DOTHAN, Ala. – Local government and economic leaders are prepared to formally oppose a federal proposal to downgrade the status of Dothan – and 143 other areas across the U.S. – so that it is no longer considered a metropolitan area.
In January, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued a public notice stating a proposal to raise the minimum population threshold from 50,000 to 100,000 for metropolitan statistical area (MSA) designation. The change would downgrade Dothan and six other Alabama areas – Anniston-Oxford, Auburn-Opelika, Daphne-Fairhope-Foley, Decatur, Florence-Muscle Shoals, and Gadsden – so they would be considered micropolitan areas.
“We don’t like it,” Dothan Area Chamber of Commerce President Matt Parker said Monday. “We don’t know what it means from a federal funding standpoint. We don’t want to go backward, we want to go forward.”
The DACC uses the MSA status to attract businesses and to show that Dothan is a regional center point for economic activity and vitality. Reclassification of Dothan and six other areas would leave Alabama with only five metro areas: Hunstville, Birmingham-Hoover, Mobile, Montgomery, and Tuscaloosa.
Parker and Dothan Mayor Mark Saliba are also concerned the change could impact money for federally funded programs like Community Development Block Grants, the Metropolitan Planning Organization, and funding for federal highways, other infrastructure improvements, and some urban grants.