Buckets of Opportunity in Rural America
Over dinner, my six-year old daughter Lucy told me about buckets.聽鈥淢y teacher says we all carry invisible buckets,鈥 said Lucy. 鈥淭hey are sometimes 鈥榝ull鈥櫬爓ith feelings like, joy, courage, and hope, and sometimes they are 鈥榚mpty鈥 because聽we鈥檙e angry, sad, or worried.鈥澛燤y first reaction was one of awe and amazement at her new and deep knowledge. My聽next thought was 鈥 boy, rural America knows all about Lucy鈥檚 bucket system.
Days before our conversation, I鈥檇 sat in a conference room in Charlotte, North Carolina,聽with 50 other rural leaders and colleagues from 17 states, working in health, education,聽energy, and investment. We came from Indian Country, the Black Belt, Appalachia, the聽Delta, the Midwest and the Colonias along the border.
We gathered to brainstorm big ideas for improving the outlook for our rural kids,聽families, and communities.聽All of us carried invisible buckets to the table, half-filled with hope and half-empty with聽worry.
The 2016 elections brought overdue attention to rural communities, but the coverage聽focused more on the 鈥渁ngry rural voter,鈥 and less on how rural places are persevering聽with a fraction of the resources of their urban counterparts.
There are no easy answers鈥攐nly buckets– to explain how Donald 国产视频 campaign聽penetrated the consciousness of rural America. Unlike the Democrats, he managed to聽tap into our cultural experience.
In my hometown, the local radio station reported that a Trump campaign bus would聽stop in our square for few hours on its way to Chattanooga. Hundreds of my neighbors聽turned out. There was no Trump or Pence, but there was BBQ, music, and photo-ops in聽front of the bus.
It鈥檚 the kind of thing Dolly Parton would do, drive into town and create a spontaneous聽potluck– except she鈥檇 actually be on the bus.聽
When Trump did show up in our small towns, he promised us jobs, 鈥済reat鈥 healthcare聽and education, broadband, and a generous farm bill. Just a few hours up the road from聽me, he gave a speech telling coal miners he would slash the EPA budget and bring back聽鈥渂eautiful, clean coal.鈥 It鈥檚 a preposterous thing to say, but it spoke directly to those聽empty buckets we sometimes carry.
Now, two months after taking office, President Trump has rejected the constituents聽who put him there and is penciling rural places out of the budget.聽The Administration is asking Congress to cut or eliminate programs that help feed and聽educate rural kids and house rural veterans. There is urgency to rollback the regulations聽that help us protect the nation鈥檚 essential resources, like water, soil, and air. The FCC聽has stifled most of the orders that would protect or expand broadband access to rural聽places. And then there is the dismantling of the Affordable Care Act, which has gone聽further than any health initiative to create gains in rural access to healthcare.
While the nominee for Secretary of Agriculture said last week he believes 鈥渢he president聽understands that many of his votes came from [rural areas],鈥 it must be betrayal or聽contradiction that would allow a 21% cut in discretionary spending by the USDA.
It鈥檚 more critical than ever to keep rural places in the nation鈥檚 consciousness, not聽because of the rural vote in the 2016 election, but because the futures of the city and聽the countryside are intertwined. Rural health and prosperity is essential for all of us.
In spite of the challenges, rural people are doing their part to meet the needs of the聽country through innovation and persistence. Rural America continues to provide the energy聽that runs the nation, the food that feeds us, and the natural resources with which we聽build our homes and cities. It even provides a disproportionate share of the soldiers who聽defend our country.
At the Big Ideas Forum, we covered more ground than the campaign bus that rolled in聽and out of our small towns. We focused on a rural future that builds upon the assets聽that we know exist in our communities. It is a future that is not tied to extraction and聽manufacturing but endeavors to recognize the history, the relationships, and the culture聽of a place.
We looked at work that is happening right now, often in partnership with the聽governmental programs this Administration would eliminate: from cooperatives and聽nonprofits working together to improve community infrastructure, to a bilingual聽education initiative on the Texas-Mexico border that is steeped in local culture.
We heard about a sustainable and profitable farming model that provides jobs to聽refugees and new Americans and is responsive to climate change.
We learned about a civic engagement model that helps communities address politically聽and culturally divisive issues, and we affirmed the role of the arts in all forms of聽community development.
These examples of rural ingenuity are just the tip of the iceberg, and what if they were聽the stories we knew about rural people and places? Could we see rural as our country,聽rather than Trump Country?
At dinner, Lucy concluded, 鈥淲hen you fill up someone else鈥檚 bucket, you fill up your聽own, too.鈥