Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Facebook Google Power The Internet Apple

Rural North Carolina Experiences Data Center Boom 153

1sockchuck writes "Rural counties in western North Carolina have hit the data center trifecta, landing major projects from Google, Apple and Facebook. These marquee tech companies will invest more than $2 billion in small towns like Forest City, Kings Mountain and Maiden, a town of just 3,300 residents. How did western North Carolina become a tech hub? Aggressive tax incentives and an abundant supply of cheap power, a legacy of the textile mills that once thrived in the region, which narrowly missed winning a $499 million Microsoft data center project that ended up in Virginia."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Rural North Carolina Experiences Data Center Boom

Comments Filter:
  • Jobs (Score:2, Troll)

    by falldeaf ( 968657 )
    I wonder how hard it'll be to find employees in those areas. I doubt there's a glut of high tech workers looking for jobs in those rural areas and if I were a knowledgeable tech worker I wouldn't really want to move to such a rural area... If you're not into country music and you prefer dance clubs over small bars you would *not* want to move to those areas!
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      I'd relocate there in a second. Any job postings up yet?

      • Too hot.

        But when the place in Maine or Hampshire or Vermont opens-up, I'll be first in line.

        • Too hot.

          But when the place in Maine or Hampshire or Vermont opens-up, I'll be first in line.

          Too hot? Have you been to Western North Carolina?

          It's a mountainous, heavily-forested region. Snow in the winter, sometimes heavy snow. The Carolina coast can really roast in the summer, but it stays pretty cool in the mountains. I was born in North Carolina but mostly grew up in Michigan, and prefer cold to warm areas. Western Carolina is certainly warmer than mid-Michigan, but it has a rather pleasant climate in my opinion.

        • Something I've noticed -- for whatever reason, techies have a tendency to thrive in the cold. Not sure what it is, but it seems like half the people I know who are "geeks" or "techies" are more comfortable in the 55-65 range for whatever reason than what most people consider "room" temperature. My office has it's own private AC, and it's set to 60. I am in heaven, the sales/purchasing guy freezes his nuts off. =p

      • Re:Jobs (Score:5, Insightful)

        by NatasRevol ( 731260 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @12:09PM (#34256148) Journal

        Hope you don't have kids.

        Education was the reason I moved from rural North Carolina. They are the reason for No Child Left Behind. The teachers help push the kids up and over that very low bar just to get their bonuses. I've seen second graders that couldn't read their math problems.

        Well, that and all the Nascar rednecks. Everyone's password is nascar7, nascar34 whatever number their favorite driver is.

    • Re:Jobs (Score:5, Informative)

      by sshirley ( 518356 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:24AM (#34254616)
      I went to university at Western Carolina University and we typically had 30+ students in the CS program. UNC Asheville has about the same. There are also a number of regional community colleges with degrees in IT. There are plenty of educated people in the area who want to stay around home and work there. I am from New England but went to school there. Back then (1999) there was a huge dearth of IT jobs in the area. If something like this had happened then, I'd probably still be there happily.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by falldeaf ( 968657 )
        That's actually more than I thought but makes sense. Also, just to be clear I didn't mean for my post to be a sleight towards NC, I actually lived in Winston-Salem for a couple years and liked it.
        • Oh, I know. On first glance, you wouldn't think so. Sure there are PLENTY of uneducated bumpkins in WNC. Hell, Buncombe County (Asheville) has an adult illiteracy rate of over 50%!!! But there are still a lot of educated people there. I was quite surprised while living there. Plus the beauty of the area, the opportunities for exercise (hiking, rafting, fishing, etc), low cost of living, etc makes it an ideal place. I don't think I listened to country once while there. :-)
      • My only question is (and I'm thinking about myself here) whether there are going to be any software development jobs resulting from this. Or just networking type jobs.
        • My first guess is "no" to the first, but "yes" to the second. I could be completely off base of course, but my read would be that software development will be done in headquarters locations, but given that these are *data* centers, most of what they'll need will probably be systems and network guys. There may be some software development jobs associated with writing internal apps and scripts needed directly by the data center, but probably not a huge number. Again, I don't work for any of these companies

      • NC State too (Score:1, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        NC State attracts students from across the state, and plenty of them come to Raleigh, get a CS or CE degree, and would be happy to move to a rural area and do IT of some sort. I don't think they'll have any problem finding folks to do the work.

        Personally, I'm a little disappointed that cheap (read: lots of coal, little renewable growth) power was a factor for Apple and Google. Facebook's a whore anyway, but Apple and Google purport to be greener than the average company.

        • That's pretty much always the case. That's why so much of the tech industry is in WA state. We've got some of the cheapest power in the country. Plus our courts tend to be pretty friendly to tech companies and hell, the state looks the other way as tech firms opt out of paying their taxes.

          We've got MS, Google, Amazon.com, Nintendo Of America, and Popcap to name a few. All of which have a presence here, and for most of them that's their main presence.
        • by doug ( 926 )

          Actually, there is quite a lot of hydro electric out there, and the McGuire nuclear plant is in the Charlotte area. I'm not saying that there isn't any coal burning plants in Western NC, just that I think that much of the power comes from other sources.

          - doug

      • I lived in Charlotte for a year. It's a major city, but the culture is not much removed from the rural lifestyle of guns, NASCAR, and church. (Good thing I like two out of three of those things.) It was dull compared to someplace major like Boston or Washington or San Francisco.

        Charlotte ranks #24 out of 210 markets.

        • by mitgib ( 1156957 )
          As someone living in suburban Charlotte, it has an airport, you can go anywhere you like anytime if what you want is far far away. Granted that is not an evening out type of thing, but there is alot to do in the area if it suites your likes. I grew up in Chicago, moved to St Louis in my 30's and to Charlotte in my 40's, so I might have very different likes than younger people thinking of the area, but the history and historical sites in the area can keep me busy for years to come. Also, it is not a terri
    • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:44AM (#34254840)

      You can buy/build a house on acres of wooded property. Private, low maintenance, no HOA living.

      Horrible residential internet though.

      I frequent those areas and its some of the most awesome living. Drawing talent away from RTP doesn't seem infeasible.

    • Re:Jobs (Score:5, Interesting)

      by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:50AM (#34254886) Homepage Journal
      "I wonder how hard it'll be to find employees in those areas. I doubt there's a glut of high tech workers looking for jobs in those rural areas and if I were a knowledgeable tech worker I wouldn't really want to move to such a rural area... If you're not into country music and you prefer dance clubs over small bars you would *not* want to move to those areas!"

      Maybe not extremely young workers...but perhaps slightly older people, who are wanting to buy a house, and perhaps raise a family?

      Places like this can be DIRT cheap to live. Cheap to buy property and build a home, and actually have some land for it to sit on.

      Even if you do get a bit less of a bill rate than you would, say on the west coast...with the extremely LOW cost of living, lower taxes, etc, you can really sock some money away. Sure, it will be a bit different lifestyle, but slowing down a bit, getting out of all of the air polution, and actually being able to see some stars at night....well, sometimes, that ain't all bad.

      :)

      • Sure, it will be a bit different lifestyle, but slowing down a bit, getting out of all of the air polution, and actually being able to see some stars at night....well, sometimes, that ain't all bad.

        Not bad at all when you have a wife and friends living there. If you're a bachelor, then the city is the place to go. In my opinion, dating is a bit of a numbers game and the city offers more opportunities to meet women.

    • by edremy ( 36408 )
      I have relatives close to those areas (south-central VA, another really depressed area) There are a ton of worker retraining programs run through community colleges and the like, and there's a fair amount of funding for them through various grants. That said, it's going to be tough for a lot of them: the folks I know who were laid off from mills generally do not have a good educational base and are often well removed from the educational experience, and numbers-wise there's no way these data centers are go
      • by hitmark ( 640295 )

        this basically sums up where the hlobal economy is headed, and i can't see a way for capitalism to dig its way out...

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by JonySuede ( 1908576 )

      I am a knowledgeable tech work and I accepted a 50% salary drop to move back to my home town. Living in a big house for about a quarter of the price of my last rent and only having to drive 5 minutes to work is priceless.

      • Re:Jobs (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Hasai ( 131313 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @11:53AM (#34255914)
        I'm with you on that. I could have been in Silicon Valley, but I opted for the Midwest for less than half the pay. End result: Life in a quiet town, twenty-minute commutes, low taxes, plenty of money left over at the end of the month, and a house paid-off in ten years that's three times the square footage of anything I could have possibly been able to afford in the Valley. God bless the "fly-over" states.
    • My company decided to outsource our shipping/warehousing to a company in N. Carolina, and something like 4 or so of our employees in that department agreed to move out there and work for that company as our liaisons. So lack of qualified people wasn't too much of an issue in that case. I wonder how many other companies are dealing with the qualified candidate issue in that way?
    • There's lots of large cities and several great colleges in the southeast that will produce plenty of people who want to work there. Some people like the small town feel.
    • by Amouth ( 879122 )

      RTP - one of the larger tech places on the east cost is less than 4 hours from these places.

      While it is rural - a lot of people don't mind it.

      Also - they are data centers.. it's not a huge influx of jobs to begin with.

    • It's not too hard, considering there aren't very many jobs that go along with these data centers, and very few high skilled jobs. The jobs number at most in the hundreds, and many of those are low skilled jobs.

      That $600 million Google datacenter? Up to 210 jobs. (no breakdown on skilled vs unskilled)
      That $1 billion Apple datacenter? 50 full time jobs and 250 outside contractors for maintenance/landscaping/security.
      That $17 million Wipro datacenter? 17 jobs.
      etc...

      That being said, the tax incent
  • by commodore64_love ( 1445365 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:19AM (#34254552) Journal

    I thought Google and the rest were looking for cool zones like Western New York and upper New England. The air conditioning bill in Carolina will be lower than California, but not by much.

    I wonder if Western NC and VA residents will still be stuck on dialup, or if they'll finally get an upgrade since they are so close to the data stores?

    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      I'm in NY. They been talking about "Tech Valley" BS for years. AMD has been taking years to build a plant up here, and even when it is ready to open, all the upper tier tech positions are being filled by out of state workers.

      The majority of the good jobs are going to local union construction, electricians and plumbers who will be working on the different sites for years, not the local techies.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There's a big lawsuit to stop the place(s) in NY from being built...

      http://www.buffalonews.com/city/communities/niagara-county/article253768.ece [buffalonews.com]

      • >>>There's a big lawsuit to stop the place(s) in NY from being built...

        Ahhh yes... environmentalists practicing NIMBY. I guess this is democracy in action but it appears to be shooting self in foot - the building would create jobs and possible future growth if Tech/internet companies (like IBM) relocate near the data centers.

        "The heart of the suit involves a ruling last month by the Somerset Town Board, after a preliminary assessment, that the project did not merit a full-blown study under the Sta

    • by mikeee ( 137160 )

      Not as hot as you might think; most of western North Carolina is at a pretty high altitude and has quite moderate summers. Pre-air-conditioning, summer vacation in the Appalachian mountains was popular among upper class New Yorkers, so...

      • >>>summer vacation in the [Pennsylvania] Appalachian mountains was popular among upper class New Yorkers...

        Fixed that for ya.

        Western Carolina is cooler than the eastern side, but still hot. I remember spending my entire Carolina summer trapped in a room, because the outside felt like a sauna, and would have gladly moved further north to NYC or rural PA.

    • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

      The Carolinas have several somethings which California does not:

      * Hard workers. I know the South has a stereotype of laziness, but when it comes to "get'r'done", Southerners are pretty good about it compared to Californians.
      * Cost of living. It's not as bad as California.
      * Taxes. In this alone, they'll be making more money.
      * Reliable infrastructure. From what I've heard about California power and telcom Internet reliability, there's only room for improvement.
      * The Carolinas are humid. As I understand things

    • This is true; Yahoo just opened a "green" datacenter in Lockport (near Buffalo and Niagara Falls).

      http://tonawanda-news.com/local/x1391190391/Yahoo-makes-its-WNY-debut [tonawanda-news.com]

    • by astar ( 203020 )

      So cheap power is the deal. I bet this is from the last century FDR TVA project centered not so far away.

      People like to complain about US economy whatever, but the difference between China and the US is that China is not run by idiots. And for figuring out where all the idiots are, you need to look a bit further than your favorite love-to-hate politician.

    • by doug ( 926 )

      It isn't the heat, it is the cost of electricity. I've heard that NetApp moved its server farm from Sunnydale to RTP, NC because the cost of electricity was lower. That savings of millions per year justified a huge long term shift. And that was RTP rates, I could easily believe that the mountains have cheaper still rates.

      - doug

  • It's unfortunate that such companies will flock to places that offer cheap but dirty power for their facilities. Google, at least, takes a progressive stance towards these things. Hard to maintain a "green" image if your vital infrastructure intensifies the demand for coal-burning. Harder still if you made the conscious choice to participate in this by moving there.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by khallow ( 566160 )

      It's unfortunate that such companies will flock to places that offer cheap but dirty power for their facilities. Google, at least, takes a progressive stance towards these things. Hard to maintain a "green" image if your vital infrastructure intensifies the demand for coal-burning. Harder still if you made the conscious choice to participate in this by moving there.

      There's a lot of nuclear power in NC too. Coal-burning in the US isn't particularly dirty either.

      • Not the dirtiest, no, but it isn't like nuclear power is a tremendous feature of wester N.C. According to this region's power supplier, coal and oil-fired plants make up at least two-thirds [duke-energy.com] of the electricity generation, splitting the rest between nuclear (most of it) and hydro plants.
        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          Not the dirtiest, no, but it isn't like nuclear power is a tremendous feature of wester N.C. According to this region's power supplier, coal and oil-fired plants make up at least two-thirds of the electricity generation, splitting the rest between nuclear (most of it) and hydro plants.

          Some remarks here. The "oil-fired" plants are mostly natural gas peaking generation. What that means is that base load is over a third nuclear. And base line power is really what a data center pulls. It might not be as "green" as power generated in the Pacific northwest, but that's pretty green by US standards IMHO.

      • Dirty coal is why ACEEE.org ranked the EV1 and other electric cars as no cleaner than a Prius and about 10% dirtier than an Insight Hybrid or Civic CNG.

        I've had EV activists tell me "clean coal is the answer!", because the factories remove 99.9% of the pollutants, but so far it's not had much impact cleaning the air.

        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          I've had EV activists tell me "clean coal is the answer!", because the factories remove 99.9% of the pollutants, but so far it's not had much impact cleaning the air.

          Uh huh. Ignorance must be bliss. "Clean coal" isn't going to show much of an improvement in overall air quality because coal burning no longer is a major contributor in the first place. It's like expecting to get slim and trim because you drink diet cola after finishing off your tub of ice cream.

    • Are you kidding? Google was first in with their data center in Lenoir, NC.
  • As someone who is considering moving to, and settling in western North Carolina (maybe Asheville), my question is how will this affect the availability of broadband connections to local businesses and residents?

    These facilities seem to cluster just west of Charlotte, NC. They're definitely going to be bringing in ample amounts of backbone connections in.

    How is the bandwidth in the area now, and is there any record of how network access improved when data centers were brought in at other rural locations aro

  • by Chitlenz ( 184283 ) <chitlenz.chitlenz@com> on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:20AM (#34254572) Homepage

    It's been strange to see this happen. We live right in the center of all this (near Winston-Salem, apple is 45 minutes south, and google is 20 minutes west) and I have to say, these places are not subtle. These places are HUGE. I think the Elkin/Google installation is like 250 acres, which is silly huge. It makes sense, land out here is cheap but you are still 5 hours from DC which in itself is priceless for corporations (the big ones). Add in tax breaks, an evolving biotech industry (like us... we hope!), and lots of geeks near-local (the triangle with IBM/Glaxo/Redhat/Epic Games/Etc. is 2 hours east) and it seems obvious. The nice part for people who live here is that bandwidth is really really good in order to feed all these guys. REALLY good :)

    • by Anonymous Coward
      The article was light on details, but the reason why companies typically do this is because the states hand out idiotically huge tax incentives that there's no way will ever be paid off by the presence of the company. By the time the jobs would be around for long enough to finally start to break even, it's been long enough that the companies have started looking around for who's going to offer the best tax incentives for them to either upgrade their facilities to stay or move. The small reasons you mention
      • Companies (and sports teams) having been whoring themselves out to the highest taxpayer bidder this way for years.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by alen ( 225700 )

        it's not like states and localities will collect any taxes if companies don't open up there? might as well give out some nice breaks which are just making up for crazy tax laws in this country for corporations. it's not like tax payers will pay anything. in the end the infrastructure spending will be good for the local areas

        • by stdarg ( 456557 )

          Not only that but I think they hope there will be a cluster effect in the future. It's like if you gave one gas station a big incentive knowing that within a few years there will be 3 more gas stations on the same block. When a McDonalds opens up, a Burger King is sure to follow.

      • And most of the employees coming in would be solid middle class democrats, who would not tolerate local rural schools boards being too creationism friendly or glossing over the history of slavery and civil rights movement. Rural NC politicians are going to be shocked when they get beaten by gay friendly, neutral-on-gun-rights candidates.
        • by Steauengeglase ( 512315 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @11:08AM (#34255172)

          Historically NC has been called, the vale of humility between two mountains of conceit (SC/VA). I'll admit they have their share of rednecks and old boys, but that state is a hell of a lot more progressive than the adjacent areas. It is a shame that they automatically get lumped into cousin-fucker stereotypes, because they have tried really hard while their neighbors wallow in their own shit, jump for handouts and fight tooth and nail to stay in the past. I say this as a South Carolinian.

          • Albert Einstein married his first cousin. Charles Darwin married his first cousin. There could be many reasons to look down on SC/VA people, but practicing accepting weddings at a genetic distance of 1/8 is not one of them.
          • "I say this as a South Carolinian."

            Lived for years in both states, strongly agree!

        • >>>middle class democrats, who would not tolerate...glossing over the history of slavery and civil rights movement.

          They are the ones who conveniently forget the 1st Civil Rights movement of the 1770s-90s (when blacks were no longer "slaves" under UK law & gained equal status north of Washington DC), or the 2nd Civil Rights movement of the 1870-80s when blacks were elected to Southern Legislatures, or the 1900s when a Democrat-run Supreme Court issued a decree that forced the entire nation to ad

      • by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF ( 813746 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:54AM (#34254956)

        The article was light on details, but the reason why companies typically do this is because the states hand out idiotically huge tax incentives that there's no way will ever be paid off by the presence of the company.

        I've never heard of them actually paying for the federal taxes, just agreeing to not charge all the normal taxes the state does. So how does the state or locality have to pay off anything to break even? Even if they charge no taxes at all, the presence of the company will bring in income tax, sales tax from employees and all the stuff they buy and all the temporary construction workers in the area.

        By the time the jobs would be around for long enough to finally start to break even, it's been long enough that the companies have started looking around for who's going to offer the best tax incentives for them to either upgrade their facilities to stay or move.

        I still don't see this "break even" you're talking about. Jobs come in for a while. It's doubtful any of these companies are going to move these data centers ever, as they are huge investments. They might not expand them if they get a better deal elsewhere, but even if they did close one, they'd sell it off and another company would open a datacenter there. Nobody just shutters a billion dollar datacenter and lets it sit empty.

        it's almost certainly about nothing other than getting ridiculous handouts given by desperate leaders in order to make them look good at any cost to their constituents. See also sports team stadiums.

        I've certainly seen some crazy things with stadiums, like subsidies, but then those stadiums often bring a lot of money into a community as well. I guess I'd just have to see some real hard numbers on the situation before I dismiss this as a political stunt that harms their constituency. I read an article or two on most of these and all I saw were tax breaks with a bunch of conditions (healthcare for employees, move into one of several very poor areas, etc.). As far as I an tell, it's the state giving up tax revenue they would not get anyway if these companies chose another location.

        • >>>Even if they charge no taxes at all, the presence of the company will bring in income tax, sales tax from employees and all the stuff they buy and all the temporary construction workers in the area.
          >>>

          Disagree. This is the same logic flaw politicians make when they justify building a new sadidum for the football/baseball team. They spend MORE money building the structure than what the stadium generates in the nearby neighborhood. Likewise the thousands of dollars collected from the ~

          • Even if they charge no taxes at all, the presence of the company will bring in income tax, sales tax from employees and all the stuff they buy and all the temporary construction workers in the area.

            Disagree. This is the same logic flaw politicians make when they justify building a new sadidum for the football/baseball team. They spend MORE money building the structure than what the stadium generates in the nearby neighborhood.

            What money? Can you cite anywhere it says NC is paying for the construction of this or even paying to build new roads around it? As far as I've been able to determine, NC is just not charging them all the taxes they normally would, taxes they wouldn't be able to collect if they weren't building in the first place.

            Libertarian==fiscally-conservative...

            Heh, maybe that explains it. Pretty much all the libertarians I meet are clueless when it comes to real world economics. I mean I like Ron Paul and respect his dedications, but he just doesn't have

            • by stdarg ( 456557 )

              I don't have any hard numbers about government expenses due to these projects but taking what you said you can construct a reasonable scenario where the county ends up losing money.

              Presumably, the cost of local services in the county increase when the population increases. Normally that is offset by an increase in property tax revenue (income tax goes to the state, not the county). The property tax burden is split between businesses and people. Since the business tax portion will not be collected, the new r

              • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                by Pharmboy ( 216950 )

                NC got screwed by Dell because of the infrastructure (roads etc.) they had to put in. Dell returned all other moneys. With these data centers, the infrastructure is not needed. There are already adequate roads (data centers typically employ less than 100 people), there is already tremendous electrical infrastructure (many dams and a nuke plant nearby) and the state wouldn't have to pay for that anyway. All the state is basically doing is not charging property taxes and other fees that they would not nor

      • I agree with you really, note that before Google and Apple came Dell... who closed within 5 years or so after receiving a ton of tax breaks. That said, what makes rural areas a little different is that when there is a tech concentration, that's just about all there is so the economy for the local area really does get directly affected (instead of Atlanta, DC, New York, et al. who all have super-diverse industrial makeups... out here its farming or IT) . You are right though, subsidies seem to rarely pay f

      • It's not that simple though. There's lots of things to consider in these kinds of deals. Typically the corporation itself is given excellent tax breaks (though they usually pay some pittance) , but they provide jobs (in this case pretty good ones most likely) which leads to income tax and lower unemployment. They attract new people to the area which increases sales and property taxes. There's good political capital in being able to point at the big new employer you brought in. They buy energy, water, a

    • I live just 20 miles south of you in Lexington (HRL actually). The other factor is how cheap wholesale electricity is, due to all the other textile and furniture factories shutting down, plus the dams at HRL, Badin, Tuckertown and Falls, PLUS Buck, McGuire, etc. And yea, NC has made a concerted effort to go after data farms in particular, which don't actually add that much employment, but have other benefits. And as you know, the weather is reasonable, quality of life is good, and while taxes are high, t

    • by Wingsy ( 761354 )
      @Chitlenz: Howdy neighbor. Advance here.
  • So now that all the eggs are in one basket (except MS, but do they matter any more?), who wants to take bets on how long before DHS drops a brick and decides these data centers ought to be a little more spread out?

    • Nah, they'll just institute some kind of security screening and full-body-scan protocol for anyone entering/exiting the entire 500sq.km area.
  • Now we know the simple formula for attracting large data centers.

    Anyone else going to follow NC's lead?
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I live within a few miles of Kings Mountain and Maiden. These are towns where the newspapers' front page stories are about things like a cow escaping from a barn and causing a ruckus as local residents stepped out of their homes to look at it as it walked by (big story from sometime last year). Getting this kind of investment from big tech companies will definitely have a huge impact. It'll be interesting to see how these quiet, unknown towns change in the next five or ten years.

    • by oldspewey ( 1303305 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:35AM (#34254728)
      Same basic news stories - except you'll be reading about how a Linux nerd escaped from a nearby data centre, causing a ruckus as local residents stepped out of their homes to gawk at the delicate, pasty white skin.
    • I live just outside of Maiden and went to the town council meeting where the data center was announced. It was surreal. The town council clearly had no idea what this thing was all about, other than it was huge and would be a good thing.
    • I suppose you miss all the stories about carjackings, murders, and rapes, eh? If it bleeds, it leads. It must be utterly horrible to live in such a place. You have my sympathy, sir.
  • Eastern North Carolina still sucks.
  • Jobless Recovery?? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DaMattster ( 977781 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:46AM (#34254854)
    Fine, okay, I am glad that Western North Carolina is going to get these data centers. But, are these companies planning on using local talent or importing talent from other areas? I would be happier if these companies planned on hiring local people and providing training opportunities. The reality of this data center boom is that very few of the local residents will realize any benefit beyond low level employment as cleaners or security guards and there will be very few jobs.
    • I'm willing to bet they'll go for the best talent that's willing to be there, just like a lot of places.

    • Even if that occurs, it's not such a bad place to start.
    • "But, are these companies planning on using local talent or importing talent from other areas?"

      Well, by definition, once 'imported' talent comes to live and work there, it becomes 'local' talent.

      I'm sure they'll be happy to hire anyone already there that fits the bill, but if nothing else, it can bring in an influx of new people that will help the area with a better tax base, etc.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      This is true. I live about 10 minutes from the Apple data center in Maiden. When it goes online, they expect to only employ about 50 people, and most of them will be imports. Still though, I've been impressed at how little a footprint they have left. The place is insanely huge, but if you didn't know it was there, you might miss it. It doesn't even seem to have any lights shining up in the air at night. They also kept things tidy during construction, even washing down the roads to prevent mud and dust.
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2010 @10:57AM (#34255004)

      Even if they do import people from other areas in the country, the locals will still see an employment boom. Housing construction, road improvements, restaurants, retail centers, need for more teachers, etc. I have family that lives on the other side of the Appalachians in Tennessee, so I've seen this area of NC a lot. In a lot of areas of western NC, especially up in the mountains, there is nothing. And what there is can be few and far between. This will be a boon not only to the towns they are built by, but all the surrounding towns as well. A lot of these support jobs may not pay much, but it's a lot better than some of the options available there now.

      As a side note, I've seen inner city Atlanta and some of the worst areas in that town, and I've seen back in the mountains in the southern Appalachians. If you think inner cities are poverty, you haven't seen anything until you go into the mountains.

      • by pigah ( 695476 )
        So how do 50 jobs bring a boom in housing? These data centers are a boon to Duke Energy and a minor improvement for the locale.
        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )
          Assuming 50 jobs per company. Several companies move into the area. So, 200 jobs(can assume about 400-600 more people if employees bring families). Many of those people have families, they need houses to be built(as there are not many vacant houses in this area). Construction workers come in, or locals are hired. More money in the area, means people have more money to spend on stuff. More demand calls for more supply, so stores are built and open up, bringing in more construction jobs, as well as reta
          • by pigah ( 695476 )
            While I don't doubt that there will be some add on jobs due to a multiplier, the incentives that are being paid for these data centers are ridiculous. A Business Week article (http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/7_30/b4043066.htm) estimates that the state and county are paying $1 million (over 30 years) for each job created by the Google deal. That is just terrible planning. Furthermore, these data centers are end user facilities. Aside from the electricity, which won't produce a lot of jobs, t
      • I live there. They will only be hiring about 50 people. There will not be a housing boom because there is plenty of good, cheap housing available for great prices (I should know as I'm trying to sell my house). The road improvements for Apple were minimal and are long done. I doubt 50 new people will be needing more teachers, restaurants, retail centers, etc. It will be a long-term bump for the tax base once the incentives run out, but not much else. Perhaps some increased corporate giving to local charitie
      • A guy from my old Mechwarrior gaming clan worked with Google on their datacenter (we were rather amused that he'd been picked up by Google, since his self-admitted nickname was "The Toothless Hillbilly!"). By the time he was done on that project, though, he had a somewhat dim opinion [banzaiinstitute.net] of Google's corporate culture, though. I wonder if they and other firms will continue to have issues with "culture shock" with regard to local employees and neighbors.
  • Being stationed in North Carolina I learned to love living in a slow pace type of town.

    I always said if you wanted to raise a family there it was a good place to do it.

    But remember just because they move a big honking Data Center there doesn't mean the pay is going to be comparable to what you are making in your metropolitan city.

    Don't expect 60k a year jobs while they could hire someone out of college for 30k and call it a good living wage.

  • My family still lives in FC, and I will gladly move back there if we can get some more tech in the area. With all of the abandoned textile mills, it would be dirt cheap to raze it and build something new, plus bandwidth is cheap too (and electricity). Plus it is a BEAUTIFUL area, with Lake Lure only 20 minutes west.
  • I haven't the least freaking clue why municipalities and states fall all over themselves to recruit these data centers. In return for a finite good (the available electrical power off the grid), and waiving pretty much all taxes, they get only a tiny handful of jobs. And most of the jobs are NOT high-skill or high-paid, because the jobs in the data center itself revolve almost solely around equipment maintenance. The "high-tech" work is pretty much all done remotely.

    I guess it's not bad for a temporary b

  • States competing with each other for the fabled 'big payroll'. Ignoring of course that promising to cut (or even eliminate!) taxes on companies if they would just set up shop in their neck of the woods will only last until the next sweetheart deal turns their pretty little corporate greedheads.

"Facts are stupid things." -- President Ronald Reagan (a blooper from his speeach at the '88 GOP convention)

Working...