Gentry County Rentals: Johnson Controls, Paper Tubes, and a Tri-Metro Triangle
On paper, Gentry County looks like any other small northwest Missouri farm county — 6,162 residents, a county seat of about 1,700, rolling agricultural land, declining population, and a pattern that has characterized this part of the state for decades. But there’s a mismatch between the county’s population size and its employment base that’s worth understanding. Albany hosts a Johnson Controls manufacturing facility, a specialty paper-tube manufacturer (GHS Paper Tube & Core), a regional hospital (Northwest Medical Center, formerly Gentry County Memorial Hospital), an independent community bank (BTC Bank, established 1919), and several other employers that in combination give this county of 6,000 people an unexpectedly stable and diverse small-market economy. For rental operators who work at this scale, Gentry is an interesting edge case.
The Johnson Controls and GHS Paper Tube Anchor
Johnson Controls is a $25 billion multinational that makes building-technology products, HVAC systems, industrial batteries, and related equipment. Its Albany, Missouri facility is the kind of presence that you wouldn’t normally expect in a 1,700-person town. For Gentry County rental operators, Johnson Controls employees represent one of the strongest tenant segments: verifiable corporate employment, predictable compensation, and the kind of long-tenure employment patterns that correlate with tenant stability.
GHS Paper Tube & Core Manufacturing fills a different niche. GHS makes paper tubes used in packaging, tape, and label industries — a specialty product with steady industrial demand. The workforce is smaller than Johnson Controls’ but operates on similar economic fundamentals: corporate-payroll, year-round employment, verifiable income.
Together these two manufacturers produce a manufacturing workforce base that’s rare in rural Missouri counties this size. Most counties of 6,000 people run on agriculture, school districts, healthcare, and retail — period. Gentry adds two real manufacturing employers to that mix, which broadens the rental demand pool and reduces concentration risk for operators.
Northwest Medical Center
Northwest Medical Center, previously known as Gentry County Memorial Hospital, is the county’s primary healthcare facility and a significant employer of nurses, allied health staff, administrative personnel, and support workers. Healthcare employment in rural Missouri has been unusually resilient over the past decade; while rural hospitals have faced closure pressures across the state, Northwest has continued operating and employing locally. For landlords, healthcare-sector tenants are generally strong applicants with verifiable employment and stable income.
The Tri-Metro Triangle Position
Geographically, Albany sits at roughly the centerpoint of a triangle formed by three regional metros: Kansas City to the south (about 75 miles), Omaha to the northwest (about 120 miles), and Des Moines to the northeast (about 150 miles). None of these are a comfortable daily commute, but all three are within a 2.5-hour drive. This central position supports a particular kind of tenant — people with regional work that takes them periodically to all three metros, remote workers who want access to multiple metropolitan options, and retirees who value being equidistant from adult children or grandchildren living in different regional cities.
The city-installed fiber internet service across Albany adds to this remote-work positioning. The City of Albany has been explicit in its economic development messaging that fiber infrastructure is now in place for business, home, and remote work needs. For rental investors, this potentially supports a tenant segment willing to pay above-market rents for a well-maintained, connectivity-ready rental property.
Albany and the Rental Market
Single-family rents in Albany typically run $600 to $900 depending on condition and location. Acquisition prices for rental-grade single-family homes commonly range from $60,000 to $140,000. The city’s housing stock includes a mix of early 20th-century houses (some with genuinely interesting architecture — the Albany Carnegie Public Library, the 1885 Gentry County Courthouse, and the Samuel and Pauline Peery House are all on the National Register of Historic Places) and newer construction. Stanberry (about 11 miles west of Albany), King City, and Guilford offer smaller, thinner rental markets tied to the Stanberry R-II school district and local agricultural employment.
A historical footnote worth mentioning: Albany was home to the oldest Horology School west of the Mississippi, a watch and jewelry repair training program that operated in Albany into the 1970s. This is not relevant to current rental operations, but it reflects Albany’s long history as a place that has periodically attracted specialized industries beyond what its population size would predict.
Eviction Procedure in the 4th Circuit
Missouri state law governs every eviction in Gentry County. The 4th Judicial Circuit covers Atchison, Gentry, Holt, Nodaway, and Worth counties. Notably, the 4th Circuit has received the Missouri Supreme Court’s O’Toole Award for timely case processing thirteen times, including in fiscal 2025 — making it among the most consistently efficient judicial circuits in the state for moving cases to resolution. Circuit Clerk Janet Parsons handles filings locally in Albany; Associate Circuit Judge Rebecca S. McGinley hears cases at the Albany courthouse. Electronic filing has been mandatory since June 2015.
A standard nonpayment case begins with a demand for rent. Missouri imposes no minimum notice period for nonpayment beyond the demand itself; once rent is past due and a written demand has been delivered, the landlord may file a rent-and-possession action under RSMo Chapter 535. Gentry County hearings are typically scheduled within two to three weeks of filing given the circuit’s efficiency record. For a lease-violation eviction (unlawful detainer under RSMo Chapter 534), a 10-day notice to quit is required before filing. Uncontested nonpayment in Gentry typically closes in 28 to 32 days when documentation is clean; contested matters can extend to 45-50 days.
Security Deposits and Routine Compliance
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposits. Gentry County adds no local layer. Landlords typically collect one month’s rent as deposit. The compliance trap remains the 30-day return window with itemized deductions under RSMo §535.300. Document move-in and move-out condition with dated photos, produce a written itemization for any deductions, and mail the deposit balance within 30 days.
The Investment Frame
Gentry County is a very small rental market but one with diverse employment anchors that differentiate it from other 6,000-person Missouri counties. Johnson Controls, GHS Paper Tube, Northwest Medical Center, the school districts, and the emerging remote-work base each support independent streams of rental demand. Acquisition prices are rural-Missouri modest, the 4th Circuit’s efficiency record reduces eviction timeline risk, and the tri-metro positioning offers slow-burn optionality for attracting remote-work tenants. For an investor willing to build a small portfolio in a tight market, Gentry has more going for it than its population figure suggests.
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