[img_assist|nid=13|title=|desc=|link=none|align=right|width=600|height=400]There's something sadly symbolic about the looming closure of the Data Group plant in Brockville. The plant makes stock tab computer paper, the kind with holes in the margins that go on those old printer sprockets, as well as cash register rolls.
Computer printers with sprockets. Kind of sounds as obsolete as the old pre-globalization and early-globalization manufacturing model under which Brockville thrived, the disappearance of which has created the economic mess we are in right now. ("It is sad to watch Brockville circle the drain," one of the commenters under the story remarks.)
The parallel is obvious: obsolete product; obsolete city.
It is also more than a little too simple.
The Data Group closing won't be the last one to hit Brockville, and as the city transforms under a new economic model, it likely won't be a Fortune 500 town again.
But there will be something here. What that will be will depend on what is possible.