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Improving Addiction Recovery Care for Virginians

October 13, 2021 James Pinsky, Public Affairs Specialist for USDA Rural Development

For people suffering from addiction, the chances of recovery are oftentimes only as good as the care they receive. And for decades, the Boxwood Recovery Center in Culpeper, Virginia struggled to provide the high-quality care it was capable of, as it operated out of a deteriorating former roadside...

Rural

Healthcare Partnership Provides Needed Nurses in Southwest Missouri

October 05, 2021 Cortney Bealer, USDA Rural Development Public Affairs

In 2013, Citizens Memorial Hospital (CMH) in Bolivar, Missouri experienced an overwhelming shortage of quality healthcare professionals. Simultaneously, its partner Bolivar Technical College (BTC) had outgrown its facility and had twice as many applicants as it had space for students.

Rural

Locals Take the Initiative to Save and Improve Their Hospital

September 23, 2021 Shelby Johnsen, Public Affairs Specialist for USDA Rural Development

Aging infrastructure and technology were taking their toll on the Hot Springs County Memorial Hospital, now known as Hot Springs Health, in Thermopolis, Wyoming. However, with local demand and tourists on their way to Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks, patient levels were increasing...

Rural

Expanding Affordable Healthcare in Rural South Carolina

September 16, 2021 Stephanie Bittiker, USDA Rural Development Public Information Officer

Having access to quality health care is often a problem for low-income patients who live in rural communities. Fortunately, there are medical facilities such as Sandhills Medical Foundation, Inc in Lugoff, South Carolina that work on a sliding fee scale, which means that all their patients...

Equity Rural

Expanding Elderly Care for a Better Community

September 09, 2021 Benjamin Wooddy, Public Information Officer for USDA Rural Development

In December 2017, Steve Coetzee, President and CEO of the Fahrney-Keedy Memorial Home, realized many of the surrounding senior care facilities in Boonsboro, Maryland were closing and that his team would need to expand their facility to meet future demand. However, the home did not have the available...

Rural

Can Family-Owned Forests Help the U.S. Achieve a Low-Carbon Future?

July 19, 2021 Lucas Isakowitz, Natural Resources Conservation Service Presidential Management Fellow

A USDA Conservation Innovation Grant (CIG) project is trying to reimagine how carbon markets can work with and for small landholders. The Family Forest Carbon Program (FFCP), led by the American Forest Foundation (AFF) and The Nature Conservancy, bases carbon payments on specific forest management...

Conservation Forestry

From Volunteer to Homeowner

June 22, 2021 Jessica Mancel, Public Information Officer for USDA Rural Development, Indiana

Richard Norman, 72, had long wanted to own a home, and move to a safer neighborhood. Unfortunately, he had been unable to get a loan from the bank. He wasn’t sure if his dream of homeownership would ever become a reality.

Equity Rural

Humble Beginnings to Homeownership

June 10, 2021 Charron Culp, Public Information Officer, Tennessee

Gloria Gonzalez has humble beginnings in Mexico where, as a child, she lived in a home made by her grandmother out of river rocks and mud. The dream of living in a safe, sturdy home wouldn’t become reality until moving to the United States.

Equity Rural

Sustainable Farming with Gotham Greens

April 22, 2021 Benjamin Wooddy, USDA Rural Development Public Information Officer for Maryland and Delaware

Sparrows Point, Md., is home to a sustainable greenhouse that is changing the way we grow produce in cities across America. Gotham Greens’ climate-controlled facility is supplying grocery stores throughout the region with fresh produce such as leafy greens and herbs while using a fraction of the...

Rural

Spread the Word, Not the Weeds

February 22, 2021 Matt Burks, USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station

Deceptively delicate and fragile in appearance, the Eurasian watermilfoil forms thick mats in shallow areas of a lake, quickly growing and spreading to block sunlight, killing off native aquatic plants that fish and other underwater species rely on for food and shelter.

Forestry