Tag Archives: winston-salem

Winston-Salem Boxer on the Front Page of the Other WSJ

A front page article of the Wall Street Journal features a Winston-Salem boxer Jonathan Haggler fighting for the World Boxing Council's Baltic heavyweight title, which covers Poland, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania and the eastern half of Scandinavia.  The fight's in New Jersey.  It's boxing so whaddayagonnadoaboutit?

Meanwhile, if Mr. Haggler is successful this weekend, Winston-Salem will boast one of the Baltic region's top heavyweights.

In 26 professional bouts stretching back to 2000, Mr. Haggler has fought only a handful of times outside North Carolina, once at a Radisson hotel in Morgantown, W. Va., another time in a nightclub in Nashville.

He says the opportunity to fight in New Zealand three years ago was his way to fast-track a career. In addition to the pay, he was told the WBO Oriental heavyweight title would vault him into the top 15 of the WBO rankings, and presumably more lucrative paydays…

It wasn't until Mr. Haggler saw the banner for the fight, announcing "WBC Baltic Heavyweight Championship," that he realized he'd be fighting for a foreign title. "That just made it that much more important for me," said Mr. Haggler.

The North Carolina heavyweight, who works with at-risk youth and their families, admits he doesn't know anything about the region other than a few facts about the Baltic Sea that were in a recent email. He admits, too, that fighters like himself are seen as stepping stones. Still, he thinks he can win the fight if he can pace himself.

If he does prevail, he'd like to fight another Pole—two-time world champ Tomasz Adamek, though a trip to the Baltics is unlikely. "I'd be the people's champ from a distance," he said.

A Life in Passing

Winston-Salem is not a large city. Even so it is like every other city in the world, welcoming any number of people who are looking for someplace new or who are simply passing through.  Through the wonders of Google I stumbled upon the story of one such person:

Their eyes met and she smiled as she passed Martin Tucker at an intersection in downtown Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The photographer and documentary filmmaker had been downtown setting up a photo exhibit at a local gallery.

"I don't know what it was about her," he said. "She looked dynamic in some way. She looked like she had a story."

Tucker chased down Patulla, who couldn't catch the northbound train until the next day> He wanted to meet up the next day, bring his cameras and audio recorder.

"Well," she replied, "I'm a hobo."

The next day, the two met and talked about religion, politics and relationships. No topic was off limits and she spoke openly, almost too openly, Tucker thought.

In the early evening, Tucker could tell she was antsy to catch her train. She signed a photo release form and was gone, leaving behind only an e-mail address. In hindsight, Tucker wished he had gone with her to the tracks, but he thought he had a complete story…

Tucker produced a 22-minute documentary, "Patty: This is My Normal," based off their afternoon together. The show premiered at a November film festival and will show at another in April.

Tucker read about her death a month later in a Texas newspaper.

He thought he'd told her life's story, but realized then had hadn't.

"I have more questions than I have answers at this point," Tucker said in a recent telephone interview. "This vibrant, 29-year-old woman who seemed like she had everything to live for but decided to check out, was quite a shock. I was crushed. I felt like I had lost a friend."

On any given day you can sit in a car idling at a stoplight on Jonestown Road, Five Corners, Stratford Road or any number of other intersections in Winston-Salem and see them.  They are people who sleep outside, who may be passing through or have settled here for whatever reason, and their stories are likely as tragic as Patulla Williams'. We can only pray that theirs don't end as tragically.

According to the Biggest Loser Winston-Salem is Profane

So I decided to try and motivate myself to lose a few pounds by signing up for the The Biggest Loser's Pound for Pound Challenge.  The Challenge pushes you to lose weight while also helping your local food bank, which in our case is Second Harvest Food Bank.  So I input all my info on the registration page of the website and found that it wouldn't accept my registration, not because I forgot to fill something out but because it seems to think that something about Winston-Salem is profane.  Check out this screenshot (click on it to enlarge):

WinstonSalemProfaneCropped
See how they politely ask for "No Profanity in Team City please"? Go figure.

So my team is now officially located in Lewisville.  If you'd like to join and pledge to lose some weight while benefiting Second Harvest just go to www.pfpchallenge.com and sign up. You can do it individually or as a team; if you'd like to join my team the name is Lewisville Designated Losers.  Let me know if you run into problems by leaving me a comment on this post and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.

Creative Corridors Coalition

I received an email yesterday from Lawren Desai, one of the founders of a/perture cinema, that she sent out to folks who might be interested in a new Winston-Salem initiative called the Creative Corridors Coalition.  I think many of you might be interested as well, and I think Lawren's email does a great job of explaining why:

Hello all,
 
I am writing to let you know about a very important community project that I hope will interest you if you live in the Winston-Salem area.  Over the next 7 years our community will experience massive investment in roadway infrastructure to support anticipated economic and transportation growth; the total for all of the projects will exceed $1 billion, invested in and around the downtown area.  A strong group of community volunteers have formed the Creative Corridors Coalition to lead a process to develop a Master Design Plan which will focus on aesthetics, identity and ensuring that these projects connect rather than divide our city.  Simply put, if we are going to experience such important growth, shouldn’t we give thought to how it all fits together and impacts the quality of our community’s life?  As an example, 11 new bridges in a 2 mile stretch of Business 40 will be built….they can either look like the ones we have now, or they can architecturally reflect the identity of a city with a storied history and a bright future. 
 
This kind of project happens once every couple of generations so what we do now will be in place for the rest of your life (and your children's life).  It really is a fantastic way to make a difference and I encourage you to visit the website for more information (www.creativecorridors.org) and to plan on attending an opening reception on February 7th (see invitation below).  CCC has received initial funding in the form of a $200,000 matching grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and we are actively working on a number of projects in the development, communications, community engagement and design areas.
 
It is really important that we continue to demonstrate that we, the citizens of Winston Salem, have an interest in this project and want our voice to be heard.  Please consider signing up to join the coalition (no cost) and we can keep you updated on the progress.  We need you and it will only take a minute.  Please join, and if you are especially inspired, get involved in one of our committees. 

Best,
Lawren Desai
I think Lawren's right; this is one of those projects that will impact the city and its citizens for generations.  Hopefully we'll see a lot of community engagement.

Ammo for Those of Us Who Hate the Incentive Game for Biz Recruiting

I'm going to state up front that until Congress legislates them out of existence the incentives that governments now routinely dangle in front of businesses in an effort to locate their operations in their state/county/municipality those inducements are a necessary evil.  I'm not going to sit here and say that my local/state reps are wrong for playing the incentive game because if they didn't play then we wouldn't be in the game at all. Still, I don't like the rules of the game at all and that's why when I saw this article from David Cay Johnston come across my feed reader I was most interested in reading it.

Johnston is reading a book called Investment Incentives and the Global Competition for Capital, a book that looks at what governments around the world are giving away in incentives, and he believes that the authors' estimate of $70 billion/year in giveaways by state and local governments in America is on the low side. Oh, and the Canadians and Europeans are doing a much better job minimizing the costs of these projects.  From the article:

"Estimating aggregate state and local subsidies in America is a difficult proposition because of the lack of transparency at all subnational levels of government," Thomas writes.

Thomas estimates American state and local government giveaways to business have grown to $70 billion per year. I am confident that his estimate is on the low side, for reasons that will become apparent.

While competition to give money to companies is a worldwide problem, the problem is much worse in the United States, Thomas shows. He estimates that American state and local subsidies to relocate existing businesses are six times the location subsidies in the 15 original EU members.

And here's Johnston's take on what's going on here in America:

But what takes the breath away is the increasing size of the welfare given big businesses as governments compete to shower gifts on companies with capital to invest, even when it means hardly any new jobs.

Back in 1967 I got onto the front page of my local weekly with my first exposé, which dealt with tens of thousands of dollars going to a building contractor that had bid low and charged high for a new county courthouse. Thomas showed that today's state and local welfare for businesses requires mechanized shovels to scoop up the cash, compared with spoons for the giveaway I wrote about 44 years ago.

Many investment incentives cover 30 to 45 percent of a factory's cost, Thomas showed. He said that the biggest recent American incentive had a net present cost of $734.3 million. That paid a fifth of the cost of a ThyssenKrupp steel mill that opened this year near Mobile, Ala. It turns out stainless and high carbon steel.

He gives our fair state of North Carolina a little attention in his pillorying of server farm deals which he points out generate very few jobs:

Then there are the North Carolina subsidy deals for Dell and Google, whose motto is "Don't be evil." Tar Heel state officials will not say what the total cost is, nor will the companies. They claim that letting loose the electricity discount figures would involve proprietary secrets.

Oh, please. Anyone in the server farm business can just look at the dimensions of the building and come up with a rough calculation of how much power it will use. Are North Carolinians dumber than Forrest Gump, or will they demand a full accounting?

It is curious how the government collects and discloses finely detailed data on how much tax money goes to the disabled, the poor, and the elderly, and to educate the young, but when it comes to welfare for big business, it just cannot seem to find the resources to gather and analyze the costs.

Strange, too, that many of these obscured, but gigantic gifts come through the good offices of politicians who pose as champions of the taxpayer and enemies of welfare, or at least of welfare for those who actually need it.

Here's the coup de grace for those of us who thought that perhaps Dell closed the 4-year old Winston-Salem plant because of a decline in the popularity of desktops:

Thomas tells how Dell moved a factory from Ireland to Poland in 2009 and then months later closed a four-year-old factory built in large part with North Carolina tax dollars. The Irish taxpayers gave €53.5 million to Dell, while North Carolina gave as much as $242 million. But when the Poles offered €54 million more, it was enough to get Dell to move about 1,900 jobs to Lodz. 

There's no mention of the claw back provisions that led to the city getting back a bunch of dollars (not all of them mind you), but it's still informative to see how we might be getting played.

Last point: I think the reason that NC appears so often in the article is that our state is being quite aggressive in pursuing businesses in an effort to replace the hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs its traditional manufacturing base has bled over the last 20 years.  And as I said at the beginning I think this is a necessary evil in the current environment, but that doesn't make it a smart way to govern in the long haul.

The Cat Effect

Bob Leak writes at the Winston-Salem Business Inc. blog:

With good reason, the Caterpillar advanced manufacturing project in Winston-Salem has drawn much attention. The facility is under construction and the expected boost to local employment and the area economy is certainly the development story of the year here. However, the real impact is yet to come.

Let’s call it the “Cat” effect. It’s the wave of activity and interest in Winston-Salem created by such a major global manufacturer having shined a spotlight on what the area has to offer. Cat’s exhaustive process of selecting Winston-Salem allows site consultants and business leaders to see more clearly the advantages and unique qualities that make the area ideal…

Where does the “Cat” effect lead? With the Cat facility groundbreaking complete, there’s still a long way to go. And in this economy, there are few, if any, certainties. But, Winston-Salem is certainly looking good in the spotlight.

ATP Tour Event Moving to Winston-Salem!

I'm a huge tennis fan so you can imagine my excitement when I read this morning that the ATP is moving a tournament from New Haven, CT to Winston-Salem.  I'd heard rumors that it might happen, but now that it's a reality I'm absolutely stoked.  I haven't heard any details yet, but I'm willing to bet a serious chunk of change that Don Flow was involved with this and if that's the case all I can say is "Thanks Mr. Flow!'

Update: Just did a little research to confirm what I thought I remembered, which is that the New Haven tournament has traditionally been a warm up for the US Open, played the week before the Open starts.  We won't likely see the Federers or Nadals of the tour, but usually it attracts its fair share of top-50 players like Baghdatis, Gonzalez, Robredo, etc. Even better, it has a doubles draw.  Did I mention that I'm really stoked?

Moravian Potters

From today's New York Times:

In North Carolina, 18th-century immigrant potters developed signature styles. Quakers from England preferred sunburst motifs on red backgrounds, while German Lutherans and Calvinists specialized in polka dots and stripes on black vessels. Moravians from Bohemia molded green flasks in turtle and owl forms and painted pomegranates and lilies to symbolize Jesus’ wounds and rebirth.

The products were all made near Greensboro. When they are shown together, “it’s going to be such a flood of pattern and color,” said Robert Hunter, a curator of “Art in Clay: Masterworks of North Carolina Earthenware,” now at the Milwaukee Art Museum

About half of the 120 pieces are loans from Old Salem Museums and Gardens in Winston-Salem, N.C., near the sites of Moravian workshops.

Yo, Winston-Salem Folks Interested in Trader Joe’s

All you folks who got together to create the video aimed at convincing Trader Joe's to open a store in Winston-Salem will probably find this Fortune article interesting.  I for one didn't know that the same German family that owns Trader Joe's also owns Aldi.  From the article:

You'd think Trader Joe's would be eager to trumpet its success, but management is obsessively secretive. There are no signs with the company's name or logo at headquarters in Monrovia, about 25 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. Few customers realize the chain is owned by Germany's ultra-private Albrecht family, the people behind the Aldi Nord supermarket empire. (A different branch of the family controls Aldi Süd, parent of the U.S. Aldi grocery chain.) Famous in Germany for not talking to the press, the Albrechts have passed their tightlipped ways on to their U.S. business: Trader Joe's and its CEO, Dan Bane, declined repeated requests to speak to Fortune, and the company has never participated in a major story about its business operations.

Some of that may be because Trader Joe's business tactics are often very much at odds with its image as the funky shop around the corner that sources its wares from local farms and food artisans. Sometimes it does, but big, well-known companies also make many of Trader Joe's products. Those Trader Joe's pita chips? Made by Stacy's, a division of PepsiCo's (PEP, Fortune 500) Frito-Lay. On the East Coast much of its yogurt is supplied by Danone's Stonyfield Farm. And finicky foodies probably don't like to think about how Trader Joe's scale enables the chain to sell a pound of organic lemons for $2.

I love this quote about the "typical" Trader Joe's shopper:

Kevin Kelley, whose consulting firm Shook Kelley has researched Trader Joe's for its competitors, jokes that the typical shopper is the "Volvo-driving professor who could be CEO of a Fortune 100 company if he could get over his capitalist angst."

Can we say Ardmore and West End?