By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Officials working to advance the well-being of
Southern states have named five areas of central importance
to the region and are studying these issues to learn how to
address them. Land
prices, national forests, welfare reform, workforce changes
and telecommunications were the topics identified as key to
the rural South. Karen
DeRosier, executive director of the Florida State Rural
Development Council, said each state rural development
council submitted areas of concern to their
state. "The
issues we presented came from the perspective of real rural
folks at the local level," DeRosier said. "We're constantly
getting feedback from a lot of different perspectives. We
hear themes that keep being discussed from different areas,
and that's what we focused on." The
Southern Rural Development Center, based at Mississippi
State University, published the research on each of these
five issues in a series titled Rural Development Issues
Impacting the South. "Land
Prices and the Changing Geography of Southern Row Crop
Agriculture" examines the urbanization that has driven up
the cost of farmland. The information allows states to
evaluate what areas are still attractive to farming and to
estimate the money required to protect this farmland by
buying the development rights. "Great
Expectations: Welfare to Work in the Rural South" studies
welfare reform issues and provides a data analysis of the
various conditions in the South that may influence the
effectiveness of welfare reform in the region. "Linking
Community Development with National Forest Planning and
Management in the South" studies communities dependent on
public land management. It offers recommendations on how
forest planning can stimulate strategic community
development in these forest-dependent
communities. "The
Telecommunications Act of 1996: Its Implementation in the
U.S. South" analyzes telecommunications policy leading up
the this legislation. Results will give policy makers a
better understanding of the Act's implications and highlight
state decisions needed to insure equal telecommunications
access at a reasonable cost, especially in rural
areas. "The
Changing Nature of Work in the South: The Polarization of
Tomorrow's Workforce" reviews labor market changes,
discussing the educational requirements needed to qualify
for the fastest growing occupations in the
region. Frank
Garcia, executive director of the South Carolina Rural
Development Council, said some of these issues have
national, as well as Southern interest, but all are current
topics of concern throughout the South. "The
intent is to distribute these studies to federal and state
agencies, public interest groups and others that make up the
rural development councils," Garcia said. "Each state
council can use this current research information in as it
relates to their strategic plan for implementing priority
programs." Dr. Bo
Beaulieu, director of the Southern Rural Development Center,
said his office commissioned this research. The SRDC and the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service
provided mini-grants to land-grant university researchers to
prepare special reports on the topics important to Southern
state rural development councils. "The
grants were designed to support the preparation of
background papers that offer the councils a more
comprehensive understanding of these priority issues,"
Beaulieu said. "They include an overview of current
knowledge from scientific literature, a discussion of policy
options and explanations of the assistance rural people may
need to address these issues." Released:
Aug. 16, 1999
Community
News
Focus Areas
Identified For South's Progress
Contact: Dr. Bo Beaulieu, (662) 325-3207
Visit: DAFVM
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