An Appalachian builder's case for why the next great tech hub is hiding in plain sight
There's a thing that happens in Eastern Kentucky.
You grow up sharp. You figure things out. You see patterns other people miss, build things from nothing, solve problems with whatever's in reach. And then, if you're ambitious enough, you leave. You have to. Because the message this place has sent for generations is that the good stuff happens somewhere else.
Silicon Valley. Austin. Boston. Seattle. The coasts are where you go if you want to matter.
That's the brain drain. It's not a news story or a policy problem or an abstraction. It's personal. It's the smartest people in your county packing up and leaving because the county doesn't have anything for them.
And the data backs it up. The Appalachian Regional Commission found the region grew just 4.0% from 2010 to 2023, compared to 7.8% nationally. The Appalachian portions of West Virginia, Ohio, New York, Virginia, and Mississippi each lost at least 3% of their populations. In some distressed counties, the damage is generational -- research found that places like McDowell County, West Virginia lost roughly 25% of their young adult population through net outmigration, with college-educated residents leaving at a 29% net rate.
Every smart person who leaves makes it a little harder for the next one to stay.
I'm an addictions counselor in Eastern Kentucky. I'm also a solo developer who, with no CS degree, no funding, and no team, built an AI orchestration engine that 44 funded teams independently decided needed to exist. I named it Orca. I shipped v1.0.0 in late 2025.
I didn't leave.
What the Research Actually Says
Before I make the case, I want to be honest about something: the brain drain in Appalachia is not a single uniform thing. The ARC's own data shows a bifurcated region. Southern Appalachia grew 13.2% over the same period the rest of the region stagnated. The outmigration crisis is concentrated in distressed, rural, Central and Northern Appalachia -- places like Eastern Kentucky, southern West Virginia, and parts of Ohio.
That distinction matters. It means this isn't a story about a dying region. It's a story about a region with a widening internal divide, where some parts are thriving and others are still bleeding out the people they can least afford to lose.
The research on why people leave is equally clear. A peer-reviewed study of Central Appalachian students found the strongest predictor of wanting to stay wasn't love of home or cultural identity -- it was the perceived likelihood of finding an interesting job with good salary and advancement opportunities. Partner employment and access to continued education also mattered. The policy implication the researchers drew was blunt: stronger public-private partnerships that create real jobs matter more than rhetoric about place loyalty.
In other words, people will stay if there's something worth staying for.
That's the opening.
The Structural Advantages Nobody Talks About
When people think about building tech in Appalachia, they think about what's missing. The venture capital, the density, the ecosystem. Those gaps are real. But the cost structure tells a different story.
Bureau of Economic Analysis regional price parity data shows that Appalachian metros operate at a fraction of what the major tech hubs cost. Huntington-Ashland comes in at 88.4 on the all-items index (national average is 100). Lexington sits at 93.1. Pittsburgh at 94.4. Compare that to Boston at 111.6, Seattle at 113.0, and San Francisco at 118.2.
On housing specifically, the gap is staggering. BEA data shows housing price parity values of 50.0 for Huntington-Ashland and 74.4 for Lexington -- compared to 148.2 for Boston, 151.5 for Seattle, and 200.2 for San Francisco. That's not a slight discount. That's a fundamentally different cost basis for building a company.
The labor cost differential mirrors it. BLS data shows mean hourly wages for software developers running $181,220 annually in San Francisco and $164,130 in Seattle. The interior U.S. operates at a materially lower baseline -- which means a tech employer can hire five serious engineers in Appalachia for what one costs in the Bay Area. That's not a small thing. That's a structural advantage that compounds over a decade.
Land and power. Data centers need physical footprint and power infrastructure. Eastern Kentucky has both, at prices California can't touch. The buildout that AI infrastructure requires is going to happen somewhere. The question is who captures that value.
Loyalty. When someone who grew up here gets a real shot at building something meaningful in their own backyard, the calculus flips. Research on the Tulsa Remote program -- which offered relocation incentives to remote workers -- found it increased community engagement, entrepreneurship, and long-term willingness to stay. A Brookings evaluation found that work-from-anywhere policies can help reverse brain drain to large cities while increasing workers' real income and community connection. The lesson wasn't that cash alone works. It was that cash plus curation, community-building, and a credible local narrative can work. Appalachia has the narrative. It needs the jobs to back it up.
The Infrastructure Is Further Along Than You Think
One of the persistent myths about Appalachia is that it's a digital dead zone. The reality is more nuanced.
ARC data shows 86.2% of Appalachian households had broadband subscriptions in 2019-2023, up 11.1 percentage points from the previous period. Device access reached 92% of households. The gaps remain -- 116 Appalachian counties still had broadband subscription rates below 80%, almost all of them rural and outside metro areas -- but the trend line is moving in the right direction.
The ARC itself has been building the ecosystem infrastructure for years: entrepreneurship academies, STEM academies, workforce development programs, energy transition initiatives, and broadband investment portfolios that have aimed to serve 500 communities and 70,000 households. Kentucky's SOAR organization serves all 54 ARC counties in Eastern Kentucky, explicitly focused on the "deep-seated issue of population retention and growth." West Virginia launched Ascend WV, a remote-worker attraction program that has generated 90,000 applications and welcomed 1,400 individuals from 48 states and eight countries.
The pieces exist. They're just not yet assembled into something coherent enough to create the conditions where a young engineer or founder looks around and thinks: I can build a full life here.
That's the gap. And it's closeable.
What Silicon Holler Actually Means
I'm not talking about a marketing campaign. I'm not talking about a "tech district" on a render.
I'm talking about what happens when the jobs exist, the broadband works, the partner can find employment, and the kid who's too smart for the options in front of them doesn't have to choose between ambition and home.
The research says something important about this: the best model for Appalachian tech formation isn't a single winner-take-all city. It's a distributed hub -- a few anchor metros and university nodes linked to lower-cost surrounding counties, with remote-work pathways, local coworking infrastructure, and targeted sector bets. Not a Bay Area clone. Something that fits the actual geography and the actual talent pool.
That fits exactly how I think about this. You don't need everyone in one building. You need the work to be real, the pay to be fair, and the infrastructure to hold.
My core mission with Orca and everything I'm building under Yak Stacks is making high-quality AI accessible to people who've been priced out of it. That mission and this place are the same mission. Eastern Kentucky has always been on the outside of economic power. I know what it feels like to not have access to the good tools. That's not abstract for me.
What the Region Actually Has
People talk about Appalachia like it's a problem to be solved. A place of deficits.
That's a real part of the story. But it's not the whole story.
Eastern Kentucky gave the world coal that powered the industrial revolution. Bourbon that became a global industry. Bluegrass that influenced every genre of music that followed. This region has always produced things the world needed. It just never got credit and never captured the value.
Educational attainment has been rising -- 27.3% of Appalachian adults held at least a bachelor's degree in 2019-2023, up 3.1 percentage points in five years. Central Appalachia still sits nearly 20 points below the national average, which is a real gap, but the direction is clear. The talent pipeline is being built. The question is whether it empties into San Francisco again or builds something here.
The research on talent retention says the same thing over and over: people will stay if the job is interesting, the pay is real, the advancement is possible, and the community feels like it has a future. None of those things require a zip code that starts with 9.
The Path
Every great tech hub started with one person who proved it was possible.
Orca is a proof of concept that this kind of work can come from here. That the architecture doesn't care where you're sitting when you write it. That quality gating, multi-agent orchestration, and typed protocol design can come out of Eastern Kentucky as legitimately as they can come out of anywhere else.
The path from here looks like this: traction leads to credibility, credibility leads to capital, capital creates the conditions where the next person doesn't have to do this alone. Where the next sharp kid in a small Appalachian county has a local ecosystem to plug into instead of a one-way ticket out.
I'm not claiming to be the person who builds Silicon Holler alone. Nobody does it alone.
I'm claiming that the conditions are right, the cost structure is real, the infrastructure is building, and the research says it's possible.
November 28, 2025 is the day we started finding out.
To the People Who Already Left
The brain drain wasn't a character failure. It was a rational response to real scarcity. When the job isn't here, you go where the job is. That's not a moral failing -- it's just math.
But the math is changing. The tools are leveling the playing field faster than the geography can push back. If you left this place carrying something forged here -- the stubbornness, the resourcefulness, the ability to solve problems with whatever's available -- you might find there's something worth coming back for.
Not because things are perfect. They're not.
Because what you've always been capable of building doesn't require San Francisco anymore.
To the People Who Stayed
You already know what this place has that the coasts don't. The way people here build things from nothing, solve problems with what's available, and keep going when the conditions aren't right.
Those are exactly the qualities that produce durable technology. Not the pitch deck. Not the pedigree.
The stubbornness.
Use it.
James Yarber is the founder of Yak Stacks and the developer of Orca, an open-source AI orchestration engine. He lives and works in Eastern Kentucky.
Sources
- Appalachian Regional Commission, Appalachia Then and Now: Population Overview — demographic history, county-level persistence of decline
- ARC Chartbook 2019–2023 — regional population growth (4.0% vs. 7.8% national), educational attainment (27.3% bachelor's degree), broadband subscription rates (86.2%), device access (92%)
- ARC Kentucky FY 2025 — $23.6M in 49 projects, workforce and infrastructure investment
- ARC Broadband Portfolio RFP — 500 communities, 70,000 households, 7,000 businesses served
- Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Price Parities 2023 — all-items and housing RPPs for Appalachian metros vs. coastal hubs
- BEA State RPP 2024 — Kentucky 89.9, Tennessee 92.1, California 110.7, Massachusetts 107.7
- Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics May 2023/2024 — metro wage comparisons, software developer salary benchmarks
- Vazzana & Rudi-Polloshka, peer-reviewed study of Central Appalachian student retention — job quality and advancement as primary retention predictors
- Terman, qualitative research on West Virginia post-coal communities — social identity and institutional support in talent retention
- Kannapel & Flory, review of postsecondary transitions in Central Appalachia — interventions with retention evidence
- Ascend WV program data — 90,000 applications, 1,400 individuals relocated from 48 states
- Brookings Institution / Upjohn Institute, Tulsa Remote evaluations — rural talent attraction, community embeddedness, ROI
- SOAR Kentucky — 54-county mission, population retention and growth focus
- USDA ERS, nonmetro migration post-2020 — national context for rural in-migration trends
- Lichter et al., historical ARC outmigration research — McDowell County data (25% young adult loss, 29% college-educated net outmigration)
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