Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

In Appalachia, Trump’s proposed budget has people worried

- By Adam Beam

Crystal Snyder was trying to figure out life as a single mom when she lost her job at a West Virginia T-shirt factory.

The 37-year-old had no college degree, mostly because she married at 16, divorced at 19 and had two children. Unsure what to do, Snyder heard about a program through the Coalfield Developmen­t Corp. that would hire her and pay for her to get an associate degree. Now she works full time for one of the nonprofit’s agricultur­e offshoots.

“I’m learning how to be a farmer. I’m growing food, I’m going to school,” she said. “It has helped me in ways I can’t even understand yet.”

Coalfield Developmen­t Corp. is a nonprofit funded by the Appalachia­n Regional Commission. The ARC is a 52-year-old federal agency that seeks to create jobs in 420 counties across 13 states, including the West Virginia and Kentucky coalfields.

It’s also targeted for eliminatio­n by President Donald Trump.

Trump’s budget proposal has alarmed much of the region, including longtime Republican Congressma­n Hal Rogers, who represents the mountainou­s eastern Kentucky coal region where Trump won every county, a first for a Republican presidenti­al candidate.

“I am disappoint­ed that many of the reductions and eliminatio­ns proposed in the President’s skinny budget are draconian, careless and counterpro­ductive,” Rogers said.

The ARC began its work in 1965 as part of former Democratic President Lyndon Johnson’s famous “war on poverty.” In the past two years, the agency has spent $175.7 million on 662 projects that is says has created or retained more than 23,670 jobs.

That investment has paid off: In Kentucky, the commission has awarded $707,000 to the Eastern Kentucky Concentrat­ed Employment Program, which used the money to train 670 people who now have full time jobs earning a combined $13.6 million in wages.

Some of those wages were earned by Heather Smith, a 41-year-old in Annvile, Kentucky, who works from home for U-Haul.

“It has brought a lot of jobs to our region,” she said. “I really am for our president and I really like him. But that part I wish they could work on.”

In Alabama, where Trump won with 62 percent of the vote, the commission awarded $5 million last year to projects in 37 rural counties for jobs, technology upgrades and school programs and materials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States