floridian wrote:
Recently I am back for a few months as a consultant for a national contractor assigned to a job along route 40 near the Uniontown Mall. This additional time has allowed me to make a fair and impartial assessment of the area and the residents. The general area has changed since I last lived here and for the better when it comes to new businesses or the potential for growth once the final leg of the Mon-Fayette Expressway is completed. What I have been hearing is this part of Fayette County will spring to action once the final link is completed and Uniontown and the surrounding towns will become the next Monroeville. After years of a declining population this is good for the region but I hear grumbling from lifelong residents that they do not like change and would rather have Uniontown as it was in the past. Sorry folks but change is good and each one of you needs to learn to accept the change and adapt to it the best way possible. Its great seeing the area developed around the area, new roads, a great community college in Penn State Fayette and so much more to look forward to over the years. There are areas in this country that would give anything to be where Uniontown and Fayette County are today. Give yourself a chance and you will realize just how fortunate you are living in this area today.
I totally agree that change is good, *especially* for Fayette County. When I had the job where I had to drive route 40 from Uniontown through Brownsville every day, the drive on route 40 was so unbearable it was the sole reason I wanted either out of the job or to move closer. It was (I think) only 6 miles of my 40-50 mile drive, but it was the only part I dreaded. Now that the new road is in, it's opening all sorts of possibilities for me personally, even more so when the leg to Morgantown is completed. Absence or presence of the leg to Morgantown solely closes or opens the entire job market to me in the Morgantown area, assuming that I want to live in Fayette County.
The one big thing that concerns me about Fayette County is that it appears to me that the local economy is all now retail driven. I worry that the local economy won't sustain itself if that's all there is, we need more in Fayette County where we can actually have money coming IN to the area, not circling around the area. Retail tends to just allow money to circulate around, if Fayette County isn't really producing anything and bringing actual revenue into the region, how can this sustain itself? Something like the Volkswagen plant, or Sony, or ?.
This is where I think the new roads can pay off. Use me as a perfect example. Right now I am really liking the idea of living in Fayette County/Uniontown, but there are zero jobs for what I do, which is a higher-end tech position. I make roughly triple the national average salarywise, and I'd love nothing more than to spend my paycheck in Fayette County. Without the new roads this wouldn't be possible. With the new roads, this now makes it possible for Uniontownians to work in Pittsburgh or Morgantown, and live in Fayette County and spend their money in Fayette County. This means money coming in to the area.
floridian wrote:
When someone does treat them right they find these men odd and dismiss them just as the young lady dismissed my friend's honorable and good intentions. This is not an isolated case and with residents not embracing change in this region I have a hard time believing that this area will ever attract new residents to move into this area. I grew up here and will always call this my hometown but as it is now I would never move back to this area to live.
I see the same sort of thing, not just with women though. I went to Kentucky a while back and noticed something odd. When I accidentally make eye-contact with someone there, they wave! Almost out of instinct or something, they are fundamentally kind people. This was different for me because in Uniontown I often make accidental eye contact with someone and it's almost as through they think I have a problem with them or something. Polar opposite.
But yes, people do seem to be different here. Back when I was single, I too met a lot of women with baggage. The phrase that women like men who treat them the worst is epitomized in Uniontown. The girl your friend sent the cards to may have originally thought it was a nice gesture, but maybe she was poisoned by peer women around her to think that way. It's a shame.