Boom Town Blues
Transcription
Boom Town Blues
Boomtown Blues: Oil Shale dollar investment. Exxon's Exit and the 22nd Oil Shale Symposium the Colorado School of Mines April 20, 1989 a paper presented at at Because the 1915-1925 had boom had failed, shale Garfield County citizens boom. But then they became convinced and they invested accord initially been skeptical of this recent ingly. The thousands of newcomers, the hundreds of new houses Andrew Gulliford, Ph.D. Director of the Museum Western New Mexico University Silver City, NM 88061 Copyright 1989 All streets, the out-of-state license plates by Andrew Gulliford This effects of the devastating the Colorado Rifle, Silt, Parachute, Grand Junction. The and extensive research and oral Colorado and in Houston and is based failed to from Bowling Green, month author public and oral brings to his work not only the and was able from area residents whom comes altered to trailers the Washington D.C. office of Additional data On former United closed to came unemployed and Sunday May 2, 1982, that it was Colony project, 7,500 overnight support workers 2,100 people began to worry Overnight, number of their question the size of off. as their inventories and the these a boom, but not epic proportions. No a single plan existed one wanted general contractors each of whom to for to believe that the a an to shut " oil shale ner. workers of all rental an estimated the exodus to Colony shed a American shutdown' trucks and 1,000 people had begun. receive their final "By Oil Shale Project few tears, dream.* and prepared Though many campers, cars, pickups, and trailers. Their only to find work elsewhere. open a president of 55,000 square City Market grocery stores, had foot "superstore' quoted on Battlement in the Rocky Mountain News "Everybody is kind of shell-shocked at the moment. Every In now."5 people waited and reassessed down the The "orderly hour, they were just settling in and had new debts and compared bust of a the leased within four days of May 2, Garfield County. The pursue another an runs" editor an editorial titled 'Exxon cuts Paper' us and to Exxon's promise dollar development 'in argued, "Pardon Exxon's at the wake of Exxon's their positions. The Grand the infamous "White multimillion of skepticism about an orderly man for retaining a similar measure assurances of due regard for all the 6 closing." had ten subcontactors working un people affected by the Colony project's Governor Richard Lamm accurately described the bust as 'a der them. one could conceive corporation stating, decision, bubble had really burst. On Battlement Mesa alone there were 26 No to $3,800 the $5 billion dollar project. Sunday, Junction Daily Sentinel published employees. for and Black thing is in a holding pattern right Overnight, planning for growth stopped. There had been countless plans radius were Mesa on September 1st. He was Overnight, hundreds of businessmen who had rapidly expanded their businesses began to 90-mile Joseph P. Prinster, about Root, T.I.C., Daniels Con struction, and Gilbert-Western knew they would be laid of a week after purchases of choice was a on from Brown & Root. A Denver Post writer explained, $14.85 planned Brown & county officials Tuesday May 4, men lined up at 7:30 a.m. move out from be their future. employees of that Exxon's departure teenage driver making a Pat O'Neill, locked into their bank accounts, drank beer, earned announced on owner "mothballing" the hundreds, the displaced ***** closing the giant $5 billion abruptness of a corporate guillotine. within a paychecks States Senator Gary Hart. When Exxon magazine commented "the Saloon had left Parachute Rocky Mountain News, the Rifle Tribune, the Rifle Telegram, the and all promised state and 1982. Within from the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, the Denver Post, the Glenwood Post, the lives of altered What actually happened was far from orderly as 1976- he knew personally and whose lives were by the recent energy boom and bust. had to accompany their deeply moving statements get profound and "the Exxon trained historian, but he lived in Garfield County from 1983 radically skills of a the Sunday would forever remain a benchmark lease for his Parachute pub, caustically commented speed of 1885-1985 to be published in the fall of 1989 by the University Press of Colorado. The Fortune open. oil shale screeching u-turn. Ohio, 1986). The paper is excerpted and copywritten from the forthcoming book Boomtown Blues: Colorado Oil Shale, at o (American Culture Green State University, towns. Manhattan day in their lives, their fortunes, and their futures. The parachute had History of Oil Shale 1885-1985" a the activity stopped all Directors had radically of thousands for whom Black upon Washington, D.C. for the author's Booms in the Colorado River Valley, Bowling paper small decision reached in Battlement Mesa. Nineteen managers on mine site and on Exxon's Board communities of history interviews conducted throughout dissertation "Boomtown Blues: A Community Ph.D. Program, Colony social and cultural irrevocably changing from was into industrialized of a boardroom half a continent away, boom on agricultural communities and pickup trucks, bearded construction workers accents of the that western Colorado Then overnight, because in detail the recent oil shale Southern soft all verified rural, rights reserved. Abstract paper chronicles the even had on expensive in the world, that any company, could simple even the largest turn its back on a $920 disaster for Garfield County.* He said, 'It's a blow for the state and resources." million also a 235 blow for the country, which needs alternate energy e added, 'This is part of the boom-and-bust cycle the West has been ^er^throughoutitshistory.-V Charles Pence, President BattlementMesa, Inc., was also interviewed by the Denver Post. He stated, Exxon, USA that it was surprise.*8 shutting down its Colony Project, O'Neill wrote that 'carpetbaggers house." the This thing, the announcement by As Ihe u-hauls moved out and buzzed caught us the newcomers around ten cents People referred to the "screw job" a had occurred Another version of the t-shirt had the same arrived by a large X. in a are motto, only the word In an to and done things He added, "I indication that we were in any work here I By Wednesday nities million for a $100 synthetic crude line with from out of are he forces at million of dience that though the Colony shutdown was a "big the state's ming growth scenarios development patterns, tions. With ment and all three into major oil shale projects in Garfield County 29,000 would at puter predicted phase.18 in an of careers were seven years on the later, multinational Occidental Oil who middle management on; nor West has the impact and belatedly returned on the local stages of boomtown There is be forgotten in also a western commu article a of benchmark in Colorado, a in growth, but distinct pattern Sunday became all those mil few years to fil Sunday is the memorable event, but the bust itself con social change the boom, has occurred yet following the bust than ever the social science investigators of use, when are gone. they can they can really be of service to the energy-impacted fail to they studied during the boom years, those same return.19 Reverend Lynn Evans of the Rifle We began to lose the community caring, commitment, for predict each other. themselves, community. in place, total employ and concern When everybody became concerned about getting rich then lost the deeper concern for everybody in the whole Then [after the bust] I think it got worse. Then they were we hard up. They really began have reached 18,000 by the end of 1982 least 6,000 jobs would million Methodist-Presbyterian Church explains that during the boom: conclusive projec three days after the shutdown, by 1990. Now, been and impact has been will never Force, which had been program had finally come on-line with real time which researchers synfuels to and moved John S. Gilmore defined the communities which au glitch," an elaborate computer model Chevron, Though Black be Ironically on that same day, May 5, still Cumulative Impact Task in 1980, but by Their interests waned with their research dollars. Now when certain.12 development was only now, not rustbelt workers who came Far more hold. Yet Victor Schroeder, Denver and their projects, transferred their occurred with facility to han a people the tank. Thousands shrinkage. building a $22 million dollar put on 94,000 bust being understood. like Exxon, Mobil, Black had found tinues. Colony to a refinery in the U.S. Synthetic Fuels Corporation, told emptied boomtown out. they before the Environ Because of the bust, $85 the bust Par- from the economy of Colorado's Western ramifications of the neglected ter dollar pipeline that dollar Mountain Bell telephone switching project lions of dollars circulating in the local economy took an Public Service Company of Colorado. A dle Battlement Mesa calls was also President There a rat of up there somewhere remained.16 The tiger had the "If Dolly also said in the Colorado River Valley. In his highly-acclaimed Science, any Sunday week, La Sal Pipeline Co., Wyoming. Exxon backed power-transmission $2.3 of Black cancelled plans to have carried Casper, mode except go. on Locals an environmentalist the batch them to do it. a population of to their Eastern roots. The am not aware of. Exxon affiliate, was was never given Agency forced County had the full fallen it."10 Dunkirk scenario, I probably would have smelled differently." 17 closed new to Parachute but Exxon laid Colony; to the mine, Exxon had workers, absorbed their losses interview published in the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, prepare a Protection abandoned Charles Pence stated, "With my 26 years in this, if someone had told me so corporations battered station wagon. They had driven still need mountain road darter," The heaviest impact of the bust has a A such witticisms as closed knocked over like so many dominoes, Rocks." At O'Leary's pub on Wednesday its editorial page, 'Shale: We came up again. flat-busted." Exxon had real reason the high 'shale Slope. babies to feed," the bewildered father explained. The Denver Post argued on proclaimed, "Jesus nual payroll evaporated and a new Once the Brown & contractor. project would start Beer-drinking-talk included 1985 only 83,000 and Exxon." 1,800 miles in hopes of a job with Brown & Root. "We've got $25 left and by Brown & Root and Exxon was closing to fire its general gone, the being told of the real reason the were Rumors flourished that Exxon had been off." Mesa cross," town, compliments of which batch of very popular t-shirts proclaimed "Exxon Sucks young couple stickers showing up in the bars inscriptions such as 'Exxon: The sign of the double was covered bumper mental "Welcome to Colorado's newest ghost "Rocks" were on vertising the "Bust of '82." with Rooters knew the the dol lar, others bought furniture, appliances and automobiles. Quick-think ing stencil artists even sold shirts, caps and bumper stickers ad By Wednesday, May 5, new graffiti began tales ton lived in Parachute she'd be an out on May 6, shutdown. with cost overruns project so as him left, Pat like flies on Some bought televisions and stereos for had been disgusted "Wehadap^foreverythi^^^^^^^^ knowwhatwe'regoingtodo. by On Thursday, project overextended. the com into the boom They were looking out for number one. They were deeper in debtr-my self included. I bought into debt, too. I bought a house, a lot more home than I needed to buy. I'm over extended, and almost everybody in be lost just in Garfield County!13 Rifle is 236 and went over extended and that makes you even more grabby, greedy, So it got worse. The looking out for number one. and that got started in the boom became values For about everyone their living on the Western Slope, growth, their ily members, "weekday adjacent all changed in neighbors, satisfied with a and ranches A year that had been had from the high higher tax on wafting above 1984. But by the third May, spite disillusioned, boosterism and and year and vilified threw many was everyone-from in the back of O'Leary's Pub thirty-year shutdown Tribune, and swept out veteran with entity Nobody wanted to believe it. It was very a person goes not through in reacting to It was like reacted. from me. People sat there oil shale's still a nn retirement his lot, ready picked out orado River to the of featured a stunning view mean al the Col have In south. Colorado were would employment levels had Grand Junction to be be the ideal strongest reached are still place. in the 9.5%, and being shaken. Younger dissolve, and older men a men with never recover own abilities but un 14.2% of expecting regain lost credit. Two California developers filed to retire. Exxon the and For businessmen, it may take lost. Exxon a $58 million countersued and won multinational corporation my flower shop. " That's the Things were going on that so clearly estate industry you'd " real estate saleswoman come up to me, of rah-rah boosterism that just about every she came and she was into that real estate person is, said, "You know this community has to survive. We silver lining in the cloud and write about the positive things going in the community. on " after She wanted me and that to no longer write anything about the the fact. Let's ignore it and bust, and it'll go away [was attitude].25 Denial equipment no years open have to find the her badly financial future can going to tendency to say, 'This can't be happening. And ifyou say that this was two weeks dreams have watched those dreams a secure believed, "Well, Colony may be gone, but the bottom fell out of the real sudden newspaper I worked for emotionally has been afford even awarded later lark, but the devastating consequences longer but a jury years by the end of 1985, felt. People may financially. Confidence in their against sort I think the Western Slope Two a of a I had a during the recession, nation." taken away long enough then it isn't happening. residences were without occupants. The boom may have been the bust anywhere so I'm My You just don't child wasn't if you were a banker and you had millions of dollars in loans and all 1982, Pat Dalyrmple, the President of Aspen Savings and economy is possibly the lawsuit of the Battlement Peaks to the north and Loan had said, "If one western which here and not real. foretold what was going to happen, but nobody wanted to accept tt I home on Battlement Mesa. Like Charles Pence, Battlement Mesa's President, Barrows had loved one's having a child snatched away from you or perception versus the reality. ar- an a happening. It can't happen. I'm not say believe it. It can't happen. It's the bar in the Exxon, who was ready to commission remembers: the reality of the world ing that is exactly how Ifelt. This is how the community as an organic Danny the Bum Barrows, Project Director for Colony and to draw plans for his chitect and to the stages death. You deny it. It's de bravado, Black Sunday continued to take its morning, to Frank P. of its having one run over by a car at the age of eight or ten. who slept all editor of the Rifle announced like going to the altar andfinding out your wife-to-be had been similar toll.21 April to community hospitals. In the feature of the early bust phase was commu main sleeping with the minister. bankrupt, had been forced to leave. De The power of the bust affected energy energy market hit home with thundering force. It was incredible. It con Exxon. Local "survivors," looking for work which they 1982, the ongoing problem with transients was only When Exxon held in Parachute the first week the summer of nity denial. Jim Sullivan, the 1983 anniversary of the of arrived The problem of transient labor in the social services and just beginning. The thick black the street. The crowd drank beer, "Survivors' Picnic" the survivors existed. burdens both to May 1, 1983, the Black Sunday which sent fall approached more and more workers left the area. boomtowns would exist for years and the wanderers would become back to late and national press coverage accompanied as thought still entanglements and bonfire on Rifle's Main Street. The the outside. Rumors persisted that Exxon would on yet as All summer, transients had rates. themselves on their resilience, bust as well return, crushed. prices reverted in legal Colony project into the flames, clouds of smoke gratulated a sold at Phase including dozens of apartments on Battlement Mesa-but they were only finished Soon there would be were mired the bust began, after "Survivors" pressed, potential, their proximity to fam farm-based income were enter denial which lasted for approximately nine many projects which had previously been started were completed, Rising expectations of rural people who had search of work. Black Sunday, the bust had begun to of shock and Even though construction work slowed down considerably, months. certainty husbands drove farther and farther out of the as encumbered with much in and one weekend. their former owners, but titles shale absolute own employment widows" previously been Farms in the bust. weeks after I-the phase communities' their friendships with valley in worse Two ofpoorer 20 new set continued from the despite a huge three-day auction of surplus Colony Shale Oil Project in late October, 1982. Over 1,200 bidders netted Exxon $5 million for the sale items. The to Parks-Davis dollar sold, the suit, and auction the only from the Alaskan only "zero dollars company explained that auction "every last thing' was they had managed which was larger was pipeline project in 1977. Yet for some local busi nessmen, denial may have been their only means of coping. Some .24 and zero cents. businesses 237 even opened after the bust. The momentum of finaTwing and construction plans saw new (based on the particularly rfule bust in We7ern Colorado which began May 2, 1982) square tenants who terminal Nine months. May, 1982-December 1982. to formation in the early stages. Shock. Anger at being deceived. rumor The killing Construction slows. Business investment out of despite obvious downward the for sale towards for rent. $10,000 January, 1983-June, 1984. an and acre, chose which Psychological two and "survivors." Solidarity among seek professional counseling. to kin networks. The Boulton Newcomers Oldtimers turn Bartering resumes. developers had clauses acres had been wanted to chose to They were in their contracts paid For retain. purchased $20,000 down, amount of Foreclosures, bankruptcies. Drastic then he the best irrigation rights. This With this that the down payment paid land. The down for payment was all a certain they ever When the other payment was due the buyer said, politicians. [ranchers] who took the down payment and put it on "Nothing doing. I own your house and it. You can have the rest of around another piece of ever and some land lost were the choice land it." Those left with larger debt than everything.2^ June, 1984-January, 1986. So Phase I Psychological spiral Acceptance. Adjustment. Conciliation. and associates move away. Continued the of the bust was characterized by in the economy, ganization. Residents cope with drastically reduced income. Persistent feelings of loss as friends tensions due to recent an got. months. practice residents. Exodus of professional white collar workers. Excessive housing vacancies. Residents move into cheaper housing. Clean sweep of local Eighteen or keep-usually the land with the Many of those ranchers sold [their] land with Phase m exam for $200,000 bust, Alice Boulton notes: Marital make a purchase options oil shale shrinkage of social services. and the beginnings a gradual left during the first nine month period. young, single construction workers from out-of-state soon as the work ended. by the company, employed draws latecomers who are welfare recipients. Almost all newcomers who arrived with the boom have left. Long term businesses collapse. Proliferation of part-time jobs. Oil and a profile of Almost all the were gone as Middle management superintendents longer because they were Foreclosures, bankruptcies at slower rate. Spiraling downward economy now affecting those with superior finances. Cheap rent downward of a major social reor An important component of Phase I analysis is people who marital economic pressures. Physical effects: their land on in to and ran. family has ranched continuously on Divide Creek in agreement effects: come County since before the turn of the century. Physical Time frame: had Garfield tensions increase. effects: he by default, initial payments would be credited acres with further displaced local and who their losses the developer had acres in the state; rates receivership. those developers twenty house on it or those Acute depression. Isolation. Deep questioning of self worth. Anomie. Increasing sense of loss. Social trauma disintegration of community. Grand Junction Hilton built after investors some case of whichever acres ple, if a house months Yet that in airport Sunday, but soon began Black after new housing market or defaulted which stated commercial 2fi into gone mall added additional destroyed and The Grand Junction real estate market cut Continued influx of low-skilled transients seeking work. Hundreds of houses Eighteen by 450% flights. A shrewd out-of-state in the within six months. and leases. The merchants. was expanded indicators. Massive exodus of hourly wage Phase II . the huge of immediately began to lose in the county owners reduce and cancel earners. effects: signed expensive spring of 1986 it had Physical Timeframe: the opening with which the bust consistently had the lowest Hilton Denial, disbelief, incredulity. Extensive continues foot Mesa Mall, had viability for downtown Psychological effects: 500,000 taxes to property Phase 1 effects: Grand Junction oil by Andrew Gulliford Timeframe crippled start regardless of whether The inertia of boomtown growth economic sense. they made sound CSS^JJ?t9tta 0f 20th Centory Mii"ff Bust businesses more stayed financially secure, could be transferred their homes were purchased by the firms which them. companies significant ways. seriously damaged the housing market in two Because they were obligated to buy back houses from executives, the companies sold more than a hundred houses be longing to Colony workers for far less than their assessed value. action 238 That further lowered neighborhood property values of single family homes. Then within twelve Union Black months of drastically lowered the rents on during the boom. Deciding where in the valley the recreation facility would be built became a major issue. County officials could passed Sunday both Exxon and buildings which they apartment not had built on Battlement Mesa or in Parachute or Rifle. The corpora tions thus gutted an already damaged County investors found out what rental housing market. Garfield services were it was like to have corporate neigh of the approximately bust lasted from Black nine months. months of a worth of coupons paid, and the for food and seventh month rent poor that Exxon only had 35% social trauma occurred shale bust ceased to be Institutions services were yet greatly cable problems. Bat lost their jobs self-concepts. and roles and during this second phase when denial of the collapse. which had of new facilities with large debts spread out Religious over a much smaller segment of church membership. and women who were experiencing personal financial stress most local businesses failed of miners customers. cattle from every shift had to nances which converted into a had been passed and western and pets was abolished established along with the position of once again be Attitudes Sonja Fritzlan changed. tolls on People became isolated sustained was she A against you're stray in a are sort the mountains, began to and themselves Silt, or as bottom. They're not talking county humane Parachute as part of "the change. rather about down there and alienated. in the Colorado River delineated empathy by the river may You did some and understand are and families which had once resources and socially bickered and contest occurred over recreation now You know business with him or your neighbor did and because it's $700 are stages. never you may be next. You've lost your job, but you'll get another one Well, you can't make it this month. But it. I can still afford it [you say to because] I can get another job. So you go and you find out that there aren't any 239 by it, And it's going to been without work before. But you've got your a month mortgage. yourself, district legislation which had been affected you. You couldn't help but feel an you've got savings so you can make fought for A particularly divisive moan, but you're forced to sit if not sympathy for someone else's financial trouble because it There thought of themselves emotionally, and quarreled. aren't good. looking forward to the portend your future. because you've as a whole. valley," the effects of the bust things turning up, they want to hit business with him. So you can piss families in Residents began to think of than in the valley and During the bust, despite bottom. If someone goes belly-up that affects you, because he probably living in their own small communities of New Castle, Communities limited living seen of battered. Attitudes bad situation when people Everything was very interlocked. a psychological and physical space mining camps lost her business and her house. They stopped visiting friends and neighbors because they did not want in the first pioneer families and ranch. to discuss financial troubles. The Valley, the homes were born Sonja Seivers, great granddaughter hurt you. While you may be embittered sense of even bankruptcies. long range impact is as much psychological as it is anything People owes you money. personal and forced to leave. Jim Sullivan left the Rifle Tribune for the The else. shot. As the bust became more severe, creased. Men became uncomfortable in their forced domestic home-bound isolation. In many cases, Grand Junction Daily Sentinel. He has Stray dogs found running loose in a farmer's pasture could officer. still em throughout the valley. He states: County ordi laws forced to babysit if their wives were and were The implosion of a collapsing economy results in the expulsion of dis during the boom were repealed. Garfield County ordinance which had included role re-definitions for fathers who had the years moved down valley to people their doors for lack of country they once again began to Family fallout among both newcomers local people. Newcomers filed bankruptcy and left. including over 200 the Cattle Company. It too folded. and services. Yet she resolutely refused to file bankruptcy as did most of the other During the boom in Rifle, the local auction sales ring for buyers had been cotheque called dogs close economy continued to wane, residents and marital Garfield County families turned to one another hard work and fiscal prudence, found it businesses in Rifle, Colorado. Bars which had been receiving five busloads counseling for financial German families who had worked in the Aspen over men increasingly difficult to meet their tithing obligations. Within Phase n time as those their descendants meant little in the face of community financial Church membership de dramatically as people moved away, leaving congregations into same families had networks of friends and oldtime The work ethic which had the boom. Social arisen with oldtime lost due to foreclosures clined expanded the Housekeeping and childraising chores often violated paternal ployed. a psychological alternative. had cash longtime and per month. investors in the valley compete pared and reduced. The barter for goods all utilities Most of the community the and as television, for free, leased for $295 occupancy. collapsed which at hang on and console one another while the newcomers sought professional by May of 1984, the housing market was so those rates, fireplace, apartments on furniture purchases, circumstances could private with rental relations and could departures, during Phase II or within eighteen pool, tennis court, $300 Under no wave of Black Sunday. Two-bedroom furnished tlement Mesa with from boom to bust so the need being cut back by the county. Schisms developed there. Those were still Sunday to Christmas or After the first initial three times that many people left shift counseling increased between the newcomers who had come in and the oldtime families who bors who had decided to disinvest. Phase I adequately conceptualize the for mental health other jobs. So you tell yourself again, well, I've been unthout work J"* you before, but I've always found another job. keep looking and you keep looking, and all a of dn't have any money So you go to make mortgage payments. You're because maybe a blue collar worker and you don't have any income. Where do you go? You don't go to social services. People like don't go to social services, but what are you going to do? There denial, but then you needed to blame somebody. was Exxon, could those goddam or politicians, Phase II dislocations included different views, the scenic educated were eliminated. Rifle went from that a paid staff of their salaries would fifteen to the boom has and rates to the bust is arisen divorce in another effect of to high ily ties and roots. full employment had returned gone low. The for their and to stay in the valley 29 always have left the had always officials and entered products the picture. the members pre-boom Businesses have declined, expanding stretching and and businesses desires for boomtown also and do which equilibrium clock on a losses have 1984, more meant than material. idle since six the oil and gas and that boomtown grow, take their former feet tall 3,000 People shale areas of food Fer sale. and to in no In publicity businesses that have an oil ten 85-ton $350,000 refinery with 159 The store. each in 1981 "A whole on new May tier is every trick to stay out of enough."34 continued to attract a and norms feet of cubic and were in the Daily Sentinel pulled area dump trucks with tires Sunday lamented, have existed including an agricultural seed firm, cost since transient rental and to and hous they what was once a stable Filling up the area's apartment buildings and and other posed additional problems receive for the they needed family counseling, individual counseling, health services at a social service staff. educational 240 that residents.33 buckets capable of holding 189 These latecomers ager, the director Junction families found that 10% of Grand im spur eco admitted Colorado. One-third of the Rifle population began to and public a they released houses were welfare recipients from Denver stamps. closes a number of the hard-core unemployed, because low county because communi families, up for sell who time when there By the end of 1985, of social seventeen other positions were business Report" they 3,745 article published agricultural community. small rental gains. over and industries brought totally different values their There is 1985 December, have failed, and a ing rates were the best in the state. Latecomers arrived after shape. in 22-year-old-independent grocery the bust. An population of industry remain unfulfilled. boomtown to be less. Small realize major years trying to are still businessmen feel bankruptcy are now finding that it still hasn't been no value of every time and the county, though The gigantic trucks beginning to fall. who in 1985, "There County Economic Development Steering and 4, 1986 to commemorate Black but other failed mining boom. For many eclipsed a survey citizens added the bust there have been Brown & Root office tried to had successfully ranchers the accommodate not rebound and economic the to told economy, became worth less in Mesa County, Of 41 000 homes September That is work. and a Former oil city council return of downward. Coal turning back employees, ac existed, but people find County, stage of fear. Are they going to be and an electrical component company, their children may be forced to fol could always of its doors in years closed County Economic Development diversification In Mesa Now their grandchildren elsewhere. of A Garfield for longer than ten their fam the boom because it welcomed River Valley now ruefully towns in the Colorado vent area and III phase 31 business block had few or other retail 1981 the county has lost 6,472 jobs Equally pernicious is bust on youth who became For for generations have folded. agricultural nomic true. wait for the factors have spiraled and pattern of out-migration patient and ties "The Garfield bankruptcies. Robert Nuffer says, "I think that but he loss Committee had been formed children and grandchildren some of whom from lucrative jobs Government operated Oldtimers had looking for work, chosen longer the boom With 1,600 homes. moving through that final there shopped was developments found of acceptance and resolution and on with portant changes. management of County may have led people to file for wages and who now counselor kind next?" county's municipal ex even another state. some that have 32 on idea it no [population] growth in reached street an entire communities are getting replaced impossible, because marital problems that may county or their time of sense~a renewed sense~of divorces, but accurately linking divorce in Garfield or Mesa the long range customed come at people and Castle, Silt, Rifle, the altered the years of work on real estate businesses closing in the Rifle area, lobbyist Parachute have been of the last 15 life," look they found. But their positions professionals to one the across depression into have been useful in mitigating future booms. have had many totally destroyed any collective managerial memory which With bankruptcies have They had leave, but I had stated families, a significant number of drugstore in business for thirty October, 1985; they were committed to The departure of growth reduced. so essential pertise and it. a tenants. Mental health The Northwest Area Council of Governments in Glenwood Springs, Grand Junction, ficials and All the city managers for New a secretary. and and revitalized backgrounds, and recreational values In Rifle, Nobody almost all of the young, professional had come into the valley people who to come themselves spending 85% villain.28 idea In 1985, foreclosures Lawyers who had So they blamed those goddam Arabs. or inflict that much harm on you and not be a represents County."30 an reasons, had to of economic that high. That Mesa be leaving. Mayor Mike Pacheco people would Daily Sentinel, "I had in the white collar worker not a you 7,400 or about sudden you backgrounds were major reductions the Garfield County man services, three service caseworkers, had been eliminated. of students from this and Because of the poor new population, the 13 Rifle High School had to offer three levels of English to abilities.35 varying student The boom has passed, in the Colorado River and communities Valley have been forced to live with dislocated economies and psychologically bruised though by their environmental concerns to their nesting There areas. ways be at the have lessened. Eagles are fewer incidents mouth of of a lasting An peace. economies of the world The ergy, and the rock oil shale are still that burns are of fueled still lies recent boom may Geographer A. David Hill from the University of Colorado had boomtown interviews in northwest Colorado in 1981 for a seminar on the quality of life. In the summer of 1982 he went back to conduct interviews two months after the bust. The "shale darter" ref erence is from Hill's July, 1982 interview with Ed Weeks, manager, Rifle Chamber of Commerce. conducted will al come again. by enormous appetites a ifi The for to author, multiple in 15 and Uintah Basin energy bust is only and written notes terviews, October, 1985. returning poaching deer Roan Creek. Yet fossil fuels a non-renewable resource. truce-not oil Pat O'Neill interview elk, and little danger exists to the threatened species hookless cactus people in fortunes. In the rapid change before families regain their equilibrium, it will be years shale region Cumulative Impact Task Force cover letter, draft, May 6, 1982. Proposed revisions August 18, 1982. Paul Ferraro and Paul Nazaryk, Assessment of Cumulative Environmental Impacts of Energy Development in Northwestern Colorado, Review Draft Report, Col orado Department of Health, in cooperation with the U.S. Environ mental Protection Agency, Region VIII. accommodate Tony Link, "Survey shows population 1985: 1. Also Tony Link, "Vacancy rate Daily Sentinel 5 February 1986. en deep in dark layers of shale. drop," above Daily Sentinel 8 July 14%, survey says," 17 Gail Pitts, "Exxon will Close Shale Oil Project-Annual Payroll Loss Could be $85 million, " Denver Post 3 May 1982: 1. 18 John S. Gilmore, "Boom Towns May Hinder Energy Resource Science 191, February 13, 1976: 535-540. Development," Boomtown Blues: Oil Shale and Exxon's Exit Endnotes Through the Colony Project, including Battlement Mesa housing for 25,000 people, was to cost $5 billion dollars, less than that was spent. The $920 million dollar figure Tracy, "Exxon's Abrupt Exit from comes Shale," Very little had been published on Western Energy boomtowns Two contemporary articles, how Jane H. Lillydahl and Elizabeth W. Moen, "Planning, Man aging, and Financing Growth and Decline in Energy Resource Com Colorado" The Journal ofEnergy munities: A Case Study of Western & Development 8-2 Sprint (1983): 211-229, and Elizabeth W. Moen, now from Eleanor Johnson Fortune, May 31, 1982: 106. For an excellent news story in which the impact of the bust was "overnight" heightened by the use of the word as a sentence lead-in (a journalistic device which I have borrowed), see the entire issue of The Weekly Newspaper (Glenwood Springs, Colorado) Vol. 6, No. 41, May 5, 1982. The two-inch headline states BUST! and the smaller headline reads "JOLT: Exxon's overnight shutdown stuns Shale," "Voodoo Forecasting: Technical, Political situation in the Colorado River Valley, but both are excellent introductions to the topic for the White River Valley and the town of Meeker. Fortune, May 31, 1982: Open," Lynn Colorado River 1985. 21 For the 1983 Black Energy Workers," "Exxon Daily Sentinel 4 May 1982. For additional Daily Sentinel, 3 May 1982. Rifle Telegram, 5 May 1982. "We will Rifle Tribune, 5 May 1982. "Boom and Bust.. Meeker Herald, 6 May 1982. and "Slow on Washington Post, 6 May 1982. Daily Sentinel 1 Cindy Parmenter, "4,100 jobs May Be Lost in Denver Post 4 May 1982: 9A. Oil Shale Shut down," Closure," Denver Post 4 May 24 " " The Week the 'Chute Didn't Open, Colorado River Journal August 1982: 29. 10 O'Neill, " Shale: We week editorials still need it, "Denver Post 5 May 1982. By the began "All right already, the sky is 12 Charles Pence "Colony quoted in the Daily Sentinel 5 Shutdown Shocks Workers," May 1982: Exxon claim 25 Jim Sullivan, former Sentinel. Interviewed by Daily Tosco," and Exxon lied Rifle Tribune, 11 August project" editor Rifle Tribune author at Glenwood about shale the offices Exxon," suit against and writer of Daily the Daily Sentinel, Grand Junction, Colorado, October 16, 1985. May 1982: 47. Denver Post 9 sues Post 21 April 1983: 1, and "Two developers lose Daily Sentinel 1 May 1983. Sentinel 12 May 1982. 11 "Developer 1982: 1. "Developers next falling," not 6,7. 23 Andrew Gulliford, "From Boom to Bust: Small Towns and Energy Slope," Small Town, Vol. 13, No. Development on Colorado's Western 5, (March-April,1983) pp. 15-22. 1982: 9A. 9 May 1983: 22 Frank P. Barrow, former Project Director, Colony Project, EngleExxon, U.S.A. Interview by author at 10 Huntwick Lane, 1986. March 12, wood, Colorado, .Live Shale," Ray Flack, "Housing Hit Hard by town," cedes," survive," Q 13 Unger, "Shale's empty promises bust Colorado breather," "Bust," out" pulls Learn," 7 Showcase- Sunday anniversary see: "1983 special edition, Daily Sentinel Environment" side after runs," "Exxon the Kansas City Times 6 April 1983: 1. "Town sees a bright bust," Kansas City Star 1 May 1983: 3B. Gary boom goes Schmitz, "Oil shale prospects continue to worsen,", Steve McMillan, and "foreclosures mount as growth re "Parachute takes a 16. cuts and editorials see: and March 1983. Robert boom fi Evans, minister, United Methodist-Presbyterian Church, Street, Rifle Colorado. Interviewed by author October 25, 200 E. 4th Kit Miniclier and Pete Chronis, "Life Turns Upside Down for Shale Plant Denver Post 4 May 1982: 1. Rocky Mountain News 4 May 1982: Ethical Issues Regard the bust 20 Pat O'Neill, "The Week the 'Chute Didn't Journal July/August 1982: 13. and Growth," 105. 3 a state of economic chaos. are Population Research ing the Projection of Local Population and Policy Review, 3 (1984) 1-25. Neither article specifically addresses county." Tracy, "Exxon's Abrupt Exit from in ever, 26 Andrew Alexander, "Following the boom: A story Daily Sentinel 4 May 1986: 5A. 4D. determination," 241 of persistence, 27 Alice Boulton letter to author received June 17 1986. , 28 f.*11"1 interview by author Grand Junction, Colorado, October c 1985. Also see Tony Link, "Foreclosure isn't always 16, Daily fatal," Sentinel 16 February 1986: 1. 29 The best article dealing with the impact of the boom on youth is William R. Freudenburg, "Boomtown Youth: The Differential Impacts of Rapid Community Growth on Adolescents and Adults," American Sociological Review 49 (1984): 697-705. 30 James T. Bernath, "Survey Results: 10 percent of families say they intend to pull up stakes, Daily Sentinel 17 Sept. 1984: 1. move," 31 Charley Blaine, "Oil glut puts boom town on the Today 18 November 1985: 1. rocks," USA 32 Robert Nuffer, Associate Director, Sopris Mental Health Center, Glenwood Springs. Interviewed by author January 16, 1986. oo Garfield County Economic Development Steering Committee, Chairman, Garfield County Economic Development Re Glenwood Springs, Co: December, 1985: 1. Nick Massaro, port, 34 fall," see the previously For the "whole new tier beginning to Andrew Alexander, "Following the boom: a story of persistence, in the Daily Sentinel, 4 May 1986: 5A. cited determination" 35 Dariel Clark, Superintendent Re-2 Schools, 822 East Avenue, 1986. Rifle, Colorado. Interview with author January 3, 242