Broadband

Rural Broadband Summit & Hearing in Kentucky featuring USDA's Jonathan Adelstein

We've reached a critical juncture in the debate over the future of wireless Internet in America. Improving connections for rural communities has become a central point of debate over AT&T's proposed take over of T-Mobile. The Justice Department has sued to stop the deal, in part because of concerns about service to rural. Now is the perfect time to discuss whatwill work to connect millions of underserved Americans to high-speed Internet.

Here are the details:


What: Rural Broadband Summit & Hearing, Oct. 11–12
Summit Info: Oct. 11, 1–7 p.m., Letcher County Cooperative Extension Service, 478 Extension Drive, Whitesburg, Ky.
Hearing Info: Oct. 12, 9 a.m.–12:30 p.m., Appalshop Auditorium, 91 Madison Ave., Whitesburg, Ky.

Local host committee honors Minnesota rural champions

Anne KantenThe Minnesota host committee of the 2011 Gathering of the National Rural Assembly honored "rural champions" at the evening program on Wednesday, June 29.

Rural champion awards were given to nine state leaders who have worked on behalf of rural people and their issues.

Recipients were:

  • Jane Freeman
  • Bob Bergland
  • Anne Kanten
  • Al Quie
  • Rod Leonard
  • Cy Carpenter
  • Lou Ann Kling
  • Jim Nichols
  • Sr. Mary Mark Tacheny

Minnesota Secretary of State Mark Ritchie addressed the Assembly after the presentations, calling on participants to use their love of place to inspire them to act on behalf of rural communities.

Let's Get Movin'

by Ada Smith

The 2011 National Rural Assembly is upon us! Here we are at a family reunion. This is the moment for us to challenge one another and spend a moment re-thinking, re-strategizing, and re-imagining our vision for the next decade. It is time for us to actualize what it means to build an inclusive nation.

We understand intrinsically that an inclusive nation recognizes not only citizens but also those residents of our communities that may not be ackowledged by a slow moving federal government. We understand that ‘the values we learned at our kitchen tables’ are the same ones that allow us to take place-based action, to eat local food from Minnesota while we’re here. We understand that if Latino populations are facing a 21% high school dropout rate, Native American reservations’ second leading cause of death is suicide, and rural youth are 30% more likely to live in poverty that that is a national problem not a rural one. We understand that we have been losing ground fast and now is the time for opportunity.


So where are these openings?

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