The other thing about a small town is, if you did break the window in a StarryBucks (lets just pretend it existed) by the time that person got home, their parents would be talking to them about the busted window and how they would be fixing it. Even before the internet, the network in a small town is quite extensive.
That said, Portland.
What Portland is losing fastest, that they have no idea is leaving is tradesmen.
When you have a very physical skill like plumbing, and you know how to do it
You can find yourself a new job in a new place quickly.
And when you are hands-on, you are usually more conservative leaning.
So, the ones who see the writing on the wall and get out are the tradesmen.
Enjoy your 6 month waiting list to see a plumber Portland.
Maybe that is why people are pooping in the streets in SF? :-p
Trade skills are incredible and the people I know that went into those industries are generally a lot more happy all around than people who have office jobs. I remember when I was in high school how it seemed as though the guidance counselors were actively trying to discourage anyone from pursuing those fields and we were endlessly visited by college reps with bogus statistics about income levels that can be expected with a college degree.
I did both. I have a degree in construction management but I really believe that the real skills I have was by doing, not by learning. The degree opened doors for me as far as getting my construction business going, but I wouldn't have been able to manage something like that if I didn't know how to do the work myself. I think that if a lot of people could go back in time they would have attended a community college and learned something hands on rather than getting a degree in something like Business or Sociology.
There is a saying, i do not know where from
That the further man is away from the soil, the more miserable (or messed up in the head) he becomes.
This seems to be true.
And everyone in the future will be part time farmers.
These are the sorts of skills that should be taught in schools. It wouldn't surprise me if a majority of people that are in grammar and secondary school right now don't have any sort of a clue how to grow anything in the ground.
My controversial High School curriculum consists of killing, cleaning/plucking and cooking a chicken.
Nobody gets out of it. Kids need to know where their food comes from.