Cheap as water

In the land of 10,000 lakes, is it possible that we can run out of water? Not likely, but our ability to access it seems to be changing. Last year, the dropping levels of White Bear Lake in suburban St. Paul made a great deal of news. The lake is a bellwether for the aquifers that lie below the Twin Cities. But communities in some parts of Greater Minnesota are starting to hear warnings about their water supplies, and other communities have been dealing with water issues for years. The Center’s next policy brief will be on the issue of groundwater and rural communities’ complex relationship with it. It’s necessary for everything. Without it, life would be a lot more difficult, and a rural economy would be all but impossible.

This week Marnie and Jim talk about aquifers, those giant underground sponges that hold water. Next week we’ll talk about our water infrastructure.

Cheap as water: Aquifers

Taking a snapshot of rural Minnesota’s voice

This week on Rural MN Radio, Jim and Marnie discuss network mapping. A group of community development practitioners from foundations, the U of M Extension, rural development commissions and other groups in central and west central Minnesota get together on a regular basis in LIttle Falls to share information and talk about what’s going on in rural Minnesota. After last year’s Finding the Voice of Rural Minnesota report, this group, Friends in the Field, decided to work out just what that voice looks like. The preliminary data is in and the group plans to have a report out later this summer.

Taking a snapshot of rural Minnesota’s voice

Craft beer boom

This week on Rural MN Radio, Jim and Marnie talk to Jan Saxhaug, labor analyst for the Department of Employment and Economic Development, about the rise of the boom in craft beer breweries. Saxhaug wrote an article on the topic for the December issue of DEED’s publication Minnesota Economic Trends.

Craft beer boom