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Tag: rural

  • Would rural areas be hit twice as hard if subsidies lapse?

    As Republicans and Democrats careened toward an Oct. 1 government shutdown, the parties clashed over whether to pass a clean extension of federal funding, as Republicans sought, or to extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, as Democrats wanted.

    In an interview on CBS’ “Face the Nation” — aired Sept. 28, three days before government funding was set to run out — Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., said that if Republicans failed to extend the expiring subsidies, many Americans would see a big hit in their out-of-pocket health insurance costs. 

    Klobuchar said rural Americans, including farmers, would be hit disproportionately.

    “Republicans have created a health care crisis,” Klobuchar said. “My constituents, Americans, are standing on a cliff right now with these insurance premium increases that are upon them. So, Democrats are united in pushing on this and saying, look, let us do something about this crisis before it is too late — a 75% increase in premiums starting Nov. 1 on people who are small business owners, people who are farmers out there, twice as much in the rural areas.”

    We previously rated the 75% talking point Mostly True. (The group that made that estimate subsequently upped it to 114%.)

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    Klobuchar’s “twice as much” comparison can be interpreted in more than one way. By one of those readings — the one her office said she intended, that rural enrollees would see their out-of-pocket costs double — Klobuchar is correct.

    What are enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies?

    People who use the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces can buy health insurance from providers at various levels of coverage and varying premium costs. Most purchasers obtain subsidies, as long as they meet the income guidelines. 

    In 2021, then-President Joe Biden signed legislation that made Affordable Care Act subsidies more generous. The law reduced the maximum amount purchasers would have to pay for coverage and enabled subsidies for households with incomes higher than 400% of the federal poverty level. Previously, the subsidies were capped at 400% of the poverty limit for a household. In 2024, that amounted to $60,240 for a one-person household. That figure increases depending on the number of people in the household.

    Congress renewed these enhanced subsidies in 2022 through the end of 2025, so they are now poised to expire.

    The subsidies proved popular. The number of people receiving them increased from 12 million in 2021 to 21.4 million in 2024, according to an analysis of federal data by KFF, a health care think tank.

    Where does the 75% figure come from?

    Using 2024 federal data, KFF calculated the average annual premium for enrollees who received enhanced subsidies. The government paid $5,727 of the total premium under the original Affordable Care Act subsidy rules. Another $888 came out of the beneficiary’s pocket.

    The enhanced subsidy provision covered the final portion, $705. If the enhanced subsidy disappeared and the enrollee had to pay both the $888 and the $705 amounts, that would total $1,593. That’s about 79% more than the same person was paying with the enhanced subsidies in place — close to Klobuchar’s 75% figure.

    On Sept. 30, two days after Klobuchar’s remarks, KFF released a new estimate that showed an even higher out-of-pocket increase of 114%, superseding the group’s previous 79% figure.

    Will the out-of-pocket hit be “twice as much in the rural areas”?

    There are at least two ways to interpret Klobuchar’s statement: that she was comparing rural enrollees’ costs with people living elsewhere, or comparing their costs with what they paid before.

    Klobuchar’s office told PolitiFact that the senator referred to rural enrollees’ out-of-pocket costs doubling compared with what they would pay with a continuation of enhanced subsidies. (That aligns with what Klobuchar has said in other settings.) 

    This is accurate, according to an analysis by the Century Foundation, which describes itself as a “progressive, independent think tank” and which Klobuchar’s office told PolitiFact is the source of her talking point about rural impact,

    The Century Foundation analysis concluded that out-of-pocket insurance costs in rural counties would increase on average from $713 to $1,473 — a 107% increase, or slightly more than a doubling. 

    By contrast, the increase for people in urban counties was 89%.

    But there’s less evidence to support the interpretation some might have drawn from Klobuchar’s statement: that rural enrollees would experience a hit twice as big as enrollees elsewhere. The Century Foundation analysis found that’s not the case.

    In its August analysis, the Century Foundation separated out the impacts of expiring subsidies by several demographic factors, including whether a county is predominantly rural.

    The group found that enrollees in rural counties would, on average, see out-of-pocket increases of $760 from expiring enhanced subsidies, compared with $624 for all counties and $593 for urban counties. That means the rural increase would be 22% larger than the increase for enrollees overall, and 28% larger than the increase for urban enrollees. 

    That amounts to a disproportionately large increase for rural areas, but not twice as much.

    Our ruling

    Klobuchar said people with Affordable Care Act insurance will see a “75% increase in premiums starting Nov. 1,” if enhanced subsidies are not extended, including “people who are farmers out there — twice as much in the rural areas.”

    A KFF analysis found that the disappearance of enhanced subsidies would increase out-of-pocket health care costs by an average of 79%, which is close to 75%. (KFF subsequently raised its estimate to 114%.)

    A Century Foundation analysis found that the increase in out-of-pocket costs for Affordable Care Act insurance wouldn’t be twice as big for rural enrollees, which is one way to interpret Klobuchar’s comment. The rural cost increase would be 22% bigger than for enrollees overall and 28% bigger than for urban enrollees.

    However, the way Klobuchar’s office said she intended the statement — that rural enrollees would pay twice as much out of pocket for their coverage than they did before an expiration of the enhanced subsidies — is accurate, because the study found that costs in rural counties would increase by 107%.

    The statement is accurate but needs additional information, so we rate it Mostly True.

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  • Colorado, UCHealth reach deal to avoid clawback of $60 million from public hospitals

    Colorado won’t have to claw back nearly $60 million it paid to public hospitals, including Denver Health and more than two dozen rural facilities, under a deal announced Tuesday to end the state’s court battles with UCHealth.

    “We thank UCHealth for working with us to resolve this issue in a manner that protects all Colorado hospitals,” Kim Bimestefer, executive director of the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing, said in a news release.

    UCHealth sued the department, alleging it had incorrectly labeled two of its hospitals as public, rather than private nonprofits. A Denver District Court judge agreed, and ordered the state to reclassify Memorial Hospital in Colorado Springs and Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins. The department filed an appeal in July.

    Their classification matters because of the state’s provider tax.

    Hospitals pay about $1.3 billion each year, gaining about $500 million in federal matching funds. Most come out ahead, though those with relatively few patients covered by Medicaid lose out. In future years, the state will have to reduce its tax rate under provisions of H.R. 1, colloquially known as President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill.”

    The state pools the money by hospital type, and distributes it based on how each facility’s Medicaid share compares to the others in their group.

    Moving Memorial and Poudre Valley from the public to the private bucket means that less money remains for all public hospitals to divide up, and that Memorial and Poudre Valley likely will get more back from the provider tax, because they’re being compared against hospitals that generally see fewer Medicaid patients.

    The state said that to retrospectively reclassify the UCHealth hospitals and distribute the funds accordingly, it would have to take back $59.7 million paid last year to 29 publicly owned hospitals.

    Denver Health didn’t comment on the possibility, but a group representing 13 Eastern Plains hospitals said some wouldn’t be able to hand over a significant chunk of cash, because they already used their share of the provider tax to pay employees and cover other expenses.

    Under the agreement, the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing will drop its appeal, and UCHealth won’t demand redistribution of provider taxes it paid in previous years.

    UCHealth president and CEO Elizabeth Concordia said the system supports the provider tax program, and thanked the state for working together on a solution.

    Meg Wingerter

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  • State dangles new tax credits for housing projects

    BOSTON — The Healey administration is offering new tax credits for real estate developers to convert vacant commercial properties as part of broader efforts to build more affordable housing in the state.

    The state Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities on Thursday rolled out the Commercial Conversion Tax Credit Initiative, a new tax credit to help convert underused commercial buildings into residential and mixed-use housing. At least $10 million in tax credits will be available in the first round of funding, the agency said.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Salem City Council approves ordinance to regulate condominium conversion

    SALEM — A new ordinance will regulate the conversion of properties with two or more residential units into condominiums through a permitting process and new tenant protections.

    The City Council approved the new rules 7-3 at its meeting Thursday.


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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • New Case Study Highlights Barriers to Computer Ownership in Rural Arizona and Community-Based Pathways Forward

    Digitunity, a national nonprofit advancing digital opportunity through computer ownership, has released a new case study detailing the urgent need for personal computers in rural Arizona and the steps local communities are taking to address it.

    Developed in partnership with Chicanos Por La Causa (CPLC) and supported by AT&T, the case study captures findings from recent focus groups, data analysis, and a 200-computer distribution initiative across San Luis and Miami, Arizona. The report surfaces systemic challenges to computer ownership, including limited access points, affordability, and gaps in digital skills, and demonstrates the impact of community-informed solutions grounded in trust, local leadership, and practical infrastructure. The case study captures project activities through January 2025.

    Across Arizona, 342,248 households (11.7% of all households) do not own a large-screen computer. Without one, families have limited access to digital opportunities in education, employment, healthcare, and civic life.

    In towns including Miami, Nogales, San Luis, and Superior, nearly one in three households lack a large-screen computer. The need is particularly acute among older adults and families in low-income and multilingual communities. Focus group participants shared their experiences navigating limited library hours for computer access, slow or unreliable internet service, and the need for ongoing digital skills training and support.

    This case study draws on insights that Digitunity has gained from its broader rural work, and is intended to offer a deeper understanding of how to design solutions that enable long-term computer ownership.

    Read the complete case study

    About Digitunity:
    Digitunity is a national nonprofit organization with a mission to make owning a computer possible for everyone. For over 40 years, Digitunity has been engaged in the work of shaping and strengthening systems to address computer ownership among those impacted by the digital divide. Through generating and placing donated computers with organizations serving people in need, supporting a national practitioner network, and providing strategic advisory support to states and cities, Digitunity works to create sustainable solutions that make computer ownership possible for all.

    Source: Digitunity

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  • Digitunity and Partners Deliver Laptop Computers to Rural Families, Expanding Their Opportunities

    The leading national nonprofit devoted to computer access partners with AT&T and Chicanos Por La Causa Parenting Arizona to connect families in six Arizona communities with 120 computers, giving them access to educational and employment resources.

    Digitunity, a national nonprofit with a mission to make computer ownership possible for everyone, announced today that it has begun distributing 120 laptop computers to families across six rural Arizona communities, in partnership with AT&T and Chicanos Por La Causa (CPLC) Parenting Arizona.

    This effort is part of Digitunity’s AT&T Rural project, designed to increase access to digital services by providing free and low-cost computers to rural families who lacked such devices. It demonstrates Digitunity’s commitment to addressing the digital divide through partnering with trusted community-based organizations to deliver solutions and shape systems to eliminate barriers to computer ownership and empower people with digital opportunity.

    In this initiative, the Digitunity AT&T Rural project has partnered with the CPLC Parenting Arizona initiative to provide computers to families with children from prenatal to 5 years old. The new computers will enable the young families to participate in virtual visits with Parent Educators, access online healthcare resources, and engage with educational activities essential to their children’s early development.

    “As more services like appointment scheduling and applications shift online, computers become a critical bridge for families to access these resources,” said Jennifer Goodall, program director at CPLC Parenting Arizona. “Some families may need more guidance in using technology, while others simply need the tools to help themselves.”

    By bringing digital tools into homes, Digitunity and its partners are addressing an urgent need in Arizona. More than 340,000 households – about 12% of the state – do not own a large-screen computing device. And nearly one-quarter of the state’s residents said a lack of access to computers or other digital devices prevented them from using the internet, according to Arizona’s Digital Equity Plan.

    “Families in the rural parts of Arizona have two different obstacles: a gap in resources and a method to access the resources available,” said Renato Ramos, associate director at CPLC Parenting Arizona. “Every family has strengths that our teams focus on to help families navigate whatever situation they may be facing. Having a computer to find a job, update information for their kids’ school, or anything else they can work through themselves, helps to build upon these strengths and that feeling of pride in themselves.”

    The initiative is already underway, with CPLC Parenting Arizona staff beginning laptop distribution in late March 2025 via its established Home Visitation program. The project will deliver 75 laptops to La Paz-Mohave, 23 to Sierra Vista, 10 to Flagstaff, six to Globe, and six to Hopi. Through the home visits, CPLC staff will help families build valuable digital skills and connect to essential support services for parents and children.

    For families in CPLC’s Home Visitation program, the laptops will allow them to conduct virtual visits with Parent Educators, participate in monthly group connections on topics like dental health and child nutrition, and access developmental activities for children up to age 5. This evidence-based program helps children develop a strong foundation for kindergarten.

    For families in CPLC’s Family Support Coordination program, the laptops represent pathways to self-sufficiency. Parents can now more easily apply for employment, complete online GED courses, conduct virtual check-ins with coordinators, and research and access essential services like WIC, SNAP, and housing assistance.

    Through collaborations like this project, Digitunity continues to advance its mission of eliminating barriers to digital opportunity. By equipping people with computers and devices they lack, Digitunity, AT&T, and CPLC Parenting Arizona empower families with the means to succeed in the modern digital economy.

    For more information about Digitunity’s programs and initiatives, visit www.digitunity.org.

    About Digitunity
    Digitunity is a national nonprofit organization with a mission to make owning a computer possible for everyone. For over 40 years, Digitunity has been engaged in the work of shaping and strengthening systems to address the computer needs of those impacted by the digital divide. Through generating and placing donated computers with organizations serving people in need, supporting a national practitioner network, and providing strategic advisory support to states and cities, Digitunity works to create sustainable solutions that make computer ownership possible for all.

    Contact Information

    Maria Penaloza
    maria.penaloza@newswire.com

    Source: Digitunity

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  • Healey signs $5.1B housing bond bill

    Healey signs $5.1B housing bond bill

    BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey signed a $5.1 billion bond bill Tuesday aimed at boosting the state’s dwindling housing stock, but critics say the plan will do little to help struggling renters and people now at risk of losing their homes.

    The measure, approved on the final day of formal legislative sessions, includes a mix of bonding, policy changes, tax breaks and other incentives to help spur the much-needed development of new homes.

    Healey, a first-term Democrat who has made housing a key part of her legislative agenda, described the measure as the “most ambitious” in state history to address what she called the state’s “toughest” challenge.

    “The Affordable Homes Act creates homes for every kind of household, at every stage of life, and unlocks the potential in our neighborhoods,” Healey said in a statement. “Today we are taking an unprecedented step forward in building a stronger Massachusetts where everyone can afford to live.”

    Under the plan, at least $2 billion will be devoted to the rehabilitation of more than 43,000 public housing units, with 25% of the money dedicated to preserving housing for those with low incomes.

    The bill also calls for diverting $800 million to the state’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund to create and preserve affordable housing for households whose incomes are not more than 110% of area median income.

    Among the policy initiatives in the bill is a proposal to authorize accessory dwelling units equal to or less than 900 square feet to be built by-right in single-family zoning districts in all communities.

    The plan expands funding for the state’s Community Investment Tax Credit Program, which funds community development corporations that partner with nonprofits to build affordable housing across the state.

    Under the tax credit program, donations to community development corporations that qualify are eligible to receive a 50% refundable tax credit.

    The Senate approved the $5.4 billion housing bond bill in May and the House followed in June with a $6.5 billion bill. Differences between the two bills were worked out by a six-member committee, which announced a compromise on the final day of formal sessions.

    Lawmakers rejected Healey’s controversial proposal to give communities the authority to add transfer fees from 2% to 5% onto property tax bills to fund affordable housing, which faced opposition from the real estate industry.

    Lawmakers also rejected a plan to spend $1 billion to allow the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority’s water system to be expanded to the Ipswich River Basin, which includes Beverly, Danvers, Ipswich, Middleton, Peabody, Salem and other communities north of Boston.

    And some housing advocates say the changes in the new law will do little to help people who are now struggling to pay the rent or facing foreclosure.

    “The housing bond bill includes meaningful funding to support public housing and build new affordable housing, but legislators failed to include any tools to help renters who are facing enormous rent hikes and eviction today,” said Carolyn Chou, executive director of the group Homes for All Mass.

    Homes for All Mass was pushing for inclusion of a proposal that would allow cities and towns to stabilize rents by pegging increases to the rate of inflation with a cap at 5% and protect tenants by banning no-fault evictions.

    “We need strong rent stabilization now to protect people during the decades it will take to make housing more affordable in Massachusetts,” Chou said.

    The housing bill was a top priority for Healey and other Beacon Hill leaders, who are trying to spur more home building amid a shrinking inventory that is edging first-time buyers out of the market.

    The prolonged housing crunch is affecting the state’s economic growth, making it much harder to attract new families and companies, they say.

    Massachusetts has some of the highest housing costs and rents in the country. The median price of a single-family home hit a record $609,000 in June, according to real estate industry reports. Meanwhile, single-family home sales were down in June versus the same month last year.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • How the University of Denver plans to recruit more students from rural communities

    How the University of Denver plans to recruit more students from rural communities

    The University of Denver announced its participation last week in the Small Town and Rural Students College Network, or the STARS College Network, now in its second year.

    Students walk the halls of Fowler High School, a rural school in Colorado. The University of Denver joined a network that hopes to help more students from rural communities see a path to college.

    Mark Reis for Chalkbeat

    This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters

    By Jason Gonzales, Chalkbeat

    Rural students may graduate high school at higher rates than their peers, but they’re also less likely to end up on a college campus.

    The University of Denver wants to change that statistic through a partnership that’s brought together 32 prominent public and private universities to help rural students learn about their college options, help them enroll, and support them to graduation.

    In July, the Denver private university announced its participation in the Small Town and Rural Students College Network, or the STARS College Network, now in its second year. Participating schools include private institutions like Yale, Vanderbilt, and Duke, historically Black university Spelman College, and public flagships such as the University of Texas at Austin and the University of California, Berkeley.

    The program doubled in size from 16 to 32 schools this year, with the University of Denver joining as the only Colorado school participating in the program.

    “We want to open the minds of students in rural areas,” said Todd Rhinehart, vice chancellor for enrollment at the University of Denver. “They have the academic horsepower, and with financial aid from these schools, they have the ability to enroll and really make it a reality.”

    Nationally, about 61% of high school graduates enroll in college, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. And about 55% of rural students go directly to college after they graduate, according to the National Student Clearinghouse.

    In Colorado, the rates are lower, however, with recent state data showing about half of all students enroll — and 47.5% of the state’s rural students go directly to college.

    Rhinehart said he’s hopeful the network can reverse a national trend that’s seen fewer rural students going to college since 2019.

    Trott Family Philanthropies funds the program and has committed more than $150 million over 10 years to help recruit and support rural students, according to the STARS website. The network offers services such as webinars, math tutoring, college planning services, and campus visits for students.

    School representatives also visit communities, Rhinehart said, and he hopes to someday place a STARS recruiter on the Western Slope.

    “Their focus would really be on all of Western and Southwestern Colorado and certainly New Mexico and Arizona,” he said. “They’d be able to visit far more high schools than we’re able to now.”

    Rhinehart aims to clear up misconceptions among rural high school communities that selective colleges like DU aren’t for them. A college education comes with the promise of higher wages and economic stability, and Rhinehart said he hears that students wonder if they are academically ready or can afford to go to selective colleges.

    Rhinehart said the network will get the message out that the school has financial aid available for them and that schools will help them succeed.

    “We’re going to get out there and say, ‘You are a strong student, you should definitely be applying, and we would love to have you.’”

    Jason Gonzales is a reporter covering higher education and the Colorado legislature. Chalkbeat Colorado partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage. Contact Jason at [email protected].

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  • Colorado weather: Afternoon scattered showers, thunderstorms

    Colorado weather: Afternoon scattered showers, thunderstorms

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon in the mountains and areas near and south of Interstate 70, according to the National Weather Service.

    Scattered thunderstorms may develop over the eastern slopes of the Front Range this afternoon with storms drifting east of the mountains this evening. Light rainfall is expected, but small hail and wind gusts up to 40 mph is possible.

    Today will be sunny with a high near 80 degrees in the Denver Metro area and a 20% chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3 p.m. and before 10 p.m. Tonight will dip to 52 degrees with gusts up to 18 mph.

    Wednesday will be mostly sunny with a high of 83 degrees. Showers and thunderstorms may return with a 30% chance of precipitation after noon. Rain may continue into that evening with a 20% chance of showers and thunderstorms before midnight and a low of 51 degrees.

    There will be a slight drop in temperatures Thursday with a high of 77 degrees and a 40% chance of showers and thunderstorms after noon and before midnight. Thursday night may dip to a low of 51 degrees.

    Afternoon showers and thunderstorms may continue in the Denver Metro area on Friday and Saturday.

    Julianna O&#039;Clair

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  • New ambulance service for Montgomery County

    New ambulance service for Montgomery County

    MONTGOMERY COUNTY, N.Y. (NEWS10) — One Capital Region County is getting a new ambulance service after cutbacks forced law enforcement to pick up the slack. NEWS10 has the latest on the service that just kicked off on Monday.

    “Really it’s all about patient care and getting an ambulance to somebody who needs it in a timely manner,” said Sergeant Justin Smith with the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office.

    Smith will oversee the sheriff’s office EMS division. He tells NEWS10 that it took nearly three years of planning to get to this point.

    “It’s been a long process so it’s kind of a Bittersweet moment here today we’ll see where this takes us. We built this from the ground up and we want to build it the right way,” said Smith.

    The county saw cutbacks in the industry after volunteer ambulances began to shutter. They relied on just a few companies to maintain EMS service.

    Within a couple of hours, the ambulance is already in use. Our cameras were rolling when the ambulance went on its first call, a non-emergency transport of a patient to St. Mary’s Hospital.

    Amsterdam Fire Chief Anthony Agresta says Monday was the perfect example of why this ambulance is needed. “We were in a situation where one of our two ambulances is out of service,” said Agresta.

    The county hired 16 people to staff the ambulance, two of them full-time. Two of them spoke to NEWS10 on their first day on the job. They tell me they live in the communities they serve and have seen the need for more ambulances.

    “It’s definitely a nice way to impact the community I live in,” said EMT Anne Clouthier.

    “It will be great to have improved EMS coverage in the county,” said EMT Michael Kent.

    Montgomery County Executive Matthew Ossenfort praises the Sheriff’s Office for the new service. “Today the real exciting part is we’re getting off the ground, we got it started and we’re here to supplement and work with providers who are already here,” said Ossenfort.

    James De La Fuente

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  • LOR Foundation Invests Over $500,000 in Innovative Water Projects Led by Western Farmers and Ranchers

    LOR Foundation Invests Over $500,000 in Innovative Water Projects Led by Western Farmers and Ranchers

    LOR selects 61 projects submitted by farmers and ranchers that explore innovative approaches to using water in agriculture.

    The LOR Foundation has selected 61 projects for its Field Work initiative, investing $538,802 into water-related agriculture projects led by farmers and ranchers. 

    Earlier this year the foundation launched Field Work, a research initiative to source innovative approaches to using water in agriculture in the West. Through Field Work, farmers and ranchers in rural parts of Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, and Wyoming were eligible for up to $10,000 to implement innovative water projects on their land (think: improved water efficiency, water reliability, water quality, crop yield or crop diversification, and labor efficiency). The goal: Get money quickly into the hands of the people in the field and on the ranch who have the potential solutions.

    LOR received more than 250 proposals from producers across all five states. Their innovative projects revealed some important trends among Western farmers and ranchers: the need for more and better pipes, nozzles, and gates to move water efficiently; investment in technology-enabled methods of supplying—and monitoring—remote or hard-to-access areas with water; a growing interest in how soil amendments like wool, fungi, and biochar can improve water retention and soil health; a return to holistic and Indigenous methods of catching, retaining, and spreading water (e.g., earthworks, water planting, underground greenhouses), and more. 

    “We believe that those closest to the problem often have the best solutions,” says Alex Dunlop, LOR’s chief business development officer. “Farmers and ranchers in places like Monte Vista, Colorado, and Questa, New Mexico, have creative solutions to water challenges. Field Work is a chance to help them put those ideas into practice and learn from them.”

    Ultimately, LOR selected 61 projects, which will get underway this spring and summer. These projects are led by the experimenters, tinkerers, innovators, and iterators who—while Western states agonize over how to resolve antiquated water compacts—have been finding ways to eke out a living from the land. They’re people who have a vested interest in finding ways to use water more effectively, for their own operations and for the good of the West. 

    They’re people like Michael Lobato, a Colorado School of Mines engineer-turned-farmer, who for the past three years has been rehabbing a five-acre farm outside of Fruita, Colorado. Lobato thinks injecting biochar—which is extremely porous—deep into the soil, rather than using it on the surface level, will improve the drought tolerance of hay and grasses and significantly reduce agricultural water consumption across the West. Interestingly, he’s planning to inject it using a piece of machinery previously used for sports turf.

    Ultimately, LOR hopes research projects like these—led by the people who best understand the challenge—reveal solutions for using water efficiently to grow food and sustain thriving communities in the West while in the grip of desperate drought.

    Learn about the 61 selected Field Work projects at lorfoundation.org/field-work.

    Source: LOR Foundation

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  • Digitunity Report Identifies Need for Computers to Address Rural America’s Digital Divide

    Digitunity Report Identifies Need for Computers to Address Rural America’s Digital Divide

    A new report examines the technology gap in rural areas and identifies ways communities can spur computer donations.

    Press Release


    Dec 5, 2022 08:00 EST

    Rural areas in the U.S. struggle to provide residents with broadband internet access and the computers needed to maximize the benefits of online educational and economic resources. Digitunity, a non-profit organization committed to ending the digital divide, has released a commissioned report on the potential causes and solutions to the rural digital divide. 

    “We know the digital divide has few boundaries,” said Scot Henley, executive director of Digitunity. “It exists in large coastal cities and small towns in America’s heartland. It affects people across demographics. With this report, we now know more about why that divide exists and how communities can resolve it.”

    Areas with substantial internet access and usage typically have higher levels of economic and community development in comparison to those with lower levels of use. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, passed in late 2021, dedicated an unprecedented amount of federal funding toward increasing broadband availability and adoption in less connected areas.

    Digitunity’s report, written by Oklahoma State University professor Brian E. Whitacre, discusses the direct correlation between internet access and rural economic development. It also looks in depth at the issue of device ownership, focusing on nationwide access and usage of large-screen devices recognized as superior to smartphones in the digital equity space. 

    The three major segments of the report, titled “Status Quo,” “Supply,” and “Support,” cover the socio-demographics impacted, as well as the supply chain processes and support networks working to resolve the digital divide rural communities face. The report’s findings align with Digitunity’s mission and focus on partnership networks. 

    “Since its inception, Digitunity has operated on the belief that community-based organizations are essential to ending the digital divide,” Henley said. “This report clearly defines the problems facing rural communities and how they can work with organizations like Digitunity to foster the solutions to those problems.”

    To learn more about Digitunity’s mission to eliminate the digital divide in both rural and urban communities, please visit digitunity.org.  

    About Digitunity
    Since the 1980s, Digitunity has advanced digital inclusion by connecting donors of technology with organizations serving people in need. Our mission is to ensure everyone who needs a computer has one, along with robust internet connectivity and digital literacy skills. To learn more about our mission, please visit digitunity.org.

    Source: Digitunity

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Where is Charlie Now? Our 1,000th Pet Transport

    Austin Pets Alive! | Where is Charlie Now? Our 1,000th Pet Transport

    Apr 19, 2021

    When the winter storm hit a few months back, a lot of shelters in Texas were facing one of the hardest decisions they had to make. They needed to get their animals out to a safe shelter or be left with the choice that no shelter ever wants to make, euthanasia. A lot of these shelters are in rural parts of the state where the kennels are outside and their access to resources is always limited, especially during a weather crisis. That is when Austin Pets Alive! and our national division, American Pets Alive!, sprang into action. We made it our mission to get 1,000 pets out of Texas safely to shelters all across the United States. In a matter of just four weeks, we hit our goal with our 1,000th pet being an adorable cat named Charlie.

    Charlie traveled all the way from Loredo, TX to KC Pet Project in Kansas. His journey up north was made special by having a first-class seat in a private plane flown by our volunteer pilot friend, David Nelson. Once he landed at KC Pet Project, it was only a matter of days until he found his forever home. We took a moment to hear from his adopter, Kathryn, to see how our 1,000th pet is doing.

    It turns out that Kathryn and her husband are both originally from Texas so adopting Charlie who came from Texas as well felt like it was a perfect fit.We felt like he was our cat from the moment we saw him. Knowing we came from the same place just cemented that feeling.”


    You might be wondering what made them choose KC Pet Project and why they felt now was the right time to adopt. It turns out after mourning the cat that they had for over 18 years who died in 2020, they were ready to bring another family member into their life in 2021. They are an “adopt don’t shop” type of family so Kathryn said going to KC Pet Project was a no-brainer.Their mission and their compassion made them the perfect place for us.”

    “Charlie (as my husband and I call him), “Fluffy Ball”(as my 5 YO calls him), is full of energy and has brought a lot of humor to our house,” Kathryn gushed when asked about what their family loves about Charlie. “As a 7-month-old cat, he bounces around the house constantly, nipping at our legs when we walk by, chasing toys and balls, jumping on beds… so that has been a source of enjoyment for all of us. He is also extremely gentle and patient with our daughter. She gets in his face, kisses him constantly, follows him around, and he is totally gentle with her and never seems to get tired of her attention.”

    It’s clear that Charlie is now living the good life with his new family in Kansas City, surrounded by love and affection every single day. It’s heartbreaking to think what his future would have been if he didn’t get the chance to be transported to KC Pet Project, which is why Kathryn wanted to leave you all with this message. “Adopt, don’t shop! There are so many wonderful animals that need a good home. Also, VOLUNTEER! KC Pet Project has wonderful volunteers and plenty of opportunities for individuals and families to volunteer at their beautiful facilities. Make it your mission to make a difference in animals’ lives, whether through adoption or volunteering at the organizations who help them.”

    Austin Pets Alive! is always in need of volunteers, and there are various ways you can do so! From walking dogs to feeding bottle baby kittens, to even transporting pets like Charlie from rural shelters to our doors here in Austin; the list is endless. If you are reading this from the Kansas City area, you can find all of KC Pet Project’s volunteer information on their website as well. We wish Charlie a happily ever after with his new family!

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Flies to Rural West Texas,…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Flies to Rural West Texas,…

    Mar 09, 2021

    AUSTIN, TX — Austin Pets Alive! coordinated the rescue and transport of 1 dog and 13 cats by plane today. With the help of private pilot David Nelson, the flight to Alpine, Texas and back to Austin saved the 14 pets at-risk of euthanasia from two shelters as part of APA!’s aim to save 1,000 pets in shelters facing tough times in the aftermath of the recent Texas winter storms.

    Map updated 3.8

    These pets are from Alpine Animal Services and Marathon Animal Shelter, both small, rural shelters lacking resources to care for all the pets that enter their doors. Austin Pets Alive!, through the generosity of donor Nelson, flew to the Alpine area to pick up these pets and return them to Austin before transporting them to shelter partners in Michigan, Chicago, and the DC area later this week.

    6-year-old pup George, who was brought back on the lifesaving flight

    This roundtrip, same day flight is crucial to lifesaving. Where it would normally be a 12-13 hour day of driving for volunteer transporters, the flight there and back will take just a few hours. Available vehicles, drivers, and funds have historically been major barriers to getting pets in these rural areas to safety, so David’s time, plane, and willingness is invaluable.

    This is David’s second lifesaving flight for Austin Pets Alive! in less than two weeks. In late February, David and APA! flew to Harlingen and Laredo in one day. On that rescue mission, David met and transported a dog named Wagon, who he fell in love with and had to add to his family.

    Jennifer from Alpine Animal Services loading two cats on the plane

    Texas shelters who need help getting pets out as well as shelters that are able to transport and/or receive cats and dogs should contact [email protected]. The biggest need at this time is for organizations that can safely transport pets. To help make these transports happen, people are encouraged to give to Austin Pets Alive! here.

    Additional photos and videos of this transport are available for press upon request. Please contact [email protected]

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