Brought to you by WBIW News and Network Indiana
Last updated on Monday, September 10, 2018
(INDIANAPOLIS) - Rural Development is likely not the first thing that comes to your mind when you hear the United State Department of Agriculture. Most folks think of the Farm Service Agency, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Food and Nutrition, or Risk Management.
However, there is a good chance that USDA Rural Development touches your life every day.
We have long been known for our role in economic development, and that is one of the key elements identified by the President's Task Force on Agriculture and Rural Prosperity. Other areas highlighted by the task force report are innovation and technology, workforce development, quality of life, and e-connectivity. In other words, USDA Rural Development has and will continue to impact rural lives for the better.
So far in the Fiscal Year 2018, USDA Rural Development Indiana programs invested more than $627 million to promote economic development, improve community services and infrastructure, and increase rural homeownership.
Thanks to those investments:
From economic opportunity to public health and the environment, modern infrastructure, including water infrastructure, is a foundation for enhanced quality of life and prosperity in rural America.
Beyond the loan and grant dollars, we invest is the assistance we offer through our field delivery system.
You don't have to travel to the big city to find a Rural Development Office. Rural Development employees live and work in rural communities like yours and near yours. Our kids go to the same school, our families are protected by the same fire, ambulance, and law enforcement workers, and we look for the same economic opportunities as you do. We know and understand the needs of rural communities and people because it is who we are and where we are.
We also are engaged in the fight against the misuse of opioids and other drugs. Too many communities are being consumed by the loss of people, resources, and productivity. Drug addiction is a multigenerational problem that can impact three generations or more.
Today, the leading cause of death in people younger than 50 is not automobile accidents or cancer - it's drug overdoses. Rural areas have now surpassed the drug overdose death rates of the urban areas.
USDA Rural Development programs can directly assist by helping communities, health care providers, and emergency responders with facilities and equipment to provide essential services, or indirectly by providing contact to others with resources to help.
Lastly, after relaying this information about what we're doing, I'd like to address what may be the best part: How we're doing it. Ag Secretary Sonny Perdue has set a goal for USDA to be the most efficient, most effective, and most customer-focused USDA ever.
USDA Rural Development has those goals covered:
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