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Editorials by Thomas Rowley, RUPRI Fellow from 2002 through 2007

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Last Chance to be Heard?

For five years now it has been my privilege to write this column for the Rural Policy Research Institute (RUPRI). My purpose: to serve rural America by giving voice to both its ongoing plight as well as its great potential. At times, that’s meant highlighting the good works of small-town innovators around the country. At other times, it’s meant reminding readers that rural people and places get the short end of the stick in so many ways. At still other times, it’s meant wagging a finger at the policymakers holding that stick.

 

Not surprisingly, those occasional finger wags have caused a fair bit of heartburn for my friends and colleagues at RUPRI. Working for a publicly funded organization, one can bite only so often and so hard the hand that feeds. Nevertheless, the people of this fine institution have always stood by me. For that, and for the opportunity to sound off at all, I am profoundly grateful. It is, however, time for me to move on to new things and in so doing let RUPRI move out of the crosshairs that have fixed upon it because of me.

 

Which isn’t to say that the job I’ve been doing is done. It isn’t. If rural America is to overcome its plight and live up to its potential, rural voices must continue to speak. Loudly. And in unison.

 

Fortunately, they are.

 

Last June, 300 rural leaders gathered at the first annual National Rural Assembly to create an agenda for rural progress. Sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the Ford Foundation and 100-plus supporting organizations, the Assembly was only the first of several such efforts aimed at strengthening and organizing rural interests to develop better national rural policies.

 

On the money front, pressure is mounting for the philanthropic community to open its eyes and its wallet to rural America. Last year, Senator Max Baucus of Montana challenged philanthropies to double in five years the amount they give to rural needs. We’re still waiting on the check; but at least foundations are starting to realize that neither the need for funds nor the opportunities for effective investments stop at the city limits.

 

Last but not least, rural America is making itself heard in deliberations over the pending Farm Bill. Sure, the House-passed bill is little better than the 2002 version; but there’s still hope that Senator Harkin of Iowa will be able to deliver some real help to rural communities and not just to the big-in-size-yet-small-in-number farmers that have always gotten the lion’s share of federal rural support. Harkin’s draft is being hashed out as I write, but according to RUPRI President Emeritus Charles Fluharty, the Senator’s rural development title is “by far, the single most significant piece of rural development legislation ever offered by a seated Chairman of any U.S. Committee.”

 

Urging Harkin on in his quest to make a difference for the nearly 90 million people of rural and small town America is one of the largest rural coalitions ever assembled. The Campaign for a Renewed Rural Development has signed up some 600 national, regional and local organizations from all 50 states to call for at least $2 billion in new mandatory funding for rural America in this year’s Farm Bill.

 

That money, of course, won’t go far enough in paying for all the planning, water, sewer, high-speed Internet, health care, workforce training and business development needed to shore up the rural economy; but it will go a lot farther than any past legislation. And the number of people calling for its passage will go a long way in determining whether the call is heard…and answered. If it isn’t, we’ll likely be waiting five more years until the next Farm Bill…and praying the whole time that it won’t come too late.

 

So get out your pen, get on your phone or crank up the computer. Add your voice to those calling for renewed rural development. This might be my last chance to be heard; don’t make it yours. Speak up.

 

And thanks for listening when I did.

 

*Comments to ruralcolumn@mac.com. Please look for possible future columns by Thomas D. Rowley at minutemanmedia.org, dailyyonder.com and ruralvoice.org.

2007-09-30 Last Chance to be Heard?
2007-09-30 Last Chance to be Heard?
2007-05-18 Can You Hear Rural America Now?
2007-03-30 Asking for Better Rural Policy
2007-02-09 Farm Bill Proposal is a Good Start
2007-01-19 It's Time to Change on Climate Change
2007-01-12 A Model Effort in Indiana
2006-12-19 A New Farm Bill Could Help Trade and So Much More
2006-11-22 A Sappy-But-Heartfelt Thanks
2006-09-28 Farm Bill Prognostications
2006-09-18 A New Story in the Rio Grande Valley
2006-09-08 A Year Later, It's Still Time to Help the Gulf Coast
2006-07-26 Alcohol Remains Biggest Rural Substance Problem
2006-07-10 We Need to Talk...About Farm Policy
2006-06-26 Indiana Town Takes Broadband Into It's Own Hand
2006-06-19 The Fight for Community Broadband
2006-06-19 The Fight for Community Broadband
2006-06-09 Medicaid: Heads or Tails?
2006-05-29 Rethinking Poverty
2006-05-15 Fed Chairman on Rural...Almost
2006-05-01 The Price of Rural Health Care
2006-04-24 Community Development Funds in Budget Crosshairs
2006-04-12 Redefining Rural America
2006-03-31 And Now for an Innovative Rural Policy
2006-03-17 Ag Department (Finally) Listens, Gets it Right
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