For sale or rent?

The West Virginia Division of Culture and History has accepted $250,000 from Mylan Pharmaceuticals primarily for an addition to the State Museum featuring the company.

The Division’s decision sets a bad precedent.  The subjects covered in the State Museum were selected by historians who gave them serious consideration. While the decision of those historians not to focus on Mylan apparently “dismayed” Mylan’s President and Governor Joe Manchin’s daughter Heather Bresch, it is perfectly understandable. Mylan’s history extends only several decades, and it is not representative of a larger West Virginia industry.

If the State Museum is to be accepted as a credible West Virginia history storyteller, it cannot sell its story-telling space.

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Think, West Virginia

With all the organizations out there aimed at improving life as we know it in West Virginia  – from Vision Shared to CreateWV to ImagineWV to the Democratic and Republican Parties, it is with great trepidation that I suggest the addition of another group to fill a desperately needed void – Thinking.

I grow frustrated by the two extreme forms discussions in West Virginia take.  At one extreme, you have the Fox News/ MSNBC crowd that sees everything at one or the other end of the political continuum.  If President Obama says it, it must be bad/good depending on which end of the political continuum you place yourself.  At the other extreme, you have people who spout platitudes as if they’re somehow meaningful and love every new idea (term defined very broadly here), no matter how hare-brained, that someone proposes and the sychophants who follow these platitude-spouters around.

Having given up on all current organizations, I have decided to create a new group called “Think, West Virginia.”  “Think, West Virginia” will focus on one thing – thinking through the serious issues of the day and coming up with nuanced solutions to our problems.  Some proposed ideas for “Think, West Virginia’s” platform:

  • The plural of anecdote is not evidence.
  • If everybody agrees with you, you’re not saying anything.
  • If the solution to a difficult problem is simple, you haven’t yet found the solution.
  • If the idea can be crystallized completely into a sound bite, it’s really not an idea.
  • If your strategic plan can fit on one page, you don’t have a plan to address any problem larger than what to cook for dinner.
  • If your strategic plan includes every idea thrown out in a brainstorming session, you don’t have a strategic plan.  You have toilet paper.
  • The number of pretty pictures in a publication is inversely proportional to the knowledge being imparted in that publication.

The first major initiative of Think, West Virginia: to require a debate class as a condition for graduation from every public and private high school in West Virginia.  Given the level of public discourse I have observed recently, it’s clear that our schools are failing miserably at teaching critical thinking skills.  And I know of no better activity than policy debate, which sadly is offered nowhere in the State of West Virginia anymore, to teach critical thinking.  In policy debate, students wrestle with a single topic for an entire year.  They learn to prepare cases defining the problem, demonstrating its significance, exploring barriers in the status quo that prevent obvious solutions from being implemented, proposing plans, and setting forth advantages to their plans.  But, more importantly, they learn how to tear down every piece of the case they just built and then to rebuild it again using sound logic and reasoning.

Think, West Virginia.  It’s truly the only way to improve things.

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The West Virginia Department of Commerce should be commended for landing $130 million in federal stimulus funds to expand high-speed internet access across the state.  I’m sure West Virginia’s application was assisted by Senator Jay Rockefeller, who has been a long-time champion of broadband access, but it takes more than a powerful Senator to land a competitive grant of that magnitude.

Senator Rockefeller described the grant as “a real game-changer in West Virginia,” and I could not agree more.  Broadband access is a critical component of rural economic growth.  In a world where some people can work from almost anywhere, they can’t work from an area that lacks basic broadband access.

Tune in tomorrow

At the end of my last post, I asked a question that I said I would answer tomorrow. Tomorrow came and went as I became extremely busy with a work-related project. But here’s the answer to the question:

What major sector of the United States economy has seen costs rise more quickly than the health care sector – and by a wide margin?

Higher education, of course.

Why have higher education costs risen so quickly? Certain higher education officials would like to convince you that it’s because state appropriations have not kept pace with inflation. But that’s really only a small part of the explanation – and not even that if you factor in all the new federal and state funding coming through the back door in the form of merit- and need-based financial aid. The dirty little secret: The back door funding of rich and poor kids with financial aid has removed market forces from the fee-setting calculus. With almost no pressure to control prices, tuition costs – and thus the revenue institutions have to operate in real dollar terms – has increased exponentially. I’m oversimplifying a bit here, but this certainly is the case for West Virginia’s four-year higher education institutions over the last decade – and what the public higher education sector tries to hide using an inflation measure called the higher education price index. (It has a legitimate purpose, just not the purpose for which it is most frequently used.)

Were I less busy, I would connect the dots that support my contentions for you sooner, rather than later. But alas market forces require me to do real, paying work. When I return to posting on this blog (this coming weekend), I will share my thoughts about our newest higher education market force – the Governor, who’s saying “no” to tuition increases, as well as address the legislative auditor’s assessment of the appropriate number of four-year institutions, which I think may be wrong-headed. Plus I’ll flag three interesting news articles about subjects that I think may have a larger impact than people realize.

But alas it’s back to paying work.

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Richard Florida’s book The Rise of the Creative Class was the standard tome for economic and community revitalization for most of the past decade.  In it Dr. Florida taught us that all we needed to do was focus on three “T’s” – technology, talent, and tolerance – to transform our communities into the equivalent of Silicon Valleys.  Despite his simple recipe for creative success, few communities made the transformation that Dr. Florida envisioned.

Now, I am sad to report, Dr. Florida has concluded that we should just give up on community development.  Instead of supporting communities, explains The American Prospect in an article aptly titled “The Ruse of the Creative Class,” we should start supporting people.  His words from a May 2009 blog post: “People – not industries or even places – should be our biggest concern.  We can best help those who are hardest-hit by the [economic] crisis, by providing a generous social safety [net], investing in their skills, and when necessary helping them become mobile and move where the opportunities are.”

Had we known back then how easy it was to (re)create West Virginia, we could have saved a lot of time and money by buying everyone suitcases and renting them Ryder trucks so they could move to more stylish bergs like Austin, Texas; Raleigh, North Carolina; and Boulder, Colorado.

Was Dr. Florida correct then or is he correct now?  Stay tuned.

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