50°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

Businesses define economy

What kinds of businesses do we want to encourage in Boulder City? What kinds of jobs do we want for our workers? Let’s split this into two parts: the economic value of various types of businesses, and the problem with job supply and demand in Boulder City.

As I meet with our business owners and survey their business activity, I find that at least we can group our businesses by internal tourism, external tourism, government, industrial and manufacturing, and all else. “All else” can mean motels, restaurants, antique shops and other retail or commercial enterprises, since they share similar traits for employee qualifications and availability, and for economic value.

Internal tourism is tourism driven to Boulder City by specific local events and activities — Art in the Park, Wurst Festival, Spring Jamboree and so on. Some events draw people from outside the region, while others mostly draw from the Las Vegas area. The jobs they engender are retail and commercial. They tend to be steady but low-paying, too low-paying to sustain most households. Yet they do not demand significant skills and are easily filled from the town’s general population.

External tourism is driven by factors from outside town. For instance, the helicopter and zip line businesses get tourists visiting Las Vegas looking for something “not Vegas” to do on their trip. Those businesses rise and fall with the national economy, or so they believe. Hotels, motels and restaurants benefit from internal and external tourism.

Government employment is driven by external factors that are not necessarily related to the national economy. Many employees are highly skilled professionals with master’s or doctoral degrees. They rarely come from the local labor market because the supply is flimsy at best.

Our industrial and manufacturing firms also tend to need more skilled labor not available elsewhere. Some of our local inns rent rooms by the week to solar plant construction workers who come from out of the region and go home on weekends. This means we are not able to provide workers ourselves for these jobs.

And a few years ago a call center firm canceled its plans to open a call center with as many as 200 jobs when it found no one available to fill them — hardly skilled labor.

Not all businesses are of equal economic value. In my last column I referred to new work, work that increases exports, as generating the most growth. Many businesses have few if any exports, so they do not tend to grow the economy; they sustain it, not always well. When the regional or national economy falters, they all falter in concert.

Government, though not a business, can and does bring significant income to the region through employment, maintenance and new construction. While the Hoover Dam can be said to general substantial exports, those exports are part of the regional economy.

As a result, those interested in denying Boulder City a natural growth pattern have succeeded in reducing its economic viability to a barely sustainable level. Without the solar power plant leases the city government would be insolvent and even so, without the federal government as an anchor the community would be on the brink.

Boulder City has evolved into a community without healthy, life-sustaining jobs, where the best paid among us work for the feds or over the hill. Retirees and homemakers don’t care about jobs and our youths don’t need much until they graduate from high school. Then their best option, without exception, is to leave.

Note: Next week I debut a Business Beat news column. If your business has an important milestone like an opening, a large expansion or a closing, we want to hear about it at news@bouldercityreview.com. Tell us how the bypass is affecting you.

Dale Napier is a journalist and businessman.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
A graduation gift to remember

Over the last couple of weeks, I twice drove over the Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Bridge, aka the Hoover Dam bypass.

Democracy dies in … Oh, shut up

OK, so, fair warning. I may be a little “spicier” than normal. It’s been a challenging couple of weeks and I’m in a worse mood than usual.

Real ID will help combat terrorism

Most veterans in Nevada are aware that when they obtain a driver’s license or renew their old one, they can ask the DMV to add the word “veteran” on the license. While that won’t give them a get-out-of-jail-free card, it might evoke some sympathy from an officer if a veteran is pulled over for a minor infraction. (No guarantee, but it has happened to me.)

Centenarian Sara, a Boulder City treasure

At 100 years of age, Sara Denton is certainly one of Boulder City’s oldest residents. And if you’ve met her, you’ll likely agree that she’s one of its most cheerful residents as well. Sara loves to laugh and has always lived life with gusto and adventure.

Know what wheels kids can (and can’t) operate

Motorized devices are growing in popularity, especially with teens, but many parents don’t know the legalities or the dangers.

Teamwork resonates in City Hall

Every year, college basketball fans get excited for their team to play in the “Big Dance.” March Madness (women’s and men’s NCAA basketball) is down to the final four teams this weekend. It’s estimated that 34 million brackets were completed this year.

My bighorn buddies

Having grown up in Boulder City, I was always aware of its unofficial mascots …the bighorn sheep.

Can’t we all just disagree?

Once you asked me, “What do you think?”

What if they gave a war and nobody was home?

The subjects in most of the articles and columns I write tend to include positive stories about American veterans and veterans’ organizations. And in fact the pieces are about veterans, not active-duty military.

Gratitude for government

I moved to Boulder City in 1981. Boulder City is blessed to have been a government town. Can we recall the blessings we have received from government?