As part of an ongoing year-long series, North Carolina Now will highlight success stories like this one happening in North Carolina’s rural communities. In the summer of 2009, the series will conclude with an hour-long documentary and a series of topical town hall meetings.
NC Rising identifies & highlights success stories from our state's rural areas that once thrived on crops such as tobacco & manufacturing jobs such as furniture & textiles, but are now transitioning into a new global economy. Tar Heel Made takes a look at how manufacturers are looking to new markets to find products and services to help revitalize economically distressed areas in the state.
NC Rising identifies & highlights success stories from our state's rural areas that once thrived on crops such as tobacco & manufacturing jobs such as furniture & textiles, but are now transitioning into a new global economy. Tar Heel Grown takes a look at how farmers are looking to new markets to find new crops to help revitalize economically distressed areas in the state.
Rural Health Care...What's the diagnosis?
Rural Health Care...What's the diagnosis?
Project DescriptionRelocated from California to the small town of Washington, North Carolina, Pacific Seacraft was saved from bankruptcy by a father and son from NC. Stephen Brodie bought the 30-year-old company at an auction in California for only $75,000, hauled the boat molds across the country, and set out to revamp the company along the Pamlico River.
Project DescriptionRelocated from California to the small town of Washington, North Carolina, Pacific Seacraft was saved from bankruptcy by a father and son from NC. Stephen Brodie bought the 30-year-old company at an auction in California for only $75,000, hauled the boat molds across the country, and set out to revamp the company along the Pamlico River.
In 2005, Cherokee County purchased a 25,000 square foot building in order to develop the Cherokee County Center for Applied Technology. A collaboration between Tri-County Community College, Cherokee County, and several industry partners, the facility is now used for classes and short-run manufacturing and houses the college's Machinist Training Program and the Associate Degree program in Machining Technology.
In 2005, Cherokee County purchased a 25,000 square foot building in order to develop the Cherokee County Center for Applied Technology. A collaboration between Tri-County Community College, Cherokee County, and several industry partners, the facility is now used for classes and short-run manufacturing and houses the college's Machinist Training Program and the Associate Degree program in Machining Technology.
More often than not, economic development begins with education. This concept is the basis of the 1:1 Laptop Initiative, funded by the Golden LEAF Foundation along with private funding from SAS and the NC General Assembly, which seeks to reform high schools by providing laptop computers to students and teachers in school districts in rural areas of the state. Created as a replicable model, the 1:1 initiative will guide the implementation of the program throughout North Carolina's public schools and afford all students access to a twenty-first-century classroom environment.
More often than not, economic development begins with education. This concept is the basis of the 1:1 Laptop Initiative, funded by the Golden LEAF Foundation along with private funding from SAS and the NC General Assembly, which seeks to reform high schools by providing laptop computers to students and teachers in school districts in rural areas of the state. Created as a replicable model, the 1:1 initiative will guide the implementation of the program throughout North Carolina's public schools and afford all students access to a twenty-first-century classroom environment.
Many organizations in North Carolina are working to build the State's military economy. These programs work directly with NC-based businesses and federal contractors to secure lucrative federal and military contracts that boost the economies of local and State economies.
Many organizations in North Carolina are working to build the State's military economy. These programs work directly with NC-based businesses and federal contractors to secure lucrative federal and military contracts that boost the economies of local and State economies.
Interview: Becky Anderson/Founder, HandMade In America HandMade in America was founded in 1993 with a belief that economic revitalization wasn’t necessarily tied to luring "modern" industry to the region but in making known the hidden heritage and craftspeople that are so vitally a part of western North Carolina. Since then, HandMade has evolved into a nationally recognized, multidimensional institution that has sparked initiatives and creative collaborations in education, small town revitalization and community development, economic development, environmentally sustainable strategies and enhanced opportunities for makers of the handmade object, heritage tourism, and incorporating crafts into building design and furnishing
Interview: Desmond Suarez & Ronno Cooke HandMade in America was founded in 1993 with a belief that economic revitalization wasn’t necessarily tied to luring "modern" industry to the region but in making known the hidden heritage and craftspeople that are so vitally a part of western North Carolina. Since then, HandMade has evolved into a nationally recognized, multidimensional institution that has sparked initiatives and creative collaborations in education, small town revitalization and community development, economic development, environmentally sustainable strategies and enhanced opportunities for makers of the handmade object, heritage tourism, and incorporating crafts into building design and furnishing
HandMade in America was founded in 1993 with a belief that economic revitalization wasn’t necessarily tied to luring "modern" industry to the region but in making known the hidden heritage and craftspeople that are so vitally a part of western North Carolina. Since then, HandMade has evolved into a nationally recognized, multidimensional institution that has sparked initiatives and creative collaborations in education, small town revitalization and community development, economic development, environmentally sustainable strategies and enhanced opportunities for makers of the handmade object, heritage tourism, and incorporating crafts into building design and furnishing
The mission of Pocosin Arts impacts educational, social, environmental, and economic development issues all at once. It’s this approach that set Pocosin apart and what caught the attention of organizations, such as The North Carolina Rural Center for Economic Development, to fund the project.
Feather Phillips, founder and executive director, Pocosin Arts Feather Phillips founded Pocosin Arts Center in 1994. Originally from northeastern Pennsylvania, Phillips began her career working in public television in Boston. In the late 1960s, after realizing that the city life was not for her, she moved to Martha’s Vineyard, where, she creatde her life around a sense of place rather than around a career. In 1972, Phillips boarded a boat and sailed south, ending up in Wilmington, NC, where she lived for 9 years. In search of cleaner and more economically viable water sources for her husband’s boat building business, she and her family moved to Bass, NC in 1980 and found the Alligator River. In 1987, they settled in Columbia, NC, where Phillips taught Art at a school in a neighboring county. Much of her vision for a community-based curriculum at Pocosin Arts came from that experience and from learning about the area's children and their families, values and traditions.
Travel west through the North Carolina mountains on Highway 74 and you’ll enter the Qualla Boundary, the 100 square mile home of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. You’re welcome there. In fact, the Tribe is hoping you’ll stop by. This community is betting on more than gaming to grow the local economy. They’re counting on tourism.
Travel west through the North Carolina mountains on Highway 74 and you’ll enter the Qualla Boundary, the 100 square mile home of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. You’re welcome there. In fact, the Tribe is hoping you’ll stop by. This community is betting on more than gaming to grow the local economy. They’re counting on tourism.
Mike Lubbock, Executive Director,Sylvan Heights Waterfowl Park and Eco-Center There are many things that lure people to a destination. In Halifax County, it’s the birds that have visitors flocking to the area. The Sylvan Heights Waterfowl Park and Eco-Center boasts it has the largest waterfowl collection in the world. With colors so vibrant and sound so unique, it would be easy for visitors to imagine they’re in some exotic location. But, Sylvan Heights’ nine acre facility is in Scotland Neck, North Carolina. The park is home to more than 1000 birds, 170 different species. It started out as a breeding center for zoos all over the world. The Lubbocks have tended the birds and the family business for 40 years.
There are many things that lure people to a destination. In Halifax County, it’s the birds that have visitors flocking to the area. The Sylvan Heights Waterfowl Park and Eco-Center boasts it has the largest waterfowl collection in the world. With colors so vibrant and sound so unique, it would be easy for visitors to imagine they’re in some exotic location. But, Sylvan Heights’ nine acre facility is in Scotland Neck, North Carolina. The park is home to more than 1000 birds, 170 different species. It started out as a breeding center for zoos all over the world. The Lubbocks have tended the birds and the family business for 40 years.
An old ABC store is transformed into a doctor’s office. A dilapidated storefront is brought back to life. In a special North Carolina Now series, entitled North Carolina Rising, UNC-TV shows you how one rural community in Greene County is trying to reinvent itself and lure new residents to come see what Hookerton has to offer.
An old ABC store is transformed into a doctor’s office. A dilapidated storefront is brought back to life. In a special North Carolina Now series, entitled North Carolina Rising, UNC-TV shows you how one rural community in Greene County is trying to reinvent itself and lure new residents to come see what Hookerton has to offer.
Sometimes protecting the economic future means preserving your heritage. A group of more than 30 commercial fishermen found a way to buy the last remaining fish house on Ocracoke Island. A NC Rural Development Grant made it possible. See what this business means to the community and the tourist industry in this remote area
Sometimes protecting the economic future means preserving your heritage. A group of more than 30 commercial fishermen found a way to buy the last remaining fish house on Ocracoke Island. A NC Rural Development Grant made it possible. See what this business means to the community and the tourist industry in this remote area