
Bringing tech jobs to rural America
Rep. Tom Perriello (D-Va.) wants to spur tech jobs in his district of Southern and Central Virginia. He's introduced a bill that would give incentives for companies to hire workers in rural areas and small towns.
Here's his recent post from The Hill's Congress Blog:
If a company can hire a phone operator in India, why can’t they hire one in Martinsville, VA? For too long, we’ve had perverse incentives for companies to ship their jobs overseas instead of rewarding them for investing in American workers. This has left areas such as my district, Central and Southern Virginia, with a huge loss in manufacturing jobs and unemployment numbers that are unacceptably high.
With this in mind,
I have introduced H.R. 3627, the Rural and Small Town Telework Tax
Credit Act of 2009. The bill aims to stimulate the growth of tech jobs
in rural areas and small towns by providing a tax credit to cover the
cost of teleworking equipment and expenses for businesses that hire
employees in rural and small town America.
My district is a
predominantly rural one that has been stung badly by the recent
economic strife, as well as by a decade of bad trade policies that
caused jobs to be shipped overseas. This tax credit incentivizes
companies to bring jobs back to non-urban regions, and to renew and
reward innovation by American entrepreneurs who create American jobs.
Not only will this legislation spur job growth, the jobs created will
be ones that belong in a 21st century economy. Teleworking is more and
more common in today’s global marketplace, and numerous companies have
telework centers answering calls from consumers and businesses that use
their products. With the unprecedented investment in rural broadband
networking in the stimulus package, the resources are increasingly
available for teleworking jobs to be created in rural areas and small
towns.
Cross-posted with the Congress Blog










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