Skip to main content
Skip to main content

USDA Blog


Showing: 1 - 10 of 35 Results
Applied Filters

USDA Helps Promote the Power of Powwow Dancing and Career Possibilities

November 18, 2022 Stephanie Ho, Acting Communications Lead, USDA Office of Partnerships and Public Engagement

Roland Begaye, 28, believes in family, friends, colleagues, and the power of powwow dancing. As a member of the Navajo Nation, in Arizona, he has had many opportunities to watch and participate as a skilled powwow dancer himself.

Equity Initiatives

Tribal Food Sovereignty a Focus of NAFDPIR Conference

November 14, 2022 Keri Bradford-Gomez (Choctaw), Senior Technical Advisor, Food and Nutrition Service

When you recognize the food on your plate, you recall memories of sharing meals with loved ones.

Equity Food and Nutrition Initiatives Nutrition Security

USDA Helps Tribal Student on Her Way to Realizing Goal of Working in Natural Resources

November 08, 2022 Stephanie Ho, Acting Communications Lead, USDA Office of Partnerships and Public Engagement

Twentysomething Native American Angellisa Hoffman was born and raised in the White Mountain Apache tribe in Arizona. Her long-term goal is to have a job related to environmental or natural resources. For that vision to become a reality, she sees a university degree as a necessary part of her career...

Initiatives

Solar: It’s a “Big Dill” for Real Pickles Cooperative

October 26, 2022 Scott Soares, State Director, Southern New England, USDA Rural Development

As USDA Rural Development (RD) highlights National Cooperative Month, one worker owned co-op in Massachusetts stands out as a model for sustainability, collaboration, and local food system resiliency. The saying goes “it’s not easy being green.” But for Real Pickles in Greenfield, Massachusetts, the...

Rural

More than just a co-op: How Cooperatives Strengthen Economic Power

October 24, 2022 Darrah Perryman, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Rural Development

On the brinks of Beaufort, South Carolina, lies the brimming, remote island of St. Helena where the Gullah farmers are hard at work. For years, the Gullah Geechee community, an African American ethnic group located in the low region of the U.S., have struggled to make a living off their biggest...

Equity Rural

Six Myths About Cooperatives Debunked

October 17, 2022 Darrah Perryman, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Rural Development

Co-ops are a business structure, and like any business, they require hard work to be successful. They are unique in that they bring individuals together to solve issues they wouldn’t be able to solve on their own. Cooperatives can help communities by creating jobs, meeting social or economic needs...

Rural

USDA Rural Development’s ReConnect Program Helps Rural Families Close Digital Divide

October 12, 2022 Darrah Perryman, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Rural Development

McClellanville County is a rural community in South Carolina, and like many communities across rural America, access to high-speed internet presents real barriers. Families like Lindsay’s struggled to stay connected in the digital age. “When the kids came home from school and I was working, no one...

Equity Rural Technology

Delivering Energy Efficient Solutions for Rural New York Agricultural Producers

October 05, 2022 Brian Murray, New York State Director, USDA Rural Development

This month, I had the opportunity to travel to New Paltz, New York and visit with Peter Ferrante of Wallkill View Farm. Mr. Ferrante received funding through USDA Rural Development’s Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) to install a solar array on the rooftop of his farmers market in the Hudson...

Rural

National Co-op Month: How USDA Rural Development Supports Cooperatives

October 04, 2022 Darrah Perryman, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Rural Development

Cooperatives are a vital pillar of the U.S. economy and contribute essential goods and services to rural America. Many communities rely on cooperatives to provide locally grown food, housing, electricity, financial services, internet, retail services, and so much more.

Rural

Dr. Mireya Loza: Farmworker Historian Shaping the Future of Ag Industry Equity

September 29, 2022 Laura Crowell, Communications Lead, USDA Equity Commission

As an undergraduate student, Dr. Mireya Loza, Associate Professor of History at Georgetown University, wrote a paper about her Uncle Juan, a guest worker from Mexico who worked in the fields in California, Michigan and other places in the U.S.

Equity Initiatives