Archive for the ‘Branson--Local News’ Category

The Importance of Diversity

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

And how it can land you a Job

Myrlte Beach

Sunrise

(From Myrtle Beach, SC)

For the last ten years of my life, I cannot account for the innumerous applications that I’ve filled out that asked me for my racial makeup. EOE, Equal Opportunity Employer, at the bottom of the page always made me wonder if I was being given a fair chance as a white male. After all, white males are the one race and gender that has not been discriminated against over the life of the United States, thus I’m put at a disadvantage—particularly since whites are still the majority in the US.

However, my recent hiatus in Myrtle Beach has offered a new perspective—one of opportunity for my self and people like me. I’m a college graduate after all—one that has diligently searched for professional employment for more than a year without so much as an interview. The economy, I tell myself, and the news reinforces. But I realize it’s a bundle of factors—one being my chosen major, English, which may not be specific enough. It may be easier if my degree said technical something—a nice label to ensure I fit somewhere.

I’ve come to Myrtle Beach to escape the ultra conservative mid-west, which prides itself in its above average schools and white majority. And now I’ve realized that’s precisely why I can’t find a job at a corporation—I’m too much like everyone else in Missouri, and national corporations want to be represented in a way that reflects the national diversity—not the local one. Therefore, theoretically, if a guy like me walks into a branch office in a neighborhood that’s largely made up of minorities, I will be considered quite thoroughly for a job.

Employers seem to frown upon those unwilling to leave their cradles—the comfort of their own people, their own culture; they aren’t willing to take risks.

And I think I can give people advice in regard to finding employment—and that is to integrate not segregate. And that’s not to say it’s absolutely necessary, but right now the job market is tough. Graduates have to be willing to be malleable and innovative.

Here in Myrtle Beach the workforce is made up of a variety of nationalities—the college students from Russia, legal and illegal Mexicans and other Central Americans, and Black Americans. The lack of American white male workers gives opportunity to such; I’ve experienced this first hand. People are surprised to see that I’m both white and American when I ask for applications—the managers are excited to hand one to me.

I can tell when I talk to the locals in Myrtle Beach that they are well educated—more so than in other minority areas I’ve been to. I’ve looked at the Myrtle Beach District Schools’ website—their high school curriculum is outstanding. The classes they offer students are diverse, typically found on college campuses. Such shows how diversity can benefit society.
Graduates who are willing to move to areas where they are the minority will land jobs, and possibly improve society in areas where the education system fails its students.

It’s important for graduates to follow the opportunity, and opportunity exists where improvement is needed.

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Methland, A Book Review

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

It’s important for everyone who cares about his or her small town communities to read Methland. Although the book is about the meth epidemic in small town America, it makes strong connections between the illegal drug trade, illegal immigration, and corporate slave labor, perhaps the three most destructive illegal activities in modern day America. More specifically, everyone in Branson, Missouri should take a close look at this book, as the small town of Oelwein, Iowa is very similar to any given town in Southwest, Missouri, many of which are micro-burbs of Branson.

Written by Nick Reding, a traveling journalist, Methland portrays the plight of Olwein, Iowa, a once bustling small town with a meatpacking pant, Iowa Ham, that once paid its workers eighteen dollars an hour. However, after being sold to a large food corporation, Gillette, pay was cut to $6.20, resulting in workers working longer hours to earn a living wage. This new culture, according to Reding, paved the way for the meth epidemic—workers quickly realized that meth provided the stimulation needed to make a long workday tolerable.

Many of the workers after getting addicted to meth at Gillette realized in the mid nineties that making and selling meth was far more profitable than working long hours. It was then that meth spread incessantly.

In light of the slave labor wages, the town began to shrink and the meatpacking plant resorted to hiring illegal immigrants from Mexico. In addition to the illegals working the low paying jobs, Mexicans would come up from Mexico and sell enough meth for them to go back to Mexico and retire within a year. The Mexican drug trafficers are clever and are able to easily evade the police. In one instance of the book, the trafficers call the DEA and taunt them: the DEA was able catch the trafficking in process by using intelligence. However, the intelligence they receive is often planted as a decoy so a much larger transport can be made incognito. It appears that the federal police are inadequate in stopping drugs from crossing the borders.

I talked with a Branson visitor from Ottumwa, Iowa, a similar town to Oelwein. Although he hadn’t read the book, he was familiar with Tom Arnold’s sister, Lori Arnold, who was a major player in Mexican drug trafficking. The visitor’s wife was a teacher, and she stated that more and more resources are going to bilingual services because of the high illegal immigrant population in the area. The visitor also stated that there are signs on the borders directing the illegal immigrants to the towns where they can find work.

Methland is important to Branson because of its excess restaurant and hotel jobs. Because businesses are not required to run background checks on employees; anybody with a fake ID can get a job in Branson. Background checks are not expensive either—but it seems that many businesses in the Branson area do not want to know if an employee is illegal. Thus, when ICE asks them why they hired an illegal immigrant, the business cannot be held accountable, claiming ignorance and referencing the fake ID.

The easy answer might be that Branson should require businesses to run background checks on new hires. However, this will only push the illegal labor trade underground further. But perhaps that is a good thing. Whatever the case may be, businesses and managers should be held accountable. If a business uses illegal immigrants, it should not be doing business in Branson. They need to be held accountable.

As for Methland, I suggest everyone who lives in a small town to read this book, because if small town American continues to turn a blind eye to this problem, the problem of corporate greed, America will fall apart.

And corporate greed is the route problem here. That is more apparent now than ever in light of the massive oil spill in the gulf, which is a direct result of the government’s lack of regulation on corporations. Such lax regulations are the result of special interest groups, which bombard the government daily to keep regulations minimal. And so far it has been working. Corporations in American are not held accountable for their actions, and it is these corporations that are cutting corners by hiring illegal aliens and claiming ignorance when they are caught. For citizens in America, ignorance is not a plead in court, but rather an admission of guilt. Corporations should be subjected to jail time in the same manner as citizens—if a manager fails to run a background check, that manager should go to jail, not the illegal immigrant.

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Tea v. Coffee: Left-Leaning Coffee Party Voices Frustration With Federal Government

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Here’s a great blog post by KSMU in Springfield regarding the Coffee Party.

http://ksmu.org/content/view/6644/66/

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Wal*Mart Recycles Plastic Bags in Branson, Missouri

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Wal-Mart Plastic Bags

Wal-Mart , over the years, has accrued a reputation of using excessive plastic bags—sometimes only placing on or two small items in each unnecessarily.

In more recent years, Wal-Mart has provided reusable bags, offered at a price to customers concerned with the environment.

But now, the Wal-Mart in Branson Hills has begun recycling plastic bags altogether, providing a giant box by the entry way where patrons can easily drop off their wads of plastic Wal-Mart bags for recycling.

To some, particularly those who live in north east coast states, recycling plastic is nothing new. In fact, states like Maine, and Massachusetts have been recycling various plastics for decades.

However, Missouri has never been one of those states that emphasized the recycling of plastics; perhaps because of the lack of nearby sea, the inland landfills able to neatly tuck away plastics without worry of runoff.

And because Wal-Mart is such a dominant corporation in Missouri and other southern, inland states, recycling plastic bags has the potential to make an environmental difference in the area—particularly since southern government institutions are so disinterested in sustainability.

Such recycling is beneficial to Wal-Mart’s bottom line as well—they now have access to free plastic to make bags, given the recycling process is less costly than buying raw plastic.

It’s about time that Wal-Mart has taken responsibility for its waste. Now, McDonalds, what are you going to do about your trash?

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Branson Tea Party Disgraces American Flag

Sunday, April 18th, 2010
Tea Party Protest

White Power at Tea Party Protest

This weekend Branson hosted Tea Party protesters, a planned peaceful demonstration on the popular Hwy 76 Boulevard.

Tea Partiers protested everything from Health Care Reform to taxation without representation.

Passersby honked in agreement with the protesters. However, one Branson visitor, a Tea Party supporter, was disgusted by the disrespectful manner in which the American flag was handled.

“I stopped when I saw the flag on the ground,” the anonymous visitor said. “I told them to get that flag off the ground. A lady responded by telling me the Tea Partier didn’t know what he was doing.”

Two Tea Partiers made a point to keep the potentially offensive signage from being seen by passersby on Hwy 76. George Grisser and Fred Ellison, according the conservative free newspaper the Branson Independent, did their best to contain the right wing extremists by blocking their signs, which proved to be a tall order. The extremists, who refused to give their names, where everywhere, trying to get noticed.

It’s not clear why the Tea Party brought its road protest to Branson, but it may be to counter the formation of the Coffee Party, a local progressive church group. The Coffee Party protests peacefully in nearby Springfield, Missouri, formed by college students in a local nondenominational church.

Nationally, the Coffee Party began on Facebook in January of 2010, and it has surpassed both the DNC and the Tea Party in fans.

Information on the Coffee Party

The following is an amateur video report of academics being kicked out of the Branson Tea Party rally.

we are change branson

We Are Change Branson

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St. Louis Public Schools Withhold Money Intended for Charter Schools

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

The St. Louis Public School System may have to fork over monies it withheld from the newly formed charter schools from 2000-2004. When the charter schools were first developed, the state had no other way to pay them but through the traditional school districts, and the school districts in St. Louis–and probably all over the state of Missouri–arbitrarily delivered funds to the charter schools, withholding $3.86 million in state funding.

Since the charter schools had been developed, the St. Louis school district has lost 10,000 students to the charter schools, leaving the district strapped for cash. The charters are independently run, non-district public schools, and the loss of student costs the St. Louis district $100 million per year in funding.

After a folly of letters were sent to the state department of education, the discrepancy between the charters schools and the public school districts went under review by the state. However, the state set the complaints to a low priority.

It was not until a charter school opened suit against the state that the state made it a priority. In the suit, the charter school asked the judge to force the state to make a decision about the back-monies. In November of 2009, Cole County Circuit Judge Patricia Joyce sided with the charter schools, but she did not tell the state how to make a decision; she merely insisted that the state come to a decision.

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Servis Advertising Offering Writing and Editing Services to High School Students

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

I’m always looking for ways to put my bachelor degree to good use. I would like to offer our writing and editing services (free of charge) to students (or nonstudents) whose parents have an education of some college or less for the purpose of obtaining scholarships and grants.

Free Writing and Editing Help

We will be offering writing services to students who otherwise would not have the professional help required to win scholarship money and grants. The fact is that such contests are biased toward kids with educated parents, as parents often help their kids write papers, giving judges the impression that the student has an inherent ability.

To help level the playing field, I will offer editing services to any student whose parents did not go to college. I’ve realized over the years that opportunities flock to kids who come from wealthy, educated backgrounds.

Who is this Free Writing and Editing Service For?

This service is for anyone who is interested in obtaining scholarship or grant money by way of writing essays. In fact, any kid from an underprivileged background who would like help writing for any goal, I will be willing to help. Such a kid may be a high school dropout looking to obtain a GED, a high school student looking to win grant money, kids from bad neighborhoods, and so on and so forth.

Because such kids do not have access to “professional parents,” I believe that offering such services is necessary to level the grant and scholarship playing field, which is overly biased toward privileged students.

How to Get Started

If you are a person who believes you meet the profile that I’ve mentioned above, please fill out the form below. In the comments box, please let me know what you are working on and why you believe you come from an underprivileged background.

Name:*
Email:*
Subject:*
Message:*

Web forms generated by 123ContactForm

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Why You Should Buy from Aeropostale but not Wal-Mart

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

In a recent article in Harper’s Magazine, freelance writer Ken Silverstein investigates Cambodian sweatshops. He uncovers several major American t-shirt distributers that utilize the services of impoverished Cambodian women; two such corporations are Wal-Mart and Aeropostale.

The subtitle of the article, “The human cost of a two-dollar T-shirt,” caught my interest because I had recently bought a slew of two-dollar t-shirts that I had planned to create original designs for and sell on this website. However, I abandoned the concept in favor of outsourcing to a t-shirt design specialist that could produce higher quality t-shirts with my designs on them.

These t-shirts can be found here.

Anyway, I am not surprised that t-shirts are produced in such a way. This was a big issue in the ‘90s with Nike, and to this day, I rarely buy Nike products for that reason. According to Silverstein’s article, however, Nike has since taken measures to improve the working conditions in third-world sweatshops. In all honesty–if you didn’t already know–the damage has already been done, as the co-founder of Nike, Phil Knight, is one of the 50 richest men in the world today.

The other key piece of information that Silverstein’s article unveiled was his estimates of the sheer profits made annually off each employee. Exploiting cheap labor, paying bare-minimum prices for the products produced, and selling those sweatshop products to Americans with ridiculous markups makes major profits for clothing retailers.

Silverstein estimates in his article that each sweatshop employee produces $195,000 in sales per year. Each factory employee’s gross pay is around $750 per year, and his estimate assumes that the retailers will sell each product for roughly $25 per piece.

People who regularly shop in Branson realize that clothes are generally priced less at Aeropostale than Wal-Mart. One reason is Aeropostal’s retail outlet in the Tanger Mall which sells excess inventory from the previous year. Often times you can find t-shirts on sale in Aeropostale for under $10. Such sales keep Aeropostale’s profit margin on sweatshop t-shirts sold in Branson at a reasonable level.

However, Wal-Mart is a different story. Because of Wal-Mart’s “everyday low prices,” one should not expect to find t-shirts below $10. Unlike Aeropostale, Wal-Mart has consistent prices, and often times their supposed “sales” are nothing more than sales promotions. Wal-Mart marks their t-shirts down from the “retail” value of $18-25, but their prices never go below the competitive t-shirt prices of non-sweatshop or American-made t-shirt products. Realistically, Wal-Mart’s prices are not competitive with Aeropostale’s in many cases, so consumers should understand that Wal-Mart is making massive profits from selling such clothing.

Beside that fact that Wal-Mart is pulling the wool over the eyes of its customers, it should also be considered who Wal-Mart’s core clothing customer base is.

Wal-Mart began in Bentonville, Arkansas and quickly expanded all over the world within a few decades. People like Gretchen Wilson, the popular country music singer, have endorsed Wal-Mart as being a cheap place to buy clothing.

In Wilson’s “Redneck Woman,” she states:

Victoria’s Secret,
Well their stuff’s real nice,
Oh but I can buy the same damn thing,
On a Wal-Mart shelf half price.

It seems that people in and around the Bible Belt have long believed Wal-Mart to be a place of low prices in terms of clothing. Such a case is a half-truth at best. Many Christians within the Bible Belt inadvertently endorse clothing sweatshops and the perpetual impoverishment of third-world countries like Cambodia, whose children are often sold into prostitution to put food on the table of their families, by purchasing average-priced clothing from Wal-Mart.

Silverstein’s article also takes note of the abundance of Christian charity groups and underage prostitutes in Cambodia, but his article does not directly suggest that Wal-Mart is responsible for Cambodia’s impoverishment.

My suggestion to those not-so-wealthy Bible Belt citizens, who might believe that they have nothing to give to charity, is that you make a difference by not buying your clothing from Wal-Mart, Target, or JC Penney (all mentioned in Silverstein’s article), and start buying your clothing from outlet stores such as Aeropostale, that do not consistently overcharge for sweatshop goods. Realistically, making an effort to keep your money out of the hands of companies that exploit Cambodians may be the best thing you can do for the poor this season.

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Reeds Spring, Missouri: A History

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

I’m going to published this article as a series in respect to its length and the extensive research involved in it. The first part includes the introduction and the Beginnings of Stone County. The next few sections will be geared at Reeds Spring’s history including its first days, railroad days, depression days, and modern days. Thanks.

Steven

Quick Update:
If you’re interested in reading part II, III, IV of this article make sure you subscribe to this blog.

Part II will cover the Civil War years up to the railroad years.

Part III will cover the depression years up to the booming years of the 50s and 60s.

Part IV will cover Reeds Spring’s more recent downfall years. This article will span from the 1980s to the present. This will be the best one, so if you don’t read any others, be sure to read this one.

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Introduction

Reeds Spring, Missouri, a passerby town located northwest of Branson, Missouri, the popular family vacation destination for southerners, has never changed. From initial settlements in the early 19th century to its near demise in 2003, Reeds Spring has been known for debauchery, saloons and questionable activities not typical for a town of roughly 400. Its cultural origins for more than two hundred years have remained consistent; the backwoods, wild-west nature of the town has been perpetuated from one generation to the next. The far-flung, dead-end highways make Stone County impossible to govern; steep hills and curvy roads make every police pursuit difficult and dangerous if not impossible. And the area has always been as such, its progress slow and easily hindered by corrupt government and lawsuits. From its beginnings in the wooded hills, residents have been the law, and officers a mere formality in a distant town; to live twenty minutes out of town renders the police twenty minutes away. In fact, the Reeds Brothers’ cabin, the first known cabin in the town, had a peephole large enough to point a shotgun through. And not much has changed over the years; if one goes knocking on doors out of town in the middle of the night, one will surely be welcomed with a hunting rifle in the face. Not that it’s unusual anywhere in the United States, and it’s in fact everyone’s right to own a firearm and protect their property. People simply don’t rely on the police in Stone County.

This idea of self-governance has been the building block of culture in Reeds Spring, and such a concept is difficult for new comers to grasp. People aren’t reliant on their neighbors as they are in the North, where homelessness is impossible in the cold winters. In fact, in the early days settlers would build their cabins on their own until the walls were raised, and only then did they call on neighbors to help raise the roof. If a man was not self-sufficient, there would be no reason for him to be in the wilderness, because the early settlers’ livelihood depended upon the relentlessness of hunting and the knowledge of agriculture. So it is no wonder that the city of Reeds Spring was sued in 2003 when a lady twisted her ankle in a pothole downtown. The bureaucrats in the town couldn’t grasp the idea that the government was responsible for the people’s safety. Because of its lawlessness, Reeds Spring is the epitome of freedom in the United States, taken as a blessing or a curse. The following is how Reeds Spring became what it is (or isn’t) today.

The Beginnings of Stone County

Because of the rocky, hilly terrain, trade in the Ozarks mostly began along the rivers, where European entrepreneurs had set up trading posts to buy beaver, deer, otter, bear, and raccoon skins, bears’ bacon, and fresh pork. The first Europeans to penetrate the Ozark wilderness were the Spanish and for a short term the French. A large portion of the Delaware Nation had settled near the James River after being pushed westerly by new white settlers and the St. Mary’s Treaty of 1818. Over the centuries, the Delaware had become dependent on annuities provided by the Spanish and American governments. Some Americans, particularly the Yocums, followed the Delaware into the Ozarks wilderness in order to capitalize on illegal trade with the tribe. President Monroe declared that Missouri land would not be sold until it was surveyed; however, the survey was not finished until the mid 19th century. In 1851, shortly after the completion of the survey in the area, Stone County was created. In 1870, the Reeds brothers were driving cattle through Stone County when they came upon a massive spring. It was there they continually stopped to allow the cattle to drink from the water, and they eventually settled the land. They established a post office there August 7, 1871. In the early 20th century a railroad came through the small town, but a 2000 ft tunnel had to be drilled through solid rock, deeming Reeds Spring a rough and tumble railroad camp.

It was considered a savage wilderness, and it was not expected to have much value when Thomas Jefferson bought it in the Louisiana Purchase. The Osage people were the earliest known tribe to inhabit the Ozark region, but they mostly used it as a hunting ground until they were asked to leave to make room for friendlier, displaced tribes. In the early 1800s inhabitants were the indigenous Delaware people–the same Native Americans who two hundred years earlier had met the pilgrim Europeans on the East Coast.i The Osage were often violent and would allegedly rob anyone who they happened upon, according to the pioneer settlers. The Osage traded with the Spanish until they became enemies of the tribe, in which case the Osage began trading with Americans. The tribe made camp along the White River in the summers and in the fall they would travel a trading path along the Mississippi. In the 20th century the White River was dammed several times, currently making three enormous lakes: Table Rock, Bull Shoals, and Taneycomo.

In late 1818, Henry Rowe Schoolcraft at the age of 25 made an expedition into the Ozarks in search of cultivatable land. Schoolcraft, just out of college, was unprepared for his journey into the wilderness with only a pistol for hunting and a packhorse to carry his things. After getting lost several times, he met James Yocum along the James River. Yocum was the first known settler in the Reeds Spring area, and he was likely an immigrant of Germany. ii Schoolcraft spent the night at Yocum’s cabin, and the next day Yocum borrowed Schoolcraft’s canoe to transport a load bears meat to a trading post 35 miles downriver; now preserved at the theme park Silver Dollar City. Schoolcraft hiked a 15-mile foot trail to the trading post, the equivalent of a journey from Reeds Spring to Indian Point. Judging by length of the trail and the location of the James River, Yocum’s cabin would have been somewhere along the Y Highway, Cape Fair region of Stone County. When Yocum arrived in the canoe a day later, he had around fourteen men with him looking to barter at a trade boat parked at the post. The 20 men drank through the night, in a small cabin in the wilderness, singing and dancing. However, Schoolcraft remained sober, for fear of his well being among the drunkards.

It is alleged that the Yocums made whiskey and moonshine to be sold to the nearby Delaware tribe illegally. They then took the specie of coin given to the Delaware by the American government, melted it down in a cave that they claimed was a silver mine, and made Yocum Dollars with it. The new coins were then circulated throughout the Ozarks. When someone showed up in Springfield with the Yocum Silver Dollar, it was deemed counterfeit by the government. ii The Yocums eventually were driven out of the Indian reservation when John Campbell, a federally appointed subagent of the Delaware reservation, learned of their practices, and the Yocums settled into Taney County, where they turned their interests to agriculture . The Yocums “dirty” money was injected into the Taney County economy.

By the 1830s, the Delaware had left the Ozarks and once again headed west. The Cherokee moved through the Ozarks in the years of the “Trail of Tears,” spawned by the Indian Removal Act of 1830 signed by Andrew Jackson and enforced by Martin Van Buren. This marked the end of Native American inhabitance in the Ozarks. President Monroe in 1818 declared that Missouri land could be sold as it was surveyed; most of Stone County was not surveyed until 1850. iv This hindered settlement in the area, as new settlers could not be guaranteed ownership of land without a legal document. However, squatters were welcome in the early days of Stone County. No one asked who their neighbors were, they were just glad to have neighbors at all. v Settlers continued to make their homes in the Ozarks, despite the uncertainty of land not surveyed. These settlers lived mostly by hunting, trapping, and subsequent trading along the riverbanks, because the land was hilly and rocky and not suited for agricultural development. Today in Stone County, the land is used to raise some cattle and horses. However, due to the thin grass on the hills, a large plot of land is required to healthily nourish livestock.

Notes:

i Schoolcraft, Journal of a Tour, Jan. 15th and 16th http://history.missouristate.edu/FTMiller/LocalHistory/Schoolcraft/schcrftcomplete.htm

ii Lynn Morrow, The Yocum Silver Dollar, 5 http://thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org/lochist/periodicals/wrv/V8/N11/Sp85d.htm

iii William Robbins, Reeds Spring Journal http://www.nytimes.com/1988/09/30/us/reeds-spring-journal-an-iron-eagle-is-back-and-so-is-a-town-s-pride.html

iv Stone County Historical Society, History of Stone County

v A Reminiscent History of the Ozark Region, 21

Bibliography

Schoolcraft, Henry R. Journal of a Tour into the Interior of Missouri and Arkansaw: from Potosi, or Mine a Burton, in Missouri Territory, in a South-West Direction, toward the Rocky Mountains, Performed in the Years 1818 and 1819. London: Richard Phillips and Company, 1821

Morrow, Lynn. “The Yocum Silver Dollar.” The White River Valley Historical Quarterly. Volume 8, Number 11, P. 5-6. Spring 1985.

Robins, William. “Reeds Spring Journal; An Iron Eagle Is Back, and So Is a Town’s Pride.” New York Times. September 30, 1988.

The Stone County Historical Society. History of Stone County. Marionville, MO. 1989.

A Reminiscent History of the Ozark Region. Ramfire Press. Cape Girardeau, MO.
1956.

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Brain Drain in Branson Missouri?

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Most people, in response to the term “brain drain,” think of Africa, where educated people emigrate out of Africa for better opportunities elsewhere. Such emigration unchecked, leads to a lack of educated persons to teach and run businesses. Without educated people, a local economy cannot stably grow.

So what of Branson? According to the most recent census data less than 15 percent of Taney County citizens have bachelor degrees. The Missouri State percentage is 21 percent. There is only one four year institution in Taney County, College of the Ozarks; a private school. This means that the students Branson educates in its public schools must leave Branson to get a higher education. And if only 15 percent of Taney County citizens have bachelor degrees, educated young people won’t return because of poor social connections with current residents.

Lack of higher education in Taney County shouldn’t be ignored. In the overall population in the U.S. according to the Census Bureau, 29 percent have a bachelor degree. That is nearly twice that of Taney County.

Southwest Missouri has a history of not having opportunity for its young people. If the region is to grow in the future, it must have a four year educational institution so that young people aren’t forced to leave the area to make an average wage.
Branson’s tourist economy has given the area an opportunity to grow, but Southwest Missouri has yet to stabilize. The tourist industry is unpredictable, and when the economy gets difficult, the tourist industry will suffer; Branson will lose its hard earned progress. We’ve already seen several businesses around town close, most notably Celebration City last fall. Stone and Taney County have an opportunity to capitalize on what’s left of the industry by building a public four year college in Taney County with tourist tax dollars. Branson is not a well-rounded city, as restaurants and hotels dominate the town. A four year college would stabilize Branson’s economy by allowing the city to become self-sufficient, using local dollars the same way Springfield does.

When businesses rely on locals for dollars, they are held to a higher standard. For instance, when a visitor gets bad service and never goes back to a restaurant, the restaurant does not suffer because the visitor is from out of town anyway. On the other hand, when a business is reliant on local dollars, they are held accountable, and they must give locals the service they expect or the locals will not return. In Springfield, the newspapers report on bad service at restaurants, and restaurants that don’t meet the standards of the locals tend to go under. An example in Branson of a local restaurant is the Olive Garden and Red Lobster, both owned by Darden, which is owned by General Mills. Olive Garden is one of the few businesses in Branson that does not lay off employees in the winter. This is because locals keep the business afloat during the winter, because they know they will get fresh food and great service. However, lower-traffic restaurants are not able to keep their food fresh in the winter.

If Taney County had a public four year college, more educated people would make their homes in Branson, and fewer businesses would have to shut down in the winter. Such an institution will stabilize Branson’s economy by increasing local dollars.

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