From Tessa Gould, One Country Project <[email protected]>
Subject Rural Update 9/12: Sticking Around, Growing Rural America, and Preserving Mental Health
Date September 12, 2023 8:33 PM
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Good afternoon,

With the House back from recess, all eyes are now on Congress to avert a government shutdown by the end of the month. September has already seen its fair share of <a href="[link removed]">storms</a>, but keep those hatches battened down &ndash; the political turmoil is <a href="[link removed]">bound to broil</a> in the coming weeks.

STICKY STATES

Though fall officially begins on Friday, in most of the country, the summer heat is sticking around. Also sticking around are natives of North Carolina, Minnesota, and Texas &ndash; some of the states with the highest shares of population retention.

The share of people who are born in a state and stay there reflects how attractive the state is in terms of offering more job opportunities, relatively higher wages, and affordable housing costs. In this case, the stickier the better &ndash; <a href="[link removed]">check out how your state measures up</a>.

GROWING RURAL AMERICA

Regardless of the state, rural regions throughout the country have struggled to recover from pandemic job losses. To help spur economic growth and prosperity, OCP is proposing to include <a href="[link removed]">Growing Rural Opportunity and Wealth (GROWth) Plan grants</a> in the upcoming Farm Bill reauthorization.

GROWth Plan grants would provide funding for rural communities and support regionally-specific plans to guide rural revitalization, from development of housing, neighborhood, and commercial district rehabilitation to creation of transportation and energy programs.

Greater access to planning and development tools will help level the playing field for rural communities when competing for economic development, and lift regions facing stagnation and decline. <a href="[link removed]">Read Growing Rural America here</a>.

THE STATE OF MENTAL HEALTH IN RURAL AMERICA

While rural authorities currently lack access to development plans and the financial resources to execute them, rural Americans more broadly struggle from a lack of access to mental health resources.

This National Suicide Prevention Month, it is important to note that <a href="[link removed]">mental health and addiction</a> have risen above health care access and quality as the top health care concerns rural stakeholders face &ndash; regardless of area of residence, gender, age, race/ethnicity, and employment.

Mental health is an issue that is particularly pressing for American Indians and Alaska Natives, more than <a href="[link removed]">113,000 of whom</a> live in counties that lack mental health providers. Telehealth arose as a popular method of receiving mental health care during the pandemic, but rural Native counties that are mental health deserts also disproportionately lack broadband internet, presenting another barrier to care.

Earlier this year, Alexa McKinley and Tara Haskins joined the Hot Dish podcast to discuss programs that work to improve mental health in rural America. <a href="[link removed]">Listen here</a>.

ICYMI

Bismarck Tribune: <a href="[link removed]">Potential for rural electric co-ops to tap millions for renewables projects</a>

Wall Street Journal: <a href="[link removed]">Help Wanted: Women to Fix America's Infrastructure</a>

Daily Yonder: <a href="[link removed]">Study Finds Gap Between What Rural Residents Want for End-of-Life Care and What They Receive</a>

Slate: <a href="[link removed]">There's a Problem With the Telehealth Revolution</a>

Axios: <a href="[link removed]">Poll: Americans believe AI will hurt elections</a>

New York Times: <a href="[link removed]">Congress Embarks on Spending Battle as Shutdown Looms at End of September</a>

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