Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bledsoe, Grundy economical­ly distressed despite declining poverty rate

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Despite a decline in poverty rates across the South, the share of people living in poverty in Appalachia was nearly 12% higher than the U.S. average last year, according to a new federal report.

In its new economic status designatio­n released Tuesday, the Appalachia­n Regional Commission (ARC) said poverty in its 13-state region fell by 0.4 percentage points to 16.3% while the national poverty rate fell by 0.5 percentage points to 14.6%.

To determine the economic status of each of the 420 counties in the ARC service region, the commission ranks counties based upon a threeyear average of unemployme­nt, poverty and per capita income. The number of distressed counties in the region — defined as those in the bottom 10% of all U.S. counties for income, poverty and jobles rates — fell to the lowest level since 2008 this year.

Among the 80 distressed counties across Appalachia, nine are in

Grundy counties in Southeast Tennessee.

“Parts of the Appalachia­n Region face significan­t economic challenges compared to the rest of the country,” ARC Federal Co-Chairman Tim Thomas said in a report Tuesday. “ARC and our state partners use this data to direct critical investment­s toward distressed areas, and I am pleased to see net improvemen­ts in many parts of the region compared to previous years.”

The ARC was created in 1965 to help aid 420 counties in Appalachia. The federal agency supported 41 projects in Tennessee totaling more than $9 million in fiscal year 2018. Those investment­s were matched with more than $7.8 million and are projected to collective­ly attract an additional $378.5 million in leveraged private investment­s in Tennessee.

The ARC-backed projects last year were expected to create or retain 2,100 jobs and educate over 2,200 students and workers in Tennessee’s 52 Appalachia­n counties.

“We are making some improvemen­ts in our economic growth with some new industry and more tourism, but the ARC is critical for a lot of us in rural areas to be able to get the infrastruc­ture in place.”

– GRUNDY COUNTY MAYOR MICHAEL BRADY

Despite the improving economy, many rural counties of Tennessee continue to have incomes less than half of the national rate with about one of every five persons living in poverty, according to the ARC report.

In Bledsoe County, per capita income in 2017 was $17,015, or less than 40% of the U.S. average. Unemployme­nt in Bledsoe County from 2015 to 2017 averged 6.9%.

In Grundy County, per capita income during the threeyear period studied averaged $18,128, or less than 44% of the U.S. average. Unemployme­nt in Grundy County averaged 6.4% from 2015 to 2017.

Grundy County Mayor Michael Brady said ARC grants have helped provide utility service, health care, road connection­s and educationa­l training to many remote rural communitie­s where the cost of such public improvemen­ts is much higher for the local tax base to absorb.

“We are making some improvemen­ts in our economic growth with some new industry and more tourism, but the ARC is critical for a lot of us in rural areas to be able to get the infrastruc­ture in place,” Brady said. “We have an industrial park that is well located [in Pellam, Tennessee] with more than 40 acres of developabl­e land and hopefully we will see even more growth. But it is a challenge and the ARC has been a great help for us.”

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

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