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Moore County

County Seat: Carthage

Date Visited: March 2021

Moore County Demographics

Population

102,763

Population Density Distribution

Rural

Median Income

$63,324

Our time in Moore County centered on a visit to Sandhills Community College. The president of the college, John Dempsey, welcomed us and introduced us to his guests, including Rep. Jamie Boles (R), and Sen. Tom McInnis (R), both of whom represent Moore County in the General Assembly. We also met Mickey Foster, CEO of FirstHealth of the Carolinas, and Charles Gregg, CEO of Pinehurst Surgical Clinic.

Moore is a rural county in the central part of the state with a growing population just above 101,000 residents. Parts of the county, such as the village of Pinehurst, are quite affluent, but the overall poverty rate is still 11.3%, just one point lower than the national average of 12.3%. As Dempsey described it, “Our community combines the wealth of the 20th century economy with the challenges of the 21st century.”

Michelle Bauer, Dean of Continuing Education and Workforce Development Programs at Sandhills, emphasized the school’s role in the lives of Moore and Hoke County residents: “There are many people in our area who are economically disadvantaged for whom we are the bridge to economic well-being.”

Jobs in the health care field can be an essential part of this upward mobility. Mickey Foster said he hired 106 new nursing graduates last year, mostly from community colleges. Despite that hiring, he said of his hospital, “Our biggest challenge is nursing, just like everywhere else in the world.”

From there, the discussion expanded to the general challenge of access to educational opportunities. For students who graduate from community college, affordability can be a barrier to continuing their education, including the pursuit of advanced nursing degrees.

To that end, President Dempsey presented the Sandhills Promise program as one way to help cost-burdened students advance their education. Sandhills Promise guarantees that Moore and Hoke County residents who graduate from high school having completed four dual-enrollment courses at Sandhills will pay no tuition at the college for the two years immediately following high school graduation. The school’s foundation funds the program because, as Dempsey put it, “We don’t want any students ever to graduate with student debt.”

On a quick tour through campus, we stopped at a construction site that will be the new home of the Sandhills nursing school. In 2018, voters approved a bond measure that is helping to cover the cost of building the 36,000-square-foot center. The construction of Foundation Hall, combined with renovations of Kennedy Hall – the existing nursing building – will enable Sandhills Community College to increase the number of nursing graduates by 50%.

We ended our visit at the Bradshaw Center for the Performing Arts, which is part of the Sandhills campus. The Center has become a popular destination for internationally known performers and local audiences alike. President Dempsey explained, “At Sandhills Community College, our middle name is ‘Community,’ so we take the needs of this community seriously.”

The community in action

Extra Miles Tour logo

Blue Cross NC Extra Miles Tour

We're on a listening tour across North Carolina, talking to local leaders who are collaborating on solutions to our toughest common challenges. Our goal is to understand the complex diversity of our state, to celebrate the grassroots heroes working to improve the health and well-being of all North Carolinians and to learn from their worthy efforts.

Disclosures:

County Statistics data sourced from US Census Bureau

Population Density Designation data sourced from from NC Rural Center.

All other trade names are the property of their respective owners.

U39702, 12/23