(Source: Tulsa World)

By MIKE SCHNEIDER; MIKE BAKER
RALEIGH, N.C. -- In the state capital's downtown core, $500,000
decorative street lights beam down on a bustling crowd who've come
to dine along a recently revitalized pedestrian plaza.
A few states to the south, the lamp posts shine largely on empty
lots in a subdivision outside Orlando where only a third of the 95
planned homes have been built.
Wake County, N.C., and Lake County, Fla., shared the spoils of
the real estate surge as two of the nation's 100 fastest-growing
counties of this decade, until the recession hit and their paths
diverged.
Most of the places on that list, including Lake County, coughed
up their quick gains. The AP Economic Stress Index -- a score based
on a county's unemployment, foreclosure and bankruptcy rates --
shows that the nation's 100 fastest-growing counties have, as a
whole, fared worse than the national average since the start of the
recession.
Yet 42 of those 100 counties are bucking that boom-then-doom
trend, including the Texas counties outside Austin, Dallas, Houston
and San Antonio, according to the AP's analysis.
The fast-growing areas that have been resilient tend to have
diversified economies.
"When one industry goes down, it doesn't just take down the whole
region," said Duane Dankersreiter, vice president of business
information and research at the Dallas Regional Chamber, explaining
that a diverse job market has developed over time there, drawing on
technology, finance and energy. "We're able to absorb the hit much
better."
The areas often owe the favorable mix of jobs to recruiting by
local leaders. Raleigh and nearby communities have spent decades
courting pharmaceutical and technology companies to an area that's
long benefited from state government, university and health care
jobs.
The effort has paid dividends during the downturn: LED lighting
maker Cree Inc. recently announced that it was adding more than 500
jobs in Durham.
Adrienne Cole, executive director of Raleigh Economic
Development, said while the region's large construction industry has
taken a hit, other sectors helped provide stability. Wake County's
September unemployment rate was 8.3 percent.
That falls below both the national average of 9.8 and the state's
10.8 percent jobless rate.
"I think we could argue that we were one of the last communities
in the recession and we'll be one of the first communities out,"
Cole said.
Schneider reported from Tavares, Fla. SUBHEAD: Some have
fared well, while others have busted.
Originally published by MIKE SCHNEIDER AND MIKE BAKER Associated Press.
(c) 2009 Tulsa World. Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.
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