advertising
print page Print  email page Email 
Tri-Cities: It's hot over in the desert

The greater Tri-Cities (Benton and Franklin counties) have had the fastest-growing labor markets in the state in the past couple quarters, as well some of the biggest population and wage gains.

Is it all for real, or just a mirage? After all, we've seen boom-and-bust cycles in the Tri-Cities before. In the early '90s, the Mid-Columbia had the hottest housing market in the nation, as workers poured in to fill high-wage SuperFund cleanup jobs at Hanford. Then came Newt Gingrich and the Contract With America, and those jobs evaporated faster than dew on the sagebrush.

So if you're a bear, you'll look inside the employment numbers and see that increased Hanford hiring is one of the factors behind the current run. After all, the vitrification plant, where they're trying to turn nuclear waste into glass, added 1,000 workers last year.

But - unlike previous Tri-Cities booms - this time it's not just Hanford.

The Tri-Cities have become the center of food processing in Washington, with one out of every 10 industry jobs in the state. The sexiest part of the food processing industry, of course, is wine. Walla Walla and Yakima get more buzz, but Prosser and the Tri-Cities are getting more of the jobs. Schau counts some 1,600 wine-related jobs in the two counties, with more to come as Red Mountain develops.

The Tri-Cities also are becoming a transportation hub. Rail links (some actually in Walla Walla County) take Washington produce to markets on the East Coast, and trucking companies have set up shop around the region, taking advantage of its location in the center of the Northwest, and that fact traffic is far lighter than Puget Sound's.

And it appears that the Tri-Cities are becoming a retirement haven. Schau has a theory, that Baby Boomers are fleeing California for the Northwest. They cashed out their massive equities during the housing boom, and moved up to Bellingham or Duval or Port Townsend, charmed by the summertime scenery. Then the rain comes, and by their second winter, those Californians are desperate for sunshine. They look at the Tri-Cities, see semi-arid hills that remind them of home and discover that a $2,000 monthly mortgage that buys them a modest condo west of the Cascades will buy them a modest mansion east of it, and before they can learn to spell Kennewick, they've moved there.

All this is creating strong job growth, and prompting Schau to predict that the Tri-Cities won't feel the current national downturn.

That's not to say all is sunny and bright. With few cultural amenities - and no coherent downtown - it's going to be hard for Tri-Cities companies to compete for young talent, respected urban economist Angelos Angelou warns, and governments also must do more to cooperate.

We'll talk more about all this in the magazine's June issue. But for now, there's gold in the Tri-Cities' sagebrush-covered hills. Best take your sunscreen.

Next week: Skagit County

A note to readers: We're coming to a close of our first quarter of publishing our weekly Economic Insider e-newsletter, and we'd like your feedback. How do you like the format? Is there anything you'd like to see more of, or less? Comment below or send a note to Bryan Corliss at bcorliss@washingtonceo.com.

1 Comments »

  1. Andrea Turner said, Thursday, 17-04-08 14:00 Hi Bryan -
    I work at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory on the eastern side of the mountains.

    I just read your piece about the Tri-Cities and wanted to offer another resource to you for future stories, particularly related to economic development.

    Gary Spanner, manager of our economic development office, chairs the Tri-Cities Research District board. Among other things, he's implemented several programs that can help diversify communities.

    Give me a call if you find yourself writing about economic development, even if it isn't just east of the Cascades.
    Andrea Turner

    509-375-3893

Comments

Leave a Reply


If you can't read the word, click here.

CAPTCHA image for SPAM prevention


advertising
advertising








© Washington CEO Magazine 2008