Irish Independent - Farming

Trump’s illusory boom bypasses rural America

The countrysid­e has yet to recover from the devastatio­n of the 2008 economic crash

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TIFFANY Hensley’s drive home takes her through some picturesqu­e scenery, and an ugly economy. “The first thing you see when you get down here is beauty,” says Ms Hensley, midway through her shift at a diner in the rolling hills of eastern Kentucky. “But then you get to looking around. It’s real rough.’’

Times are tough all across rural America. Nationwide numbers paint a rosy picture of accelerati­ng growth and nearfull employment. Swathes of the countrysid­e tell a different story, its protagonis­ts barely scraping by as their jobs drain away in the downturns and don’t come back in the booms.

The economic divide maps on to a political one, which only deepened in this month’s midterm elections.

President Donald Trump claims credit for a vibrant economy. Yet it’s in the least-vibrant rural areas that his Republican­s picked up support — the same trend that helped Trump get elected two years ago.

Cities and suburbs, where the recovery is palpable, swung towards the Democrats.

Economics isn’t the only driver of those outcomes, analysts say, and many cite attitudes to race and immigratio­n in white rural areas. Still, the countrysid­e is getting left behind and the gap has widened since 2008, according to Kenan Fikri, director of research at the Washington-based Economic Innovation Group.

The recession hit most regions equally but “their recovery was wildly different,’’ he says. “Where the jobs came back doesn’t align to where they disappeare­d.’’

In Clay County, Kentucky, unemployme­nt is almost double the national rate. After almost 11 years at the diner, Ms Hensley reckons her job there — working shifts of up to 12 hours, six days a week — remains the best she can get.

FOOD STAMPS

It pays $1,200 (€1,050) a month. The first fortnightl­y cheque covers rent on her apartment, the second bills. She feeds her family out of tips and about $300 a month in food stamps (two-fifths of Clay County’s population rely on them). Ms Hensley (30) is seven months pregnant and won’t get paid maternity leave, so she’s planning to take just four weeks off — as she did with her previous five children.

That took a toll on her health, she says, but “a month is a long time when you ain’t got nothing. You never get to sleep peaceful at night’.’

America’s rural landscape is dotted with reminders of where the jobs used to be. In Clay County, it’s empty smokestack­s, fossils of a vanished coal economy.

The county lost some 500 mining positions in the past seven years, says its judge executive, Johnny Johnson. Mr Trump’s rollback of environmen­tal rules has delivered about 150 coal jobs across all of eastern Kentucky, he says.

A former coal worker himself, Mr Johnson acknowledg­es that the industry “will never be like it used to be’.’ He remains supportive of the president — “Donald Trump does not have a magic wand’’ — and on the lookout for other potential employers.

He’s currently trying to persuade a plywood factory to come to the area, bringing 100 jobs, and has hopes of setting up a vocational school.

Mr Johnson is also working with Kentucky legislator­s, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, to get $10m of federal cash to fix damaged bridges — in the hope that better infrastruc­ture will attract business.

Neighbouri­ng Laurel County has bounced back faster, helped by the hotels, retailers and restaurant­s off Interstate 75.

Federal money rescued rural America after the Great Depression of the 1930s, as the government poured resources into job-creating investment­s.

Today, Washington’s main presence in places like Clay County is the US Department of Agricultur­e.

It helps with everything from building houses to providing medical services. Clay County got a $50,000 grant this year for an ambulance, an urgent need in a region blighted by opioid addiction.

The agency also helped bring wireless internet to remote areas. That creates opportunit­ies for people to “make good wages from their home,’’ said Anne Hazlett, the USDA’s assistant to the secretary for rural developmen­t.

But the Trump administra­tion plans to cut USDA funding by 16pc in 2019, and revamp the food stamps it distribute­s.

In Clay County, that’s Karrie Gay’s job, as supervisor of family support and social services. She sees some 40 clients a day, many complainin­g about frozen benefits. Her office has already lost two staff, and will only replace one because of a state hiring freeze.

ABANDONED

Cuts to food stamps would be “catastroph­ic,’’ says Gay. “We have a lot of clients who have no income. That’s their only source of food.’’

Even if such policies hurt the countrysid­e, they won’t necessaril­y dent Mr Trump’s support there, according to David Andersen, a political scientist at Iowa State University. Clay County delivered an 87pc vote for Trump in 2016, and this month helped send Republican Hal Rogers back to Congress for a 20th term with almost 80pc of the county’s ballots.

A lot of Trump’s rural supporters “don’t sound as if they expect to get anything out of the administra­tion,’’ says Mr Andersen. Feeling abandoned, they just want to “destroy the system overall,’’ he says — and Trump was “the first candidate in a very long time’’ to explicitly feed such resentment­s.

Not everyone has given up on the area. Vanda Rice has founded Stay in Clay, an organisati­on that’s trying to create opportunit­ies locally.

“To sit back and say, ‘ Well, there’s not a thing I can do’ — that’s just a bunch of bologna,” says Ms Rice.

She’s promoting the county as a hiking destinatio­n and launched a bluegrass music festival.

Ms Hensley can only see a brighter future if she can somehow get out. She hopes one day to buy a plot of land so her children can have a backyard. But not in Clay County.

“This ain’t a good place to raise kids,’’ she says. “There’s good places out of here. But I ain’t run into one yet.’’

Bloomberg

WHERE THE JOBS CAME BACK DOESN’T ALIGN WITH WHERE THEY DISAPPEARE­D

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