Hillary Clinton Fact Sheet: Strengthening Rural America
Hillary is on the road in Iowa today at Des Moines Area Community
College in Ankeny IA. With Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, who has endorsed her, she laid
out her plan for rural America.
Earlier, she expressed heartbreak at the sad news out of Virginia.
Heartbroken
and angry. We must act to stop gun violence, and we cannot wait any
longer. Praying for the victims' families in Virginia. -H
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton tours the Tool and Die
Lab at the Des Moines Area Community College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015,
in Ankeny, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, tours the Tool and
Die Lab at the Des Moines Area Community College, Wednesday, Aug. 26,
2015, in Ankeny, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton and Agriculture Secretary
Tom Vilsack tour the Tool and Die Lab at the Des Moines Area Community
College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015, in Ankeny, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie
Neibergall)
FILE
- In this July 26, 2015, file photo, Democratic presidential candidate
Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. In
her many visits to the leadoff caucus state, Clinton has included
multiple remarks with regional references. The approach is a stylistic
shift from Clintons failed 2008 presidential bid, which began poorly
with a third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses. (AP Photo/Charlie
Neibergall, File)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton waits to be introduced
before speaking about rural issues at the Des Moines Area Community
College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015, in Ankeny, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie
Neibergall)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, followed by Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack, left, waves before she speaks about rural issues
at the Des Moines Area Community College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015, in
Ankeny, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, followed by Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack, left, arrives to speaks about rural issues at the
Des Moines Area Community College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015, in Ankeny,
Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at the Des Moines
Area Community College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015, in Ankeny, Iowa. The
transmission of classified information across Hillary Clintons private
email is consistent with a culture in which diplomats routinely sent
secret material on unsecured email during the Obama and George W. Bush
administrations, according to documents previously made public and
reviewed by The Associated Press. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks about rural issues
at the Des Moines Area Community College, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015, in
Ankeny, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Hillary Clinton’s Plan for a Vibrant Rural America
America’s
rural communities lie at the heart of what makes this country great.
The affordability of our food, the independence and sophistication of
our energy supply, and the strength of our small communities all depend
on a vibrant rural America. Despite their critical role in our economy,
too many rural communities are not sharing in our nation’s economic
gains. Unemployment and poverty are too high, commodity prices have
recently declined, and necessary components to economic security –
including accessible health care and affordable education – are
unavailable in too many rural communities. We must do more to ensure the
vitality of our rural areas—not only because America’s 46 million rural
residents make up nearly 15 percent of our population, but also because
rural America provides the foundation for the entire country’s economic
success.
Clinton’s focus on strengthening rural America for the next generation focuses on four key areas.
Spurring investment to power the rural economy.
Small and medium sized businesses power the rural economy but many are
being held back by inadequate infrastructure, poor access to credit and
capital, and insufficient incentives to invest. To unleash the potential
of America's rural businesses, farms, and ranches – and create jobs and
grow wages for working Americans – Clinton will:
Expand access to equity capital for rural businesses by increasing the number of Rural Business Investment Companies (RBICs),
which make equity investments in small rural businesses—driving growth
and creating jobs in rural areas. RBICs are approved through the Farm
Credit Administration, funded by Farm Credit Banks, and directly link
entrepreneurs to capital. They help to build "capital networks" in rural
areas, which research suggests is a major factor impacting venture
capital access in states with large rural populations.1
Simplify regulations for community banks
to ensure they are focused on funding our small business and are not
swallowed up by a never-ending cycle of examinations and paperwork.
These banks are vital to our rural businesses—a National Federation of
Independent Businesses survey found that more than 70 percent of rural
respondents identified their primary financial institution as a local
bank, compared to 49 percent of urban respondents.2 Clinton's
plan will cut red tape for banks that don't measure their assets in
billions – while making sure community banks are never used as a Trojan
Horse to undermine Dodd-Frank reforms for the largest Wall Street Banks.
Create a national infrastructure bank and invest in infrastructure
to improve the country's rural transportation, water, and broadband
infrastructure so that it meets the demands of our modernizing
industries and creates jobs in rural America. Crucially, Clinton will
focus on increasing access and adoption of high-speed broadband so that
rural small businesses can better connect to the global economy, farmers
and ranchers can benefit from agricultural technology, and students can
benefit from distance learning.
Streamline, expand, and make permanent the New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC)
to increase the amount of credits available to low-income communities
and add new credits for hard-hit communities that have seen jobs and
production depart. Since the NMTC was amended in 2006 to ensure
non-metro communities were allocated their fair share, the credit has
created tens of thousands of jobs and financed over 600 businesses and
facilities in rural America.3 This tax relief for long-term
investments in rural and other communities will be paid for by raising
capital gains rates on short-term trading and churning.
Strengthen USDA grant programs
to make them less about bureaucratic buckets and more about funding
flexibility, leveraging local resources, and measuring results. For
example, Clinton will partner with Land-Grant Colleges and Universities,
Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribal Colleges, and
Hispanic Serving Institutions to expand the USDA StrikeForce Initiative.
StrikeForce targets rural development resources to create jobs and
revitalize areas of the country where poverty rates exceed 20
percent—about 85 percent of which are in rural areas.
Raising agricultural production and profitability for family farms.
A strong agricultural economy remains a critical cornerstone of a
vibrant rural economy. Farmers and ranchers supply food for America's
dinner tables, invest in farm machinery and supplies, and provide
domestic energy resources that fuel small businesses. The agriculture
economy also drives America's larger economic success—accounting for
about $800 billion in economic activity each year and supporting one out
of every eleven jobs in the country. To ensure that America's farmers
and ranchers have the tools they need to succeed Clinton will:
Support the next generation of farmers
by doubling funding for the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development
program to provide education, mentoring, and technical assistance to
aspiring farmers and ranchers. Clinton will also fight to enact her New College Compact
to tackle student debt. A National Young Farmers Coalition survey found
that 30 percent of respondents said that student loans delayed or
prevented them from farming.4
Build a strong local and regional food system
by doubling funding for the Farmers Market Promotion Program and the
Local Food Promotion Program to expand food hubs, farmers markets, SNAP
recipients' access to fresh food, and to encourage direct sales to local
schools, hospitals, retailers and wholesalers. Clinton's focus on this
issue stems from the “Farm-to-Fork” initiative she promoted in New York
as Senator.
Provide a focused safety net for farmers and ranchers
by continuing to make progress in targeting federal resources in
commodity payment, crop insurance, and disaster assistance programs to
support family operations that truly need them in challenging times,
like when weather-related disasters devastate whole areas of the
country.
Fight for comprehensive immigration reform
because America's immigrants and migrant workers play a critical role
in developing and supporting America's agricultural economy.
Promoting clean energy leadership and collaborative stewardship.
Rural America is an energy leader, providing clean electricity and
transportation fuels to the rest of the country, reducing our dependence
on foreign oil, and making the air we breathe cleaner and safer. Over
the past decade, American wind power workforce has grown 10-fold and
domestic renewable fuels production has expanded by more than 350
percent—creating jobs, boosting farm incomes, and driving billions of
dollars of investment into rural communities. Clinton believes that
America can't afford to cede our leadership in developing and deploying
advanced clean fuels and clean electricity that will grow our economy,
lower our energy bills, combat climate change, and make America the
clean energy superpower of the 21st Century. Rural America's rich
endowment of natural resources extends far beyond energy, too, and
Clinton will partner with local communities to protect our lands,
waters, and wildlife. Clinton will:
Fully fund the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP),
which provides assistance to producers – including a set-aside for
minorities and veterans – who are working to conserve and improve
natural resources on their farms and ranches. Additional funding will be
directed toward proven initiatives like the Regional Conservation
Partnership Program, which provides communities with flexible funding to
set priorities and lead the way on efforts to improve water quality,
combat drought and wildfires, expand wildlife habitat, and enhance soil
health.
Strengthen the Renewable Fuel Standard
so that it drives the development of advanced cellulosic and other
advanced biofuels, protects consumers, improves access to E15, E85, and
biodiesel blends, and provides investment certainty.
Support the bio-based economy's dynamic growth
by doubling the loan guarantees made through the Biorefinery, Renewable
Chemical, and Biobased Product Manufacturing Assistance Program. The
loan guarantee program helps fund the creation of bio-processing plants
and emerging technologies that, for example, convert agriculture and
landfill waste into productive chemicals and non-petroleum based
materials. In 2013, the bio-based economy generated $369 billion and was
responsible for over 4 million American jobs.5
Launch her Clean Energy Challenge
to give states, cities, and rural communities ready to lead on clean
energy the tools, resources, and flexibility they need to succeed. In
doing so, Clinton will achieve the twin goals of having more than half a
billion solar panels installed in this country by the end of her first
term and producing enough clean renewable energy to power every home in
America within 10 years of her taking office. This includes expanding
the Rural Utilities Service and other successful USDA energy programs
and ensuring the federal government is a partner, not an obstacle, in
getting low-cost wind and other renewable energy from rural communities
to the rest of the country.
Expanding opportunity in rural communities across America.
Clinton believes that you should be able to live, work, and raise a
family anywhere you choose. But increasingly, young Americans in rural
areas have been forced to look outside of their communities to find
quality heath care, a good education, or a stable job. America's rural
areas are each unique, and each faces its own set of challenges—but
every American, in every community, deserves a fair chance. That is why
as Clinton fights to strengthen the rural economy and raise wages for
working Americans, she will also work to ensure everyone has a solid
foundation for success. Clinton will:
Make critical investments in our youngest learners
by doubling funding for Early Head Start and working to ensure that
every 4-year old in America has access to high-quality preschool in the
next ten years. Rural children disproportionately lack access to quality
preschool—during the 2013-14 school year, ten states did not offer a
preschool program for four-year-olds, eight of which had a higher
percentage of students enrolled in rural schools than the national
average.6
Ensure cost won't be a barrier for college.
For students from rural areas – who attend two-year institutions at a
higher rate than their peers in metro areas – community colleges provide
a pathway to obtain high-skilled manufacturing, service and
agricultural jobs in their local communities.8 Clinton's New
College Compact incorporates President Obama's plan to make community
college tuition free so that young students and displaced workers can
gain the skills they need to succeed. Research also shows a ten-percent
gap in college attainment for rural students compared to the national
average. Reasons for this gap include a lack of access to college
preparatory courses in high school and cost barriers to attending 4-year
institutions. Clinton is committed to ensuring that rural schools
access college-prep courses in high school through on-line learning. And
Clinton's New College Compact will work to ensure that students can
attend a 4-year public college without taking loans for tuition.
Improve health care access for rural Americans
by further integrating telehealth, remote patient monitoring, and other
information technologies into our broader health system. Nearly a sixth
of Americans live in rural areas, but barely a tenth of physicians
practice there.9 Clinton will explore cost-effective ways to
broaden the scope of healthcare providers eligible for telehealth
reimbursement under Medicare and other programs, including federally
qualified health centers and rural health clinics. She will also call
for states to support efforts such as those by doctors and state medical
boards to streamline licensing for telemedicine. Additionally, she will
examine ways to expand the types of services that qualify for
reimbursement, such as treatments that use remote patient monitoring
technology – while ensuring that eligible services improve health and
drive value. We need to harness public resources and private innovation
to expand telehealth and information technology to benefit patients in
rural areas and all over the country.
Ensure that our rural communities have better access to substance abuse prevention, early intervention, and treatment.
Substance abuse is striking small towns and urban areas across America.
But in rural America, the disease is particularly devastating—between
1999 and 2009, the death rates associated with drug poisoning grew by
394 percent in rural areas compared to 279 percent for large central
metropolitan counties.10 In the coming weeks Clinton will release a comprehensive plan to address our substance abuse epidemic.