jiminy Cricket Syndrome, believing that some sort of techno-hoodoo will make it all better. It AIN"T GONNA HAPPEN!!! So, if you live in the country, count yourself lucky. Hold on as best you can, and you will be rewarded.

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