The Voice of Business, Industry & the Professions Since 1942
North Carolina's largest business group proudly serves as the state chamber of commerce


Executive Profile




Two-Way Street
David Hoyle, business' best friend in the state Senate,
learned a lot about education in politics, and vice versa


By Phil Kirk

Lessons learned as a boy growing up in the mill village of Dallas have guided Gaston County native David Hoyle from a humble beginning to the halls of the General Assembly, where he is called by many as the state’s No. 1 advocate for business and industry.

Hoyle’s support for a strong economic development policy and a pro-business, pro-jobs climate has won him many friends in the state’s business community. At the same time, his demeanor and candor have not alienated the legislators and advocacy groups on the other side of the political spectrum.

He credits his mother, the late Ethel Brown Hoyle, with shaping his philosophy and the manner in which he deals with people.

“My mother always told me do not let the sun set with anyone having hard feelings against me,” he says. “She said even if you’re wrong, don’t go to sleep without at least trying to mend fences. Life is too short and there is nothing wrong with saying you’re sorry.”

Hoyle’s rapid rise in the power structure of the state Senate has landed him the co-chairmanship of the powerful Finance Committee. Again, he attributes his development in that area of interest to his parents. “They taught me the importance of financial integrity and paying your bills on time, and also to be fair in all your financial dealings,” he says.

Although he lived in the Ranlo mill village at birth, the Hoyles moved to Dallas when David was four or five. His father, W. Atkin Hoyle, operated a roller shop, while his mother worked in a mill in Smyre.

Hoyle developed a strong work ethic, which he still displays today. He had no choice as he began working in his father’s shop cleaning rollers with hot, scalding water. From there, he moved to washing cars and pumping gas at a neighborhood gas station.

From those beginning jobs, he moved on to working the loading docks at Carolina Freight in Cherryville. “I couldn’t wait until January to file my tax returns so I could get my refund,” he recalls.

It was at Dallas High School where he discovered that he couldn’t keep his eyes off of Linda Summey. “We were first just friends, but we started dating in the 10th grade,” he says. “She was a grade ahead of me and went to Lenoir-Rhyne.”

After graduation, Hoyle attended The Citadel for a year, but didn’t cater to the military life at the Charleston, S.C., school. So he transferred to, you guessed it, Lenoir-Rhyne. Both became graduates of the Hickory school in just three years by going to summer school.

David calls himself “a city boy” because he grew up in Dallas, but says he married “a farm girl.” Linda’s father was the area John Deere farm equipment dealer as well as a hardware and business supply dealer, and David worked there during the summers.

Linda’s father split his business and began to concentrate on the building supply end, which is where David went to work after graduating from Lenoir-Rhyne.

“We got into building prefabricated roof trusses,” Hoyle says. “In fact, we were one of the first companies to do that. We built thousands of apartments and houses in Myrtle Beach, Hilton Head, Atlantic Beach, Austin, Texas, and other places. We were the first company in the U.S. to get the Underwriters Laboratories certification on total house structures.”

By 1969, the business had grown so rapidly that Summey and Hoyle saw a big need for capital. Wix bought the business and Dana later bought Wix and Hoyle’s services.

In addition to running his own investments business, which involves real estate and development, Hoyle now is an active member of two very visible boards.

He’s been on the Gaston Federal Bank board for nearly 30 years and is the current chairman. “We’ve grown from $25 million in assets to more than $500 million,” he says. “We just recently bought Citizens Bank in Salisbury. I spend a fair amount of time on that board.”

He’s also an active board member with the Shaw Group, a $2 billion a year manufacturer of piping systems. The New York Stock Exchange listed-company employs 15,000 and is headquartered in Baton Rouge, La. It also designs, manufactures and constructs some nuclear power plants, as well as providing maintenance for others.

Not one to let any grass grow under his feet, Hoyle is actively involved in developments in Dare County, as well as building some student housing near the N.C. State University campus.

Getting into politics and elective office seemed like the right thing to do when he ran for mayor of Dallas at the ripe old age of 27.

“Since I grew up in Dallas, I knew everybody in the town,” Hoyle says. “The town was split into two groups, so we put together a ticket of candidates who could pull the two factions together.”

Hoyle won and served two terms before the demands of his business career pulled him out of the mayor’s seat and back to his full-time job.

However, it is not Hoyle’s nature to sit on the sidelines very long, so it was not surprising in 1977 when Gov. Jim Hunt, in his first term, rewarded Hoyle’s early and active campaign support with a coveted seat on the powerful state Board of Transportation. It was a spot he would occupy for eight years.

He continued his high level of activity as the Gaston County Democratic Party chairman. In 1992, he decided to seek a seat in the state Senate but first he had to defeat the popular Carl Stewart, the former Speaker of the House, in the Democratic primary.

Campaigning the old-fashioned way, with no consultants or pollsters and with a lot of handshaking, organizing and speaking, Hoyle managed to win in a landslide with 57 percent of the vote.

He candidly admits his family ties to the education community helped his campaign tremendously. His daughter, Lonnia Beam, teaches at Chavis Middle School. She and husband Todd have a 12-year-old son, Matthew. Daughter-in-law, Resa, a teacher at Brookside Elementary, is married to David Jr., a real estate appraiser and partner with his dad. They have two boys, Will, 12, and Blair, 9.

Unlike many families today that are split up by hundreds of miles of geography, the Hoyles are not. Lonnia and Todd live 10 miles away in Cherryville and the younger Hoyles live near Dallas on the farm where Linda grew up.

When asked what he was proudest of in his career, Hoyle quickly responded. “I’m proudest of my family — my wife, my children and three grandchildren,” he says. “They’re the reason I’m in Raleigh. My family gives me my real political strength.”

Other than his ties to the education community through his immediate family, Hoyle’s three sisters were all teachers and two of his brothers-in-law were teachers and coaches, along with many first and second cousins. Even Linda taught for two years before “we needed her in the family business.”

Not only did his education/family network provide him with the organization and the votes necessary to be re-elected four more times, but it has also helped Hoyle to shape education policy in the Senate.

“I hear it all — the good, the bad, the problems and the challenges in education,” the senator says. “Teaching is an honorable profession, and I’m going to support it every way I can.”

Again, Hoyle has proven he’s not just a “talker” for public education. In the community, he has served as president of the Gaston County PTA Council, board member and president of the Piedmont Education Foundation, former chairman and member of the board of trustees at Lenoir-Rhyne College, and former member of the board of advisors for the Liberal Arts and Science Division of Gaston College.

As a conservative Democrat, Hoyle is swimming against the political tide in Republican-dominated Gaston County. In fact, Hoyle represents the strongest Republican district in the state that is not represented by the GOP.

Textile executive Duke Kimbrell credits Hoyle with “representing his district better than anybody I have ever known.” Kimbrell recalls there being more Republicans than Democrats at one of the earlier fund-raisers for Hoyle. “Although he is a staunch Democrat, he doesn’t like partisan politics,” Kimbrell says.

He also pointed out that Hoyle’s avid pro-business stand does not turn off his constituents because of the manner in which Hoyle pursues his philosophical goals. “That is a real gift David Hoyle has. He loves what he’s doing. He does a superb job. I just wish we had more like him in the legislature. He looks at the logical and practical side of things and that’s unusual.”

Hoyle laughingly points out that he has been accused of being too pro-business. “Good. I plead guilty,” he responds.

Without a healthy business climate, he is fond of reminding his colleagues and constituents that there would be fewer jobs and that the quality of life would suffer.

Again, from his parents, Hoyle learned that public service is a public responsibility. “You don’t have to be in office to be in public service,” he says. “You can be an active volunteer in your community. If we all gave a little bit of our talents, the country would be a better place to live.”

Hoyle has put that belief into action in his own community, serving on the boards of Gaston Memorial Hospital, Gaston County Heart Association, Gaston Chamber of Commerce, Schiele Museum, United Way of Gaston County, Gaston County Arts Council, Garrison Community Foundation, Gaston-Lincoln Area Mental Health, and others.

He hopes to pass that philosophy on to his grandchildren as well as to all young people. “Be good citizens,” he says. “Be involved. Give back to your community and be willing to express yourselves on the issues. … I’ll be honored if my grandchildren went into politics.

“I believe I have made a difference by bringing a pro-business, pro-education, pro-people agenda to the General Assembly,” he continues. There would be little disagreement from his constituents, who have re-elected him with little or no opposition.

Hoyle does often show a frustration at the slow pace of change in Raleigh as well as when some of his colleagues don’t seem to grasp the impact of their decisions on the business climate. However, he is not known to be shy in expressing his views in public or in private Senate Democratic caucuses where a wide range of strongly-held views are often debated.

“My biggest frustration is knowing the bureaucracy needs to be changed, tweaked, fined tuned and made more efficient,” he says. “Knowing a problem exists and not getting it fixed is frustrating, but we’re chipping away at it.”

Another disappointment to Hoyle is the failure of the House to pass a constitutional amendment to limit the length of legislative sessions. Recognized as the legislative leader on this subject, Hoyle had led the Senate to pass the amendment five times.

“We need to bring some sense of certainty to the process,” he argues. “If we want to maintain a citizen legislature, we have to pass session limits or we will wind up with a legislature of great affluence and retired people.

“Our only hope is through the effort by NCCBI to get this amendment passed by the House and to get it on the ballot. If we can force a recorded vote, it will pass the House.” (NCCBI’s board of directors has made this issue its top priority for the short session, which begins later this month).

Hoyle seems content to remain in the Senate for many more years. Having given up on running for governor after a lot of soul searching, he is comfortable in his current leadership role.

“David is very dedicated to the citizens of his district and our entire state,” longtime friend Ken Younger says. “His business experience has caused him to realize that business and industry must grow and prosper so that jobs and appointments will too.”

Younger doesn’t mince words in describing Hoyle’s effectiveness. “I strongly believe that he is the most capable, most conscientious person in the legislature,” he says. “He is a great asset to our state.”

NC FREE, the business community’s political advocate, consistently ranks Hoyle as the No. 1 pro-business senator. Few would disagree.

Rooming with powerhouse legislator Marc Basnight in Raleigh has obviously not hurt Hoyle’s rise in the power structure. Their friendship began 25 years ago when they served on the DOT board together, and it was further solidified when Hoyle committed early to vote for the Dare County legislator for the top Senate leadership position.

When Hoyle’s not legislating in Raleigh, developing property in Gaston and Dare counties, attending board meetings in Louisiana, or spending time with his family, Hoyle likes to venture to the mountains and play golf at Elk River or Linville, a couple of North Carolina’s finest layouts. There he shows off a 12 or 13 handicap — it has been as high 18 and as low as eight, he says. He also enjoys hunting and fishing.

With the unprecedented financial and budgeting issues facing this legislature, don’t expect Hoyle’s handicap to drop in the near future or for him to catch a lot of fish. It will take all the political muscle and insight the 63-year-old senator has to protect North Carolina’s pro-business climate — a commitment that shapes his agenda and schedule daily.

Return to magazine index
 

 

Visit us at 225 Hillsborough Street, Suite 460, Raleigh, N.C.
Write to us at P.O. Box 2508, Raleigh, N.C. 27602
Call us at 919.836.1400 or fax us at 919.836.1425
e-mail:
info@nccbi.org

Co_pyright © 1998-2001, All Rights Reserved