US EDA Awards $100,000 Grant for Southwest Indiana
Local Sources - The Indiana Economic Development Association Foundation is pleased to announce that the US
Economic Development Administration (US EDA) has awarded a $100,097 grant to assist four regions in
Indiana in creating a strategy to leverage each region’s agricultural assets.
The grant will fund
implementation of the Rural Economic Development Model (REDM): a first-of-its-kind process
developed in Indiana to assist rural communities in creating new economic development opportunities
for Indiana’s farmers.
The US EDA grant will enable 14 counties in Southwest Central Indiana comprised of Crawford, Daviess,
Dubois, Greene, Harrison, Jackson, Knox, Martin, Lawrence, Pike, Spencer, Perry, Orange, and
Washington Counties to examine the agricultural output in their regions to identify opportunities for
creating new markets, applications, or processing facilities that can enhance the local value of the
agricultural output.
This will create new markets and income for local farmers, generate more local jobs
connected to agriculture, and capture a greater source of revenue for the region’s communities.
The Rural Economic Development model was created as a collaboration between the Indiana Economic
Development Association (IEDA), Indiana State Department of Agriculture and the Purdue Center for
Regional Development (PCRD) with support from the Indiana Farm Bureau, Indiana Corn Marketing
Council, Indiana Soybean Alliance and the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs.
Dubois Strong President, Ed Cole, shared his enthusiasm for the initiative, “Agribusiness is an important
economic driver for our county. Through the collaboration with PCRD and Radius Indiana, we look
forward to identifying new value-added agricultural opportunities in Dubois County and our region.”
The Rural Economic Development Model employs a proprietary technology developed by PCRD that
enables counties and regions to examine the agricultural output unique to their locale, and then
engages a local planning team composed of local economic development officials, farmers, and other
local stakeholders to create and implement a plan to leverage local agricultural outputs, expand existing
agribusinesses and attract new economic opportunities. The 24-month process will be completed in the
Summer of 2023.