By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A 25-year-old center uses its resources to share
research and information important in keeping rural
development issues a top priority in the South. The
Southern Rural Development Center, headquartered at
Mississippi State University, works with 13 states and two
territories. It serves Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virgin
Islands and Virginia. "The
SRDC seeks to tap the talents of the region's land-grant
universities to help address important rural development
issues," said SRDC director Dr. Bo Beaulieu. "We try to
understand the rural South research needs and take steps to
get that research conducted. We then make sure that research
is delivered for application to the leaders and citizens of
the region." The
first priority of the SRDC is to keep the development
concerns of the rural South in the spotlight. Once concerns
have been identified, the Center develops research to better
understand these issues. Armed
with the findings, the SRDC then provides educational
programs to communities and citizens to address these
issues. It also seeks to inform policy makers of the impacts
federal and state policies are having on the rural
South. "We try
to provide the most up-to-date information for rural
communities to use to develop strategies to address such
things as economic development, workforce preparation and
strategic planning programs for its citizens. We do this
through our links with each land-grant institution's
Extension Service," Beaulieu said. The SRDC
coordinated a recent four-state conference for Champion
Communities. About 150 representatives gathered from
communities in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South
Carolina. Earl
Thompson was mayor of Cuthbert, Ga., when he attended the
meeting. He now is the president of the Lower Chattahoochee
4-County Chamber of Commerce. "We sit
here and let things pass us by, like education, and we
decided to get out and go after things,"Thompson said.
"These four counties don't even have 20,000 people total,
but we've learned to pull our resources
together." Knowledge
and information gained at the SRDC conference allowed this
Champion Community to make even greater strides forward. One
county was just awarded a $3 million grant for a rural water
system and one of the cities involved was given almost
$400,000 for rural health. "It got
the federal government looking our way," Thompson said of
the learned strategies. The SRDC
puts the strengths of the southern states to good use across
the region. Where one state may not have the resources to
find a solution to a rural development issue, the SRDC can
identify and recruit people from other universities to help
that state accomplish the task. "At the
Center, we use resources efficiently to share this
information," Beaulieu said. "If there are some innovative
educational programs that have been tested and deal with
issues that go beyond a particular state boundary, then we
can spotlight that program for use by other
states." Beaulieu
said the Agricultural Research, Extension and Education
Reform Act, which is the most recent Farm Bill, strongly
encourages states to work together to solve problems that
impact many of them. "With
this added focus on multi-state issues, the Southern Rural
Development Center is in an ideal position to tap its
network of people and universities to work as a team in
tackling the tough rural development issues challenging the
South," Beaulieu said. The
Center's primary audience is the region's land-grant
universities as they work to keep these informed of critical
rural development issues. Secondary audiences include
organizations with significant interest in rural issues,
such as state rural development councils, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Rural Development Offices and
community-based grassroots organizations. The SRDC
is one of four multi-state rural development centers
organized as a result of the Title V Rural Development Act
of 1972. The SRDC is funded by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and joins the Northeast Regional Rural
Development Center, the North Central Regional Center for
Rural Development and the Western Rural Development
Center. Released:
April 26, 1999
Community
News
Center In Place
To Promote Rural South
Contact: Dr. Bo Beaulieu, (662) 325-3207
Visit: DAFVM
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