Related Rural Blog Posts

  • Department of Education Hosts National Rural Education Technology Summit

    They came by plane, train, and automobile, but were making more innovative connections for students in rural schools.

    More than 150 rural education and technology experts responded to an invitation from the Obama Administration to participate in a National Rural Education Technology Summit on Wednesday, July 21 at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian to learn from one another and provide feedback to federal officials.

  • Food Safety Week Kick Off

    Cross posted from the USDA blog

    I’m very pleased and honored to be a part of Food Safety Week and contribute to our mission to protect public health. The USDA has been working diligently over the past year to improve food safety since the creation of the Food Safety Working Group. Part of our mission is to guarantee that we equip you with accurate food safety information. If it’s grilling outside for 4th of July, going to a ballgame, or just enjoying a summer night with your family, make sure that safe food handling is a part of your celebration. An easy way to prevent contaminated food is to use a food thermometer when grilling or smoking meat. Commonly, the color of the meat is wrongly used as a method for indicating whether or not the meat is cooked. However, using a food thermometer is the only way to determine the temperature of the food. What temperature should your food be? Check the Food Safety and Inspection Service’s website.

  • USDA Unveils Roadmap To Achieve America’s Renewable Energy Goals

    The Obama Administration has made domestic production of renewable energy a national priority because it will create quality American jobs, combat global warming, reduce fossil fuel dependence and lay a strong foundation for a strong rural economy.  While the President’s Biofuels Interagency Working Group, which I co-chair, continues its work to shepherd our Nation's development of this important industry and to coordinate interagency policy, the USDA released a report yesterday outlining both the current state of renewable energy efforts in America and a plan to develop regional strategies to increase the production, marketing and distribution of biofuels.

    The Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS2) mandates that there will be 36 billion gallons of biofuel per year in America’s fuel supply by 2022.  I am confident that we can meet this threshold, but to do so we must make further investments in areas including research and development of feedstocks; sustainable production and management systems; efficient conversion technologies and high-value bioproducts and analysis tools.

    While corn-based ethanol production will remain important to America’s producers, we are also gearing up research efforts to assist growers of advanced biofuels to produce energy from new feedstocks on a regional basis and in an environmentally sustainable manner. 

    Renewable energy development not only promotes energy independence; the regional strategy I’ve outlined sets the stage for job creation in rural communities that are often located in distressed areas and persistent poverty counties.

    To view the report in its entirety, visit www.usda.gov.

    Tom Vilsack is the Secretary of Agriculture

  • Partnerships for Regional Energy Innovation in Omaha, Nebraska

     

    The administration has made it a priority to encourage partnerships across all sectors of the economy in order to address the greatest challenges facing our nation.  We recognize that government must play a convening and coordinating role in catalyzing progress on the President’s agenda, especially around efforts to forge effective relationships with organizations of all types.  This is particularly important in the area of energy, where new advancements are critical for our nation’s future.  In his State of the Union address earlier this year, President Barack Obama stated “We need to encourage American innovation … [and] no area is more ripe for such innovation than energy.”

     

    In supporting this priority, the administration convened a regional conference on energy innovation yesterday in Omaha, Nebraska, focused on connecting entrepreneurs and small enterprise with representatives from organizations across sectors.  This conference was a unique partnership between the City of Omaha, Gallup, the Kauffman Foundation, and the Department of Energy.  Nearly two hundred attendees met at Gallup University’s Omaha Campus to discuss issues ranging from regional gap funding and human capital needs, to collaboration and the early adoption of energy innovation. 

     

    This meeting continued conversations that began in Washington D.C. on May 7, hosted by a variety of offices in the White House, and led by Undersecretary of Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy, Dr. Kristina Johnson.  Undersecretary Johnson presented the opening address at Omaha’s convening, where she discussed the importance of increasing our nation's use of clean energy and the necessity of diversifying our energy use portfolios.  Ted Zoller, Director of the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, presented the afternoon keynote remarks on regional energy innovation clusters and the interconnectivity of energy markets and sector leaders.  Finally, a series of deep dive sessions and issue reporting concluded the conference.

     

    In attendance were representatives from local, regional, and national organizations, federal representation from the White House National Economic Council and Domestic Policy Council, theU.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Defense, and theU.S. Small Business Administration, as well as representation from the United Nations.  Additionally, local government was represented by the Omaha Mayor Jim Suttle, State Senators Haar and Mello, and the Nebraska Commissioner of Labor, Catherine Lang.

     

    During the conference, organizations in each sector identified their role in addressing both near-term and long-term energy challenges, stressing the necessity of integrated and coordinated solutions.  Private corporations and venture capital firms expressed their interest in providing business acumen to start-up enterprises.  They also indicated that the focus of organizational advancement needs to be directed toward human capital development, not simply increases of financial capital into the market.

     

    Academia, including the Universities of Nebraska, Minnesota, Chicago, North Carolina Chapel Hill, and Arizona State, as well as regional community colleges, discussed its role in addressing the human capital needs identified by the attendees, and described its ability to create environments that spur constant innovation and business start-up opportunities.  Philanthropic foundations such as the Kauffman Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, and the A.E. Casey Foundation identified their strengths in working strategically with multiple stakeholders to address organizational needs, and their role in supplying risk capital to support energy innovation and human capital development.  Finally, non-profits, including the Nebraska Community Foundation, the Innovation Accelerator, and the Center for Rural Affairs explained their role in working with local communities.  Through their on-the-ground experience and relationships, they are able to identify local needs and interventions best supported by the other sectors represented at the conference.

     

    The day concluded with a reception co-convened by the Meeting of the Minds and the engineering firm HDR.  Overall, yesterday’s conference presented a unique cross-section of perspectives, provided an atmosphere for new cross-sector partnerships, and made progress for the administration’s ongoing efforts to advance dialogue and understanding between all sectors of the economy.

     

  • USDA Broadband Report Highlights Role of the Recovery Act in Bringing Connectivity to Rural America

    Today I released our first comprehensive report on USDA’s deployment of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funding for rural broadband.  It showed that the 68 investments we have already made will bring broadband access to an estimated 530,000 households, 93,000 businesses, and 3,300 anchor institutions like hospitals, schools, community centers and libraries.  They will create 5,000 jobs immediately. And they will cover an area larger than the state of California. 

    President Obama and I are deeply committed to bringing advanced Internet capacity to all corners of rural America. We must do this because it will generate wealth and economic opportunities in rural communities as we help build a stronger future for rural America.  

    Access to broadband internet will help local businesses be competitive in domestic and world markets. It allows rural residents to have access to educational and health care opportunities that simply won’t otherwise. In many parts of the country farmers and ranchers are already using these technologies to improve crop production, marketing and distribution of commodities. We need to expand that access so that anyone, anywhere, can be a successful farmer, rancher, or business owner. 

    As I mentioned last week during our National Rural Summit in Missouri, we need to create an economic environment that ensures opportunities for young people in rural communities. And part of creating those opportunities will be ensuring access to the latest technologies. We need our best and brightest to be at home in the community where they grew up – we need their talent to create a strong, vibrate regional economies. The expansion of broadband funded by President Obama’s Recovery Act will help ensure that we build those 21st Century rural communities where folks want to live, work and raise their families. 

    Tom Vilsack is Secretary of Agriculture

  • The National Summit of Rural America: A Dialogue of Renewing Promise

    As the Obama Administration National Rural Summit came to a close yesterday, there was a general feeling of hope for the future of America’s rural communities. But there was also a sense that a host of partners - federal, state, and local governments, non-profit and for-profit entities, and most of all the good people who live in rural America - must work together to bring about the change our rural communities so deserve.

    One of our panelists, Aneesh Chopra, Chief Technology Officer of the United States, acknowledged that although the day’s conversation had covered a breadth of important topics, challenges still lay ahead for rural America. The wide range of issues that will be involved in driving the economic revitalization of rural America span not only several government departments and agencies, but also hit home in every community across the country. With only a limited time to discuss the topics concerning rural communities at the summit, I encourage the public to keep the conversation going to ensure a successful future for the rural economy. That can be done as simply as talking with a neighbor, or by offering your ideas to the White House by visiting the Open Government Initiative.

    One underlying theme of our conversations yesterday was the importance of educating the public about rural America in order to get our rural communities the attention and support they need to thrive. Over the last year, Deputy Secretary Merrigan and I have visited almost all 50 states, in an attempt to focus attention on the pursuit of the American dream within rural communities, and to illustrate how far around the country the reaches of rural America go. But this can only go so far. The conversation needs to extend into all of our communities, so folks understand that the strength of this nation relies on the strength of our rural communities.