December 23, 2024
Business

Paper trail ends for N.H. village Leaders struggle with choices

GROVETON, N.H. – First, it was the orders coming into Wausau Paper that dried up. Then it was the jobs.

Now, the stream of snowmobilers and ATV riders who stock up at Emerson Outdoor Outfitters en route to New Hampshire’s north woods is slowing down, a victim of high fuel prices.

Battered by economic forces beyond its control, this village faces a bleak future in the wake of rising gas prices and the paper mill’s closing, which threw 303 people out of work last December and hampered what was once a vibrant place.

Like other cities pinched by hard times, Groveton now must find ways to conserve. After voters rejected a plan in March to give the Police Department leeway to close for a few hours a day if necessary, Groveton (pop. 2,485) eliminated its $60,000-a-year town manager’s job, cut the Police Department’s budget and began tapping surplus funds to keep water rates down.

“Groveton is hurting,” said Selectman Jim Tierney. “The first tax bills are going out this coming week. That’ll give us an idea as to where people are, by how many don’t pay. That’ll let us know just how much hurt there is.”

Increasingly, the hurt being felt by consumers – at gas pumps, grocery stores and malls – is being felt by cities and towns that cope with the same harsh realities.

“Job losses have a roundabout effect on local governments,” said Chris Hoene, director of policy and research for the National League of Cities, which represents cities and towns. “If you’re out of a job, you need to draw on social service programs that government provides.”

Layoffs hurt consumer spending, which is another source of local government revenue, he said.

“Most of what we do is essentials in life,” said Steven Jeffrey, executive director of the Vermont League of Cities and Towns. “We don’t go overboard when times are good, so there’s not much fat to cut when times go bad. Through the variety of recessions we’ve had, work forces don’t go up and down with the economic times. You still gotta plow the snow, you still gotta school the kids.”

In this part of New England, paper is king. At least it was for most of the 20th century with timber harvested in the nearby mountains being churned up and converted to coated “freesheet” paper sold as 8-by-11 sheets by office supply stores and stationers.

But foreign competition, rising fuel costs and plunging demand in the paperless economy of the digital age have taken their toll. Dozens of paper mills have closed.

In April 2006, Groveton Paper Board – Groveton’s other remaining paper-making operation – closed, idling 108 workers and adding a cruelly ironic coda to the sign on its exterior wall. “Groveton Paper Board Inc. We’re Here to Stay,” the sign said.

It wasn’t.

Since 2000, the county has lost about 2,000 jobs, all but about 400 of them in paper making.

On Oct. 23, the ax fell at Wausau Paper, a sprawling complex along the Ammonoosic River that had been churning out paper – and fueling the village’s economy – since the late 1800s under various owners.

“They called us into a meeting and said, ‘Due to economic conditions, we’re going to shut the mill permanently,” said Brian Sullivan, 47, who had worked his way up to shift foreman after 27 years at the mill. “It didn’t feel too good at all.”

Sullivan, who made about $60,000 a year, remembers growing up in Groveton when it was a boom town.

“Now, it’s a town in crisis. We need help. We need businesses, and we need jobs,” said Sullivan.

David Atkinson, vice president of operations at the Wausau Paper mill, said he doesn’t expect paper making will ever resume at the site. An industrial park? Perhaps.

“Can it get any worse for the residents of Groveton? I would hope not,” he said.


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