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Put Up or Shut Up – Civil War Helena Plan may be city’s last chance for revitalization

The time is rapidly approaching for Helena-West Helena and the Phillips County community to put up or shut up. On the surface that statement bay seem a little harsh or brash but think about it.

For almost three decades now, this area of the Delta has been trying to pull itself up by the bootstraps out of a hole that was dug when the family farms practically went belly up. For almost 30 years, Helena-West Helena and Phillips County have been trying to come up with a viable industry to come here and take roots. It simply hasn’t happened.

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:
This past week, I was part of a group of 35 people who traveled to Arkadelphia as a part of the National Conference on Rural Philanthropy, to tour and hear an information session hosted by Dr. Wesley Klluck, chair of the Clark County Strategic Plan.

Council on Foundations Rural Conference News

Dear Colleagues,

A few days ago, we concluded the 2009 Philanthropy and Rural America Conference at the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock. This event was about asking what we can do to grow philanthropy in rural America, not what others can do for us. As philanthropists, we need to be the innovators to find new solutions to old problems.

For three days last week, more than 150 foundation and other leaders focused on one mission: to develop a strategic plan for rural philanthropy and get it back on foundations’ agendas.

Civil War Helena plan to be unveiled

Focus on city’s historical attractions this Saturday

If you hear the sounds of cannons firing in Helena-West Helena Saturday morning your ears are not deceiving you. It will be part of the ceremonies unveiling a master polan to promote the city’s Civil War heritage. It wall begins with the opening ceremonies at 9 a.m. at the future site of Freedom Park, just across from Estevan Hall.

WRF selects Southern Bancorp as Foundation’s main banking provider

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (July 6, 2009) – The Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation (WRF) has selected Southern Bancorp to provide all primary banking services for the Foundation.

Following a competitive request for proposal process, WRF selected Southern Bancorp based on Southern’s services, rates and fit with the Foundation’s mission. By banking with Southern Bancorp, WRF will leverage its financial resources to deliver greater mission impact beyond traditional grantmaking. This new business relationship between WRF and Southern Bancorp represents a mission-related investment that will enable Southern Bancorp to increase its impact in distressed rural communities and thus support the mission of WRF.

Why the Delta matters

In his 1997 book Rising Tide, which chronicles the great Mississippi River flood of 1927, author John Barry closes with a rumination on societal changes.

“A society does not change in sudden jumps,” Barry writes. “Rather, it moves in multiple small steps along a broad front. Most of these steps are parallel if not quite simultaneous; some advance farther than others, and some even move in an opposite direction. The movement rather resembles that of an amoeba, with one part of the body extending itself outward, then another, even while the main body stays back, until enough of the mass has shifted to move the entire body.”

So it is in the Delta of east Arkansas. There have been no sudden leaps forward following decades of economic decline-no giant automobile assembly plants, no ethanol boom, no discovery of oil. But thereare many talented people taking those “multiple small steps,” and their numbers appear to be increasing even as the region’s overall population declines.

Helena-West Helena Civil War site expected to boost Delta's tourism

A proposed $1.5 million project unveiled Saturday will highlight the lives of Phillips County residents, both black and white, during the Civil War.

Officials say visitors will learn a little-known part of the area’s history once the plans are completed in 2011.

They hope the project will entice Civil War buffs to visit the Phillips County town of Helena-West Helena and help increase tourism.

4 alternatives to payday lending

Webmaster Note: Michael Rowett serves as the Chairman of Arkansans Against Abusive Payday Lending (AAAPL) on behalf of Southern Good Faith Fund, an affiliate of Southern Bancorp.

Highlights
Payday loans often create more problems than they solve.
Banks, credit unions offer alternatives for tapping quick cash.
Credit counselors can rearrange finances to free up money.

The recession drags on, and many consumers facing financial emergencies are looking for quick cash. For years, payday lending — in which borrowers get small loans to tide them over until the next payday — has been a popular option.

Currently, there are about 22,000 storefront payday loan stores nationwide, according to the Consumer Federation of America in Washington, D.C. On average, the industry makes $40 billion in loans and collects $6 billion in finance charges from borrowers each year.

But taking out a payday loan isn’t necessarily a smart financial move for the borrower.

Town puts focus on Civil War past

Helena-West Helena to host events, outline black history exhibits.

Leaders will unveil a plan Saturday to showcase the city’s Civil War history.The plan, created by the firm Mudpuppy and Waterdog Inc., of Versailles, Ky., will include interpretations of 29 Civil War sites in Phillips County. Besides the plan’s unveiling, the city will host a number of events that are free and open to the general public.

New Fisher fellow will open state’s first charter school outside Helena

KIPP Delta’s expansion plans supported by Walton Foundation

KIPP announces that Maisie Wright, one of 17 KIPP Fisher Fellows for 2009-10, will open a new public charter school in the Arkansas Delta. The Fisher Fellowship, which prepares aspiring principals to open and run new KIPP schools, is a yearlong leadership-training program that begins this month with a summer Institute at New York University. KIPP Delta is also announcing an opportunity to three Delta communities to sponsor this new KIPP school.