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Poster child for recession shows signs of recovery

Sat Jan 2, 2010 4:02 AM EST
us-news, us, barack-obama, of, hope, elkhart, elkhart-county, of-hope, glimmer, when-ed-neufeldt
Charles Wilson, Associated Press
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showing 1 of 3 photos
<p>In this photo taken Nov. 18, 2009, recreational vehicles are ready sales at International RV World in Elkhart, Ind. There's a ray of hope in Elkhart, the Indiana city that was turned into a poster child for the recession. Heartland Recreational Vehicles of Elkhart announced Tuesday it would immediately begin hiring 200 production workers. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)</p>

In this photo taken Nov. 18, 2009, recreational vehicles are ready sales at International RV World in Elkhart, Ind. There's a ray of hope in Elkhart, the Indiana city that was turned into a poster child for the recession. Heartland Recreational Vehicles of Elkhart announced Tuesday it would immediately begin hiring 200 production workers. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

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ELKHART — When Ed Neufeldt introduced Barack Obama at a speech in Elkhart County in February, the new president promised the laid off RV worker would find a job.

Since then, Neufeldt has found two, setting up bread displays in grocery stores and working with a company that hopes to hire hundreds of people to make electric motors.

"If I was on unemployment, I'd be bringing home more money than I bring home from both jobs," said Neufeldt, 63, of Wakarusa. "But that's OK, I want to work and I feel like I'm helping the economy a little not being on the unemployment ranks."

Obama has visited the northern Indiana county four times — twice during the 2008 campaign and twice since — focusing attention on the area as emblematic of the nation's double-digit unemployment woes.

Now, hope is rising in the struggling area as people head back to work — though not always at the same jobs they left, and sometimes for less money.

The unemployment rate here, driven by job cuts at factories that made Elkhart County the capital of recreational vehicle manufacturing, spiked in March to 18.9 percent. But it has fallen steadily since, reaching 14.5 percent in November while the national rate climbed to 10 percent.

Part of the drop in unemployment may be due to hiring at a handful of RV makers like Heartland RV in Elkhart, which recently held a job fair after announcing it would add 400 jobs by March. For jobless workers who have spent months scrimping to keep up with mortgages, the job fair was a welcome first step in returning to the life they used to know.

"Unemployment is livable, but it's not like how we were living," said Marcia Blanton, who lost her job at RV maker Monaco Coach in September 2008. Blanton, 53, of Elkhart, briefly landed a job at a musical instrument factory before being laid off again a year later. She was still waiting to hear from Heartland about her application weeks later.

Other RV makers also have begun hiring, albeit slowly, as orders from dealers have picked up in the past few months. Dealers don't generally discuss sales figures, but two economists who follow the industry have predicted a slight rebound in production for 2010.

Gulf Stream Coach and Electric Motors Corp. announced in May they plan to spend more than $80 million on building renovations and equipment for factories in Wakarusa and Nappanee. The companies estimate the project could have 1,600 workers by 2012.

"I don't think there's any question that jobs are up," said Morton Marcus, a retired Indiana University economist who recently conducted a study for the Elkhart County Economic Development Corporation that forecast an upswing in the RV industry.

Still, some of those who have gone back to work are making less money.

Doug Hartzell, 59, of Nappanee, was rehired as a temp worker at the new Monaco RV in September after the old company's assets were bought by Navistar International Corp.

"I really did make an effort to find a job in those 12 months I was off and it was kind of discouraging after a while when you go door to door and you don't even get a chance for an interview," he said.

He said he's fine with working 9 1/2- to 10-hour days, even for the smaller paycheck.

"I'm just glad to have a job," he said.

More jobs could be on the way in other industries as well.

Band instruments, office furniture, steel tubing, plastics and agricultural testing supplies are also made in Elkhart County.

Dorinda Heiden-Guss, president of the county development corporation, said the county has seen an "onslaught" of business interest since visits from Obama and former Arkansas Gov.-turned-Fox News commentator Mike Huckabee.

"People seem to know about Elkhart County," Heiden-Guss said.

In the past year, about $134 million worth of new projects entailing 3,300 new jobs have been announced, she said.

Upstart Electric Motors Corp. has moved into a former RV showroom in Wakarusa, where CEO Wil Cashen hopes to hire hundreds of workers to produce drive trains for electric-hybrid vehicles. Companies like Gulf Stream would install the engines. It's one of three electric vehicle projects involved in or eyeing the county.

Profitability will take some time — Electric Motors' business plan projects million-dollar losses for the first two years before turning a $21 million profit in 2011.

Still, Cashen, a northern Indiana native, is a big believer in Elkhart County and its down-to-earth work force.

He was so taken with Neufeldt's speech introducing Obama in Wakarusa that he hired him as a company spokesman. There isn't much speaking to do right now, so Neufeldt does odd jobs around the mostly empty building and the nearby Nicola Tesla School of Technology, where Cashen intends for employees to be retrained to work with electric motors.

"Elkhart is a kind of a sleeping diamond," he said. "It's an absolute diamond in the rough."

Amid the signs of hope, there are still plenty of reality checks.

Thousands remain out of work — nearly 14,000 in the Elkhart-Goshen metropolitan area alone in November. Social services agencies like Church Community Services, a food pantry near downtown Elkhart that serves 2,000 families a month, say they're still seeing intense need.

"We haven't seen the bottom yet," director Dean Preheim-Bartel said.

But despite lingering skepticism among some in Elkhart County, many believe that this poster child for the recession will one day become a symbol of recovery.

"If it's going to happen, I think we're going to be the first to see it happen," said Heiden-Guss, the president of the economic development corporation.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (11)
Ken59

with so many out of work and RV'S by the thousands for sale USED cause they do not have the money to buy the gas to move them or use them and to buy a truck to pull a travel trailer costing $40,000 or more it's going to be a slow in sales for some time as I see it!

Sales lots here have gone dry! many closed up and the banks took back the stock they had! flooring cost to the banks if they will floor them!

Wish I had the money to travel and have a nice RV

    Reply#1 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 4:42 AM EST
    texamerican1

    president promised the laid off RV worker would find a job.

    This is the administration that has the lowest (8%) of cabinet members that ever had a private sector (real) job, right?

    Personally I hope things turn around and help comes to the hard hit areas soon. I don't think it is wise to put ones hopes on the federal government to bail out the working stiff or small business. They don't have enough of OUR money left after Wall Street, GM, AIG Fannie & Freddie etc.....

    It's time to get back to the American "can do" mentality, like our parents and grand-parents had and become more innovative and self-reliant. Help will come from within and the from local level first.

      Reply#2 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 7:12 AM EST
      eriq samson

      So if an administration had all veterans you would claim they were completely unqualified, right?

      This is the crazy - ranting of illogic and prejudice and fear; wingnut batsh1t crazy

        #2.1 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 5:46 PM EST
        texamerican1

        eric

        you sure get a lot of assumptive baggage going in that simple little sentence don't you?

        But yes, I believe an administration composed of veterans only would lack the diversity and experience needed to effectively manage the government, especially in relation to capitol issues. If you should prefer;

        crazy - ranting of illogic and prejudice and fear; wingnut batsh1t crazy

        (wtf ever you mean by that) I suggest you look elsewhere. Perhaps you might even develop an arguable point so we might chat.

          #2.2 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 11:00 PM EST
          eriq samson

          Here's a good example of crazy - you assume that private sector jobs is somehow better than other jobs for understanding government - actually any fool could tell you not only is there absolutely NO help, it would be a disadvantage; you would have learned nothing about governing now how to do it but would have learned skills that are wrong to apply to situations

          This is what is wrong with most rabid right wingnut ideas; they make no sense and in fact are very very wrong in the final analysis - this is how we got in this mess we are in and your solution is to dig the hole deeper

          You are just a captain who is waist deep in the big muddy, lyrics here

          • 1 vote
          #2.3 - Sun Jan 3, 2010 6:21 PM EST
          texamerican1

          eric

          Diversity is the heart of a well rounded opinion forming committee or company or unit. A military unit doesn't rely only on snipers to do the work any more than only accountants can operate a company. By the same token a government should contain career politicians, private sector professionals, engineers, economics majors, teachers, can you follow the drift??????

          Try to lose a little of the hate in your message. Life doesn't have to be mean. It's just life. Your name calling and agitated demeanor diminish the credibility of any meaningful message you could ever hope to convey.

            #2.4 - Sun Jan 3, 2010 6:45 PM EST
            eriq samson

            NO, you said something that was prejudicial and incompetent - "This is the administration that has the lowest (8%) of cabinet members that ever had a private sector (real) job, right?" -- as if: (a) this is a bad thing in some functional way AND you implied (b) this is a bad thing

            I said "you assume that private sector jobs is somehow better than other jobs for understanding government - actually any fool could tell you not only is there absolutely NO help, it would be a disadvantage; you would have learned nothing about governing now how to do it but would have learned skills that are wrong to apply to situations"

            Basically pointing out you had not thought this through very far; it does not logically make any sense

            But, see, that just demonstrates a bigger problem: do you just not understand the evidence before you or deny the reality behind it; either you are (were) basically too lazy to have done the research or too opposed to the possibility that you did not try?

            That, in any event, is the fundamental problem - had you the normal practice of looking at something and analyzing it yourself you would have known what you had to prove: you have to prove your vision of reality is fact based or opinion of the fact based.

            At some point you have to take responsibility for your opinions, and whether there is any underlying reality

            • 1 vote
            #2.5 - Sun Jan 3, 2010 8:18 PM EST
            texamerican1

            Eriq

            I have never encountered anyone who reads and assumes so broadly between the lines. I feel that experience in the private sector enables government to understand business better. You have my thought order backwards.

            I do take responsibility for my opinions and I do no attack people who differ with me. Many of my opinions are based on observances in my life. Life has proved them to me. You choose what your life proves to you.

            If you think an administration composed entirely of career politicians is the way to go,... vote for it.

            Happy New Year and May God bless America

              #2.6 - Sun Jan 3, 2010 9:46 PM EST
              Reply
              tinman1967

              Signs of recovery?
              You must be joking....or lying.

                Reply#3 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 12:30 PM EST
                caroaber

                Patience is a virtue.

                  #3.1 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 12:34 PM EST
                  eriq samson

                  T - there are buttloads of signs of recovery - the unemployment claims have fallen (and estimates are that December will show a positive number - more hiring that unemployed SEASONALLY ADJUSTED (November had a net loss of only 11,000 nationwide)

                  Consumer confidence is up

                  Christmas sales were up, better than expected

                  But keep on with the delusions, the rest of us prefer reality

                  • 1 vote
                  #3.2 - Sat Jan 2, 2010 5:49 PM EST
                  Reply
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