I just finished reading an article by Richard Florida in The Atlantic magazine by the title "How The Crash Will Reshape America". I'll quote the leading paragraph for the sake of accuracy; " The crash of 2008 continues to reverberate loudly nationwide-destroying jobs, bankrupting businesses, and displacing homeowners. But already, it has damaged some places much more severely than others. On one side of the crisis, America's economic landscape will look very different than it does today. What fate will the coming years hold for New York, Charlotte, Detroit, Las Vegas? Will the suburbs be ineffably changed? Which cities and regions can come back strong? And which will never come back at all"? Another chapter in the article is titled "The last crisis of the factory towns" Again I feel I have to quote; "Sadly and unjustly, the places likely to suffer most from the crash-especially in the long run-are the ones least associated with high finances. While the crisis may have begun in New York, it will likely find its fullest bloom in the interior of the country-in older, manufacturing regions whose heydays are long past." I would never admit to being a pessimist, and even today I see many opportunities for Berlin and the region. I quote this article to wake us up to the need to think of ourselves in new ways and to urge us to get off our backsides. When reading this article, it becomes obvious that the communities that will survive this crash and reshaping are those who can change their collective attitudes and focus. The article screams at places like Berlin and the North Country to wake up to the threat of becoming but a memory in history. (We have examples of local places once important, now diminished, places like Percy, Crystal, Stratford and Columbia, victims of other crashes) To the optimist like myself, this is all about the opportunity to re-invent ourselves and capture the best that life in the 21st century has to offer. We need to find the strength to push the pain of our losses with the closing of the mills out of our daily lives. We need to accept without regret that those "good old days" will not come back and that we need to create "new good days" and that they may not look anything like the old ones. We have entered a post industrial period and the collapse of the paper industry has caught us flat footed. It's time for us to roll-up our sleves as did our grandparents and carve-out a piece of the new economic pie from the many resources we're blessed with having in the North Country.