Talk Business & Politics March/April 2015

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Big Companies in a Small Town

Deltic Timber, Murphy Oil and Murphy USA have had a huge impact on El Dorado, its success and its quality of life. By Jeanni Brosius

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fter oil was discovered in the 1920s, El Dorado was known as Arkansas’ Original Boomtown. As with many towns during the oil boom, over the years its economy gradually waned. But with continual backing and support from its corporate community, including three large publicly traded companies that call the town home – Deltic Timber Corp., Murphy Oil Corp. and Murphy USA, Inc. – El Dorado is booming again. The growth stems from noteworthy investments into its economic development and education of its children. Things began to transform in the 1980s when Main Street El Dorado was incorporated. Since then, the city has seen a major uptick in its economic development, education and the arts, and the impact of Deltic, Murphy Oil and Murphy USA can be seen throughout the town of a little more than 18,000 residents. EDUCATION PROGRAM As with many small South Arkansas towns, El Dorado has laid out a strategic plan for economic development. One of its five goals includes education. Working hand-in-hand with Murphy Oil, the El Dorado Promise Scholarship Program has made history. Allison Parker, general manager of global communications at Murphy Oil, said her company believes it is part of its corporate responsibility to give back to the communities in which it operates. Because one of the city’s most precious resources is its children, ensuring a good education seemed a logical focus. The El Dorado Promise is a scholarship

program established and funded by Murphy Oil Corp. The program provides students who graduate from El Dorado High School scholarships that cover tuition and fees to any accredited two- or four-year public or private college in the United States. The scholarship’s maximum amount would equal the highest annual resident tuition to a public university in Arkansas. Since its launch on Jan. 22, 2007, more than

“Our large employers have allowed our local economy to weather the bad economic times better than most.” – Austin Barrow

President & COO El Dorado Festivals and Events 1,500 students have received Promise scholarship funding. El Dorado Mayor Frank Hash said there is absolutely nothing exactly like the Promise in any other city. “There is only one other city in our entire nation that has such a generous highereducation program: Kalamazoo, Mich.,” Hash said. “[The Promise] is a $50 million endowment and growing.” Murphy also offers a gift-matching program to its employees and retirees and

is able to direct a large portion of the donations to the organizations of the employees’ choice, Parker said. “I don’t know of any other community that has done so with the same level of success,” said Austin Barrow, president and COO of El Dorado Festivals and Events, Inc. “Beyond the sizable commitment of money, the day-to-day attention that employees pour into education within the community is noted from as early as kindergarten, and seen throughout the entire public school experience.” As a result of the Promise, the El Dorado School District has implemented programs to prepare its students for college, beginning in kindergarten. According to El Dorado Promise officials, the enrollment in the high school has more than doubled since 2005. INDUSTRY INVOLVEMENT El Dorado has always been a city with major industries. Hash said because the town is particularly rich in natural resources, such as oil, timber, brine, natural gas, clean high-quality water and electrical power, it is attractive to industry. The town is also easily accessible through rail, highway and river transportation modes. “Many of these prominent companies were created in El Dorado, and I believe the question might be why did they stay?” Barrow said. “Perhaps the question is what can we, the people of El Dorado, do to make sure they stay? Quality of life is a major factor in many people’s lives when considering where to relocate for a job, and these firms understand that notion. “They understand it, and they fund it. … El Dorado is a bit of an oasis in a sea of www.talkbusiness.net

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