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Dec. 17, 2005
California’s San Joaquin Valley: The New Appalachia?
By Michael Doyle
Sacramento Bee
Sacramento, CA -- California's San Joaquin Valley really may be the new
Appalachia after all, a new congressional study suggests.
The travails sound familiar. Poverty is high, education is low, and social
needs abound. But the 365-page regional report card released Wednesday, Dec.
14, 2005, one of the most comprehensive of its kind, also leaves unanswered
what may be the most enduring Capitol Hill question.
That is: What must Congress do now, given the immensity of the problem?
"By a wide range of indicators, the San Joaquin Valley is one of the most
economically depressed regions of the United States," the Congressional
Research Service concluded in its final version of a report begun about a
year ago.
Even notoriously poor Appalachia fares better in some respects.
Per-capita income is lower in the Valley's eight counties than in the
68-county area known as Central Appalachia. Predictably, but grimly, the
Valley's public assistance rates are higher than Appalachia's.
Uncle Sam also seems to be investing more in Appalachia than in the Valley.
Per-capita federal spending overall was lower in the San Joaquin Valley than
in the depressed Central Appalachian subregion, the report concluded.
"This is a significant challenge for us," said Merced Democrat Dennis
Cardoza, one of the initiators of the new report. "We have to continue to
fight to get our fair share of resources."
There can be many reasons why some regions get more federal funds than
others, and it's not always because of political clout. Areas with many
elderly residents, for instance, can be awash in Social Security and
Medicare checks. In Appalachia, 14.3 percent of residents are 65 or older;
in the Valley, fewer than 10 percent are 65 or older.
Consequently, federal retirement and disability payments are higher.
Moreover, the Valley does better than Appalachia in some areas, including
receiving federal grants.
Still, the comparison with benighted Appalachia carries weight.
Valley lawmakers ordered the study as a foundation for efforts to draw more
federal resources into the 27,280-square-mile region stretching from
Stockton to Bakersfield [Editor’s Note: Slightly larger than West Virginia].
Appalachia is relevant not only for its poverty, but for the concentrated
federal fix-it effort provided through regional entities like the Tennessee
Valley Authority.
"This provides the basis for thinking that an extraordinary intervention
strategy is necessary," said Carol Whiteside, president of the Modesto-based
Great Valley Center. "Many of us believe that we need some permanent,
regional group that has some ongoing, continuous responsibility (for helping
the region)."
Appalachia has the TVA and the 13-state Appalachian Regional Commission.
Congress in recent years has approved similar regional economic commissions
for Alaska, the Mississippi Delta and the Northern Great Plains.
The San Joaquin Valley is currently targeted by several, considerably
smaller programs, including Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's California
Partnership for the San Joaquin Valley, announced last June in Fresno. A
federal interagency effort begun in the Clinton administration still meets,
to mixed reviews.
Concentrated federal investment can work, analysts believe, and the new
report points to the changes wrought since the Appalachian Regional
Commission was created in 1965. Since then, the Appalachian poverty rate has
been cut in half, and the region's high school graduation rates have
increased by 70 percent.
"Forty years and billions of public and private dollars later, the region
has changed," CRS analyst Tadlock Cowan noted.
Nonetheless, many are skeptical of formal new commissions or agencies.
"I don't want to see a big new bureaucracy set up to do this," Cardoza said.
Visalia Republican Devin Nunes agreed that "you're not going to see anything
like" the sprawling Appalachian Regional Commission set up on the Valley's
behalf. Like Cardoza, though, he believes the chart-laden study will be
useful when making Capitol Hill funding requests.
Cardoza, Nunes, Mariposa Republican George Radanovich, Tracy Republican
Richard Pombo and Fresno Democrat Jim Costa united in ordering the report.
In broad terms, it tracks the findings of myriad earlier reports by think
tanks, universities and independent analysts. The incessant level of
comparative detail is unusual, though, as is the congressional imprimatur.
"This gives greater credibility to the numbers," Whiteside said. "It gives
greater weight to the data."
Privately, some lawmakers have winced at the comparison with Appalachia.
Analysts, though, noted a number of parallels, starting with each region's
traditional reliance on a single industry: mining in Appalachia, and farming
in the Valley.
Important differences, though, also divide the regions. Appalachia, for
instance, is expected to add only 98,000 new residents by the year 2020,
while the fast-growing Valley is expected to add 398,000.
Distributed by Scripps-McClatchy Western Service, http://www.shns.com.



