By
Denise Cosper MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Former Mississippi Gov. William Winter told
educators and job training program coordinators that
continuing to move the rural South from "shadows into
sunshine" requires building human relationships where people
work together. "Capitalism's
success has not eliminated poverty," Winter told
participants in a recent Southern workforce conference.
"Programs aimed at moving the poor into the economic
mainstream require for them to enter an expansion of the
economic mainstream, a creation of the bootstraps by which
people can pull themselves up out of poverty. There has to
be a vision we can all share. Our people are a wonderful
resource who are being overlooked and
underutilized." The
Southern Rural Development Center headquartered at
Mississippi State University sponsored the Building a
Quality Workforce in the Rural South conference. More than
150 Extension Service educators, job training program
coordinators and other workforce program representatives
from 13 states in the Southeast attended the
conference. Winter
said studies in the last decade have shown two economic
Souths emerging, "one of burgeoning cities and one beyond
the bright lights where low wage economic factors are at
work to stifle rural areas. "We have
to face up to these harsh realities and develop new
strategies, drawing on the strengths of our natural
resources and the huge reservoir of underdeveloped human
capital," he said. Winter,
who was governor from 1980 to 1984, said the South faces
four major barriers to economic equality ñ separation
of the well-educated from the poorly trained, deregulation,
access to technology and racial differences. "The
only road out of poverty runs by the schoolhouse," Winter
said. "Better public schools are essential to training a
good workforce. Poor schools shortchange kids and send a bad
message to businesses who might want to locate in rural
areas. Firms will not go to communities that are not
committed to quality public education." The key
to developing the full potential of workers in rural areas
lies with universities and community colleges, Winter
said. Deregulation
has led to increased trucking rates for small towns and a
lack of public transportation, among other difficulties,
Winter said. These changes have abandoned rural areas to the
pressures of the marketplace and given advantages to urban
areas. Technology
can be key to economic growth in the rural South if access
to it is not limited. "Because
other essentials are available, such as parks, recreation
and schools, more entrepreneurs are finding that the cities
and towns of the rural South offer the best of all worlds,"
Winter said. The
South's multicultural society should be recognized and
valued. "We have
made strides in the last 30 years, but there is still too
much distrust between races, not just blacks and whites,"
Winter said. "We have to recognize the interdependence
because the vision for the rural South includes all of
us." Winter
said overcoming these barriers will take cooperation among
public and private sectors where people come together to
help the rural South prosper. "This is
a fortuitous time in our history," he said. "It is up to us
to see that we don't miss this window of opportunity. We can
give our people education, skills, economic opportunities,
and the will and vision to prosper wherever they choose to
live. Hopefully that will be in the warm and familiar
surroundings of their communities in the rural
South." Released:
Aug. 9, 1999
Community
News
Former Governor
Shines Light On Workforce Issues
Southern Rural Development Center
Contact: Dr. Bo Beaulieu, (662) 325-3207
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn99/990809bb.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.