By Laurent Belsie (belsiel@csps.com)
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
SHERWOOD, N.D.
A few miles
from the Canadian border, Sherwood, N.D., (pop. 255) boasts half
a dozen businesses, three churches, a post office, and no pay
phone. It's a place where residents not only leave their keys
in the car downtown, but keep the engine running. Even motorcyclists
wave to cars rushing by.
WIDE
OPEN SPACES: Harold Jenner crosses the street in Goodrich, N.D.
The town, like many others in rural counties across the Great
Plains, saw its population decline by nearly 40 percent during
the 1990s. North Dakota has been hit especially hard by population
losses, with 47 of its 53 counties losing residents during the
past 10 years.
WILL KINCAID/AP/FILE
So when talk
surfaced this spring of merging the boys' high school basketball
team with arch-rival Mohall, the less-than-friendly response surprised
locals.
Everyone knew
something needed to be done. Next fall, Sherwood High School will
have only 13 boys. Barring an unexpected influx, that number will
dwindle to seven by fall 2003. The two schools already "co-op"
football, baseball, track, volleyball, and golf.
But the idea
of losing their own basketball team struck a sensitive chord in
both communities. Would seniors get enough playing time? What
would be the team name, the team colors?
Such thorny
disputes are symptoms of a larger blight that is spreading through
rural towns across the American Great Plains: population decline.
While parts of the United States have seen staggering growth during
the past decade, as shown in the latest census figures, the nation's
rural midsection is being squeezed by a steady decline - and nowhere
harder than in North Dakota.
Although the
state as a whole eked out a meager population gain during the
1990s - thanks to a handful of growing suburbs and native American
reservations - rural North Dakota lost chunks of people. Of the
53 counties in the state, 47 saw their populations fall. The five
biggest losing counties each saw more than one-fifth of their
populations evaporate over 10 years.
The decline,
intensified by a bad farm economy, is stretching services, forcing
closures, and pulling at the community fabric. Enough schools
have closed around the state that recreational-vehicle groups
rent them out as weekend meeting places. Locals talk about burnout
from working on too many civic committees. Of the state's 88 nursing
facilities, 40 percent reported last August that they had stopped
accepting new patients because they couldn't find people to staff
them.
"It's
kind of a financial death sentence when you stop admissions,"
says Shelly Peterson, president of the North Dakota Long Term
Care Association in Bismarck.
But North
Dakota's challenges run deeper than numbers alone. It's mostly
losing young people and middle-age adults, says Richard Rathge,
director of the North Dakota State Data Center in Fargo. Ironically,
senior citizens are moving back to the state, many returning to
family and friends after the loss of a spouse or some other life-changing
event.
For Bob Roberts,
it was retirement from the Postal Service in Seattle. "I
just wanted a change of scenery," he says. So he and his
wife, Elaine, who grew up in Sherwood, moved back to ride bicycles,
watch the grandchildren, and, on this particular day, do some
yard work. "It's smaller and quieter" here, Mr. Roberts
says, leaning on his rake.
Robert Johnson,
a commercial real estate broker in Alaska, found himself sitting
alone in Anchorage and also decided to come back home to Sherwood.
He now substitutes at the high school for the shop teacher, a
farmer who has to be in the field during spring and fall months.
SOURCE:
Sherwood and Mohall school boards.
KAREN N. SCHNEIDER
"We
are grateful to have [senior citizens], don't get me wrong,"
says Vance Undlin, vice president of Citizens State Bank in Mohall
and chairman of the county job-development group. "But they
don't spend as much as the middle-age and younger people."
One resident
who doesn't seem to mind the solitude is Bill McGinty, who moved
to Sherwood from California last October to start a new life.
After hearing about the community of Sherwood from a friend, he
packed up, traded in his Cadillac for a pickup, and bought a large
house and five acres for $90,000 (something that would have cost
$1.7 million back home). He sells collectibles and other items
over the Internet and is interested in buying a local business.
"No crime,
no pollution, no traffic, and the nicest people you ever met in
the world," says Mr. McGinty. In fact, he hopes the cold
winters will keep others from moving in. "You know what winter
is, don't you? Repellent."
But city officials
are less sanguine about the lack of activity.
"I remember,
Saturday nights, you would want to be in town by six o'clock to
get a parking space on Main Street," says Mayor Allan Engh,
owner of the local hardware store. Now, "the grocery store
has trouble staying open. Our store is down. People like to move
to a small town, but you have to have the basics."
On the other
side of the town's wide main drag, the post office still operates
and a former farmer has opened up an insurance agency. Across
from Mayor Engh's hardware store, his sister runs Nettie's Diner,
which attracts a good crowd at breakfast and lunch (a hearty breakfast
special is $2.75). For any serious shopping, however, residents
have to travel 65 miles to Minot.
The situation
isn't all bad in Mohall, either. Although the county seat lost
its drugstore and its auto-parts shop, the grocery store in town
recently expanded, as did a local telemarketing firm.
And after
several meetings, Mohall's school board last month decided not
to merge basketball teams with Sherwood. "It will happen,"
predicts Garrett Titus, superintendent of Sherwood Public School.
"The only holdup will be the name and the colors."
At the moment,
team names can get a little confusing. The merged baseball team
practices in Sherwood, so the players are the Sherwood-Mohall
Wildcats. But the track and volleyball teams practice in Mohall,
so they're the Mohall-Sherwood Yellowjackets.
The football
team dodged the issue by calling itself the Renville County Roughriders,
but it soon got bogged down in a controversy over school colors.
Some older residents complained that the uniforms - with only
Sherwood royal blue and Mohall black - didn't represent tradition.
So the team now plays in uniforms with all four colors.
"We didn't
care," Mr. Titus says. "One of the kids said: 'I don't
care if it's pink as long as we can play.' " But the superintendent
hopes to get his way when the basketball programs merge and pick
a name. "Doesn't the Renville County Roughriders sound better?"
he asks.
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