Posted inPolitics & Policy, Rural Issues

Some Black Rural Voters Feel Abandoned by Democrats

The election results didn’t shock Keith McCants, a 42-year-old welder in south Georgia.  Leading up to Election Day, the chairman of the local Democratic Party had been door-knocking and engaging with voters across Bryan County, about 21 miles from Savannah. He even passed out Kamala Harris for President signs, but people “would take them down […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues, Voting

The Powerful, Unsung Role Black Rural Voters Can Play in Our Elections

For years, Garrett Snuggs questioned why the predominantly white town council of Wadesboro, North Carolina, didn’t reflect its population — 69% of which is Black. In the rural town of 5,000, about 52 miles away from Charlotte, he noticed that many Black folks, particularly youth and men, were disengaged from the political process.  That changed […]

Posted inRural Issues

Locked Up and Locked Out

Pamela Barnes never thought she and her sisters would be sitting in a cold, dirty holding cell for trying to protect her family’s land.  Just before sunset around 6:30 a.m., the 63-year-old gazed at the white walls’ chipped and peeling paint. Her eyes moved to the rusty, mold-covered vent above her. Her discomfort was eased […]

Posted inExtreme Weather, Rural Issues

Louisiana’s Black Rural Communities Feel Neglected After Hurricane Francine

On Tuesday, six days after Hurricane Francine smashed into Louisiana’s coast as the strongest storm of this year’s hurricane season, the Biden administration announced a major disaster declaration for the state and ordered federal aid to supplement the recovery process.  How quickly states and local counties can help individual households largely depends on how quickly […]

Posted inEminent Domain, Rural Issues

In 11 Minutes, These Black Landowners Lost Their Property to a Railroad

Landowners in a predominantly Black town in rural Georgia who have been fighting to keep their properties from falling into the hands of a railroad company were dealt another blow on Wednesday when a state regulatory authority ruled in favor of the railroad.  During a Wednesday session, the Georgia Public Service Commission unanimously approved Sandersville […]

Posted inMaternal Health, Partner Content, Rural Issues

Maternity Care in Rural Areas Is in Crisis. Can More Doulas Help?

This article was published by KFF Health News. When Bristeria Clark went into labor with her son in 2015, her contractions were steady at first. Then, they stalled. Her cervix stopped dilating. After a few hours, doctors at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, Georgia, prepped Clark for an emergency cesarean section. It wasn’t the […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues

Georgia Residents React to Harris-Walz Rally in Savannah

When Brandon Byrd learned that Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz would be in his home state of Georgia to campaign this week, he responded: “It’s about damn time.”  Byrd understands rural areas better than most as a native of Metter, a 30% Black town of fewer than 4,000 people. Since 2021, […]

Posted inBlack Farmers, Rural Issues

Justice Has Been Delayed for Black Farmers, and They’re Looking to the Next President for Answers

Bernice Atchinson, an 85-year-old advocate from Alabama, has been fighting for more than 40 years on behalf of her fellow Black farmers. She even represented them in the landmark case Pigford v. Glickman, a class-action lawsuit alleging the U.S. Department of Agriculture discriminated against Black farmers from 1983 to 1997 when they applied for federal […]

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