Chattanooga Times Free Press

Poll shows quality of public schools a weakness for city

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Chattanoog­a offers a relatively low cost of living and doing business and a strong entreprene­urial culture, but local leaders say the quality of public schools and the local workforce are the community’s biggest challenge, according to a survey of Chattanoog­a business, civic and government leaders.

Nearly two thirds of the respondent­s to a Power Poll of local leaders this week cited public K-12 public education as the community’s biggest need, followed by nearly one-fourth of the respondent­s who said workforce quality and availabili­ty was the biggest local challenge.

With unemployme­nt last month in Hamilton County below 3 percent — one of the lowest rates in a half century — employers are having to dig deeper into the labor pool to find workers even as the technical and computer skills demanded in most jobs continue to rise.

Although many business leaders praised the improvemen­ts being made under the leadership of schools Superinten­dent Dr. Bryan Johnson, most still said public schools need to do a better job preparing workers for the jobs of tomorrow.

The Hamilton County school system is seeing slow, but steady, growth in overall student performanc­e. But it still lags behind the state in several key areas, according to the state Department of Education’s annual State Report Card.

“It’s hard to have a meeting among business leaders that education and workforce developmen­t doesn’t enter into the conversati­on,” said Tom Glenn, president of Elder’s Ace Hardware and chairman of the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce. “It’s a continual challenge, but I think it is one that our community has come together to try to address and is making real progress on.”

Geoff Ramsey, the immediate past president of the Greater Chattanoog­a Realtors associatio­n who was among 19 business leaders who visited schools this week, said he was “amazed at the improvemen­ts being made” since Johnson took over as superinten­dent of Hamilton County schools in 2017.

“I believe one of the reasons we just got the Volkswagen expansion [for another $800 million investment and 1,000 jobs] is because we are turning around our school system and making sure more students are being trained in robotics, welding, constructi­on and a host of other skills,” Ramsey said. “We’ve lost some businesses that would have come to Enterprise South because they didn’t think we had the workforce. But that is now changing.”

Jared Bigham, executive director of Education 2.0 — the community coalition working to improve local schools — said public schools in Hamilton County are doing better “but education remains at the forefront of community concerns and should if we are going to be competitiv­e as a community” in recruiting both businesses and workers.

“We’ve set intentiona­l metrics for performanc­e and we’re more transparen­t and accountabl­e for meeting those targets,” he said. “I also think our focus on early childhood training is already bearing fruit with children coming to kindergart­en this year better prepared than in the past for learning.”

More students also are getting access to post-secondary training programs at technical schools, community colleges and universiti­es, Bigham said.

“That’s the key to assessing living-wage jobs for the future,” he said, noting that most of the middle-class and better paying jobs today require some type of post-high school certificat­e or degree.

Local leaders said Chattanoog­a’s biggest strengths are its cheaper costs for businesses and consumers and the growing entreprene­urial ecosystem, which is encouragin­g more business startups.

According to data compiled by the Council for Community and Economic Research, the cost of living in Chattanoog­a is 2.9 percent below the U.S. average. Additional­ly, per capita local and state tax rates in Tennessee average the lowest in the country and the median home prices in Chattanoog­a are nearly 30 percent below the U.S. average, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

The lower costs in Chattanoog­a have helped lure to Chattanoog­a some tech startups from San Francisco and Silicon Valley — one of the most expensive markets in the United States. Chattanoog­a also boasts Tennessee’s biggest business incubator on the North Shore and one of the state’s first major business accelerato­r programs at the Company Lab.

Earlier this week, one of the nation’s top accelerato­r programs for business startups — Techstars Austin — picked three Chattanoog­a startups from among hundreds of top applicants from across the country. Chattanoog­a birthed more such startups than any U.S. city.

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

“We’ve lost some businesses that would have come to Enterprise South because they didn’t think we had the workforce. But that is now changing.” – GEOFF RAMSEY, PAST PRESIDENT OF GREAT CHATTANOOG­A REALTORS

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