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Rural America: Our Past or Our Future?
May 20th, 2019
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Featured Article
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5 minute read
Rural America: Our Past or Our Future?
At the end of May, Munson Healthcare's Manistee Hospital in Michigan's northern lower peninsula will shut down its maternity unit. Manistee, with a shrinking and increasingly aging population of just over 6000 people in 2014, no longer has a birthrate that justifies its own maternity center. Expectant moms will have to travel to Cadillac, about an hour away, when the time comes. Closing Manistee's maternity ward and relocating its two OB/GYN providers will cost the rural community fifteen jobs, but James Barker, the hospital's CEO, says the goal is to “ensure the long-term sustainability of the hospital.” Hospitals all over rural America have had to make similar decisions in recent years. Since 2010, hospitals in the hinterlands have been closing at a rate of nearly one per month, and half of them lose money every year.Rural America's existential crisis may have been exacerbated by the media. In the 1950s, eight of the top 30 most watched TV shows were set in the American countryside. Shows like Bonanza, Lassie, Gunsmoke, and the Lone Ranger were joined in the '60s by The Beverly Hillbillies, Green Acres, Little House on the Prairie and Mayberry. By the Seventies, however, the vast majority of these shows were dropped, with TV networks deciding to chase the bigger advertising dollars that came from catering to a more urban audience with programs like All In The Family and M*A*S*H, which put cultural issues front and center, and shows that featured city life, such as Mary Tyler Moore and Laverne & Shirley. Depictions of rural America became more negative. When rural viewers tuned in, they saw themselves depicted as uneducated hicks, if they saw themselves at all. No wonder they distrust the media.
Commodity agriculture sapped rural America's resilience (and their soil), but there's still room in the hinterlands for an agrarian, low-energy future. Public domain image courtesy of MaxPixel.net.
Sources:
Manistee Hospital Maternity Unit to close May 31
Critical condition: The crisis of rural medical care
America’s Rural Purge
The Emptying Out of Rural Kansas: An Interview with Corie Brown
Big-box stores in Minnesota fight for lower tax bills
Farmers are losing patience with Trump’s trade war
What happens to rural and small-town Trump voters after Trump is gone?
Trump Administration Proposes to Eliminate Most Rural Housing Programs
Housing's hidden crisis: Rural Americans struggle to pay rent
Rural America Is Building Its Own Internet Because No One Else Will
Rebuilding Paradise: the complex economic biome nurturing vital rural communities.
Everything You Know About Rural America is Probably Wrong
How Rural America Is Saving Itself
Getting out of the city
The Future is Rural (PDF)
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.