Newspaper Tree El Paso

May 2, 2008

El Paso Needs the Rebirth of Cool

by Rich Wright

There's this brain drain argument that's popular with people who have an opinion about El Paso's economic state.

It goes like this: Businesses won't move here because there's not an educated workforce, and there's not an educated workforce because there are no jobs here for educated workers.

It's a Catch-22 conundrum. A vicious cycle. People leave because there are no jobs, and there are no jobs because the people who would create them leave.

Without these key players, the reasoning goes, El Paso will never reach critical mass, the Gladwellian tipping point after which our fissionable business reactivity will be self-sustaining.

Education is supposed to be the answer. The new medical school is supposed to help relieve our brain drain, by enticing future doctors to stay here long enough to grow roots. Right now we have residents spending up to five years at Thomason, and mostly they move on when their time is up. Maybe the three more years of medical school will make a difference. Maybe not.

When I lived in Austin, shortly after the discovery of fire, there were Ph.D's flipping burgers at Mad Dog and Beans. The fry cooks at Dirty's only had Master's degrees, and those chiefly in English literature. The point is that a lack of economic opportunity will not deter the educated if they really want to stay.

We can't blame our inhospitable weather for the exodus. In the summer in Austin the temperature and the humidity are both 95. You start sweating as soon as you get out of a cold shower.

In Phoenix, the daily summer temperature varies between 98 and a 108. At two o'clock in the morning it's still too hot to run. There's no relief.

Austin has attractions. Barton Springs. A vibrant music scene. Willie Nelson, and dubious Tex Mex delicacies. But how can anyone explain Phoenix's success?

The problem, I think, is that El Paso has never marketed itself as a young person's town. We've never developed the assets. We've never cultivated an appeal to the prized 18 to 35 year old demographic. We've never cultivated cool.

Cool is a hot commodity for marketers. Marketers try to distill cool to imbue consumer goods, from energy drinks to pop bands, with its elusive essence.

I think we could encourage young people to stay in El Paso if we could convince them that El Paso is cool.

Cool is a mindset. It's an attitude and a perception. Attitudes and perceptions can be self-perpetuating. And not-cool is the attitude and perception a lot of young people have about El Paso.

They say there's nothing to do in El Paso. A lot of the people who say there's nothing to do in El Paso move to other cities and don't do anything there, either.

We say we want our young people to stay in El Paso, but we're not willing to put up with the bother. When those troublesome young people were congregating on Lee Trevino on Sunday nights, we outlawed cruising. Part of the reason for our lack of violent crime is the relative absence of the 18 to 35 demographic, in particular the male half of it.

Past city administrations have tried to appeal to a different psychographic, young families. We've pursued a suburban ideal, two car garages and backyard barbecues and 30 year mortgages.

Cool isn't always the Chamber of Commerce's problem. Austin's business community, with a college population in excess of 50,000, has economic incentives to appeal to young people. Most of the students at U.T. have leisure time and disposable incomes. Businesses arise to meet the needs of the market.

In El Paso, the youth market is serviced by headshops and tattoo parlors and car customizers, and t-shirt shops in the mall.

We have, in recent years, made concessions to the pursuit of cool. At least we have skate parks. And we have the spontaneously self-generating cool. Jim Ward, and Radio La Chusma. Al Jourgensen saw the cool, and moved to El Paso. There's the Tap, and the Arbolito, and the Kentucky Club. But so far we haven't put it all together to come up with enough fissionable material to generate a cool reaction.

Maybe the medical school will spur development of the commercial infrastructure necessary to nurture the 18 to 35 demographic. Maybe, with an influx of medical students, businesses will arise to meet their need for cool. Because there's nobody in quite as much need of cool as medical students.