Economic development officials in Clay and Platte counties often brag about the quality of their workforce. It's a boast that can easily be supported with facts.
No less a source than Fortune magazine rated Kansas City Number One in access to a quality labor force. Fortune was especially impressed with the area's "Midwestern values" and a measurable devotion to work that brings dividends to area employers.
This editorial perspective is backed by facts. In a recent study by the National Center for Health Statistics, workers in Kansas City were found to have lost the fewest days to illness or injury of any of the 33 major metropolitan areas studied. Kansas City area workers tallied just 277 sick days per 100 workers. This loss was approximately half that of the national average and nearly one-fourth the size of some other major cities.
The reasons for this phenomenal loyalty to work are many, but many analysts give a lot of the credit to the region's rural roots. Indeed, many area inhabitants still consider themselves country residents and place a high value on so-called rural values. Indeed, many of the Northland's workers actually live in the country, or something pretty close to it. Even more have parents who were raised and lived in decidedly rural settings. Kansas City and Northland employers have found that they really do bring a serious work ethic to the job.
The availability of these workers is also a positive, according to a recent Bureau of Labor Statistics survey. Of the 146,670 in the Northland labor pool, more than 31,455 (10 percent) said they were actively seeking new employment opportunities. Another 115,215 (36 percent) said they would consider new employment for the right opportunity.
Although area workers may bring old-fashioned values, their education is up to date. Sixty-nine percent of the available labor pool have some college education and 95 percent have a high school diploma or more.