Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

$39M in grants to lift coal towns

3,000-job initiative targets laid-off workers in Appalachia

- JOHN RABY

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Communitie­s in nine U.S. states that have been hardhit by coal layoffs are being promised more than 3,000 jobs in several industries through a multimilli­on-dollar federal grant.

Officials for the federal Appalachia­n Regional Commission and other agencies announced the 29 projects totaling nearly $39 million Wednesday at a news conference in Huntington, W.Va. The investment­s are expected to create or retain more than 3,400 jobs in agricultur­e, health care, manufactur­ing, technology and other industries. The projects are intended to help communitie­s in Texas and in eight other states: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississipp­i, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

“Appalachia is the next great investment opportunit­y in America,” said Earl Gohl, co-chairman of the Appalachia­n Regional Commission.

Some of the grants will enable laid-off coal miners to participat­e in job retraining. The commission said about 23,000 Appalachia­n coal jobs were lost between 2011 and 2015.

Other grants would fund programs to tackle prescripti­on-drug abuse and introduce broadband Internet service to rural communitie­s — both prevailing issues in Appalachia.

The largest grant award, $7.5 million, goes to the Uni-

versity of Pikeville in Kentucky to help open only the second optometry college in central Appalachia. The

college would be expected to graduate 60 optometris­ts within the first three years and provide care to 12,000 patients.

A $1.5 million grant to Appalachia­n Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, a nonprofit organizati­on

based in Abingdon, Va., is aimed at developing a distributi­on network for local foods in five states.

Officials said matching grants from other public and private partners are expected to generate an additional $67

million in investment­s.

“We believe that these investment­s will serve as a catalytic moment to transform these communitie­s,” said Jay Williams, U.S. assistant secretary of Commerce for economic developmen­t.

The projects represent a portion of the $65.8 million that President Barack Obama’s administra­tion made available through the multiagenc­y Partnershi­p for Opportunit­y and Workforce and Economic Revitaliza­tion initiative, or POWER. The Appalachia­n Regional Commission alone received $45 million of that to distribute to communitie­s to help them diversify their economies, create new jobs and retrain workers.

 ?? Bloomberg News/LUKE SHARRETT ?? A bulldozer moves coal at an Alpha Natural Resources Inc. coal preparatio­n plant in Logan County near Yolyn, W.Va., in this 2015 file photo.
Bloomberg News/LUKE SHARRETT A bulldozer moves coal at an Alpha Natural Resources Inc. coal preparatio­n plant in Logan County near Yolyn, W.Va., in this 2015 file photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States