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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The Alabama Entrepreneurial
Research Network, based in The University of Alabama’s Culverhouse College
of Commerce, has received a $50,000 grant from the Delta Regional Authority to continue
its program of fostering business opportunities in the state’s rural areas.
The grant will be administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Two USDA representatives,
Teresa St. John, area specialist, and Patricia R. Butler, rural development specialist,
were on campus recently to discuss the grant with Cindy Jones, UA director of the
Office for Sponsored Programs, and the co-directors of the Alabama Entrepreneurial
Research Network, Annette Watters of the Center for Business and Economic Research,
and Paavo Hanninen, director of UA’s Small Business Development Center.
The Alabama Entrepreneurial Research Network works through chambers of commerce and
industrial development authorities to provide business services to people starting
small businesses, services such as viable business plans, Internet technology and
other resources that are usually out of the financial reach of many small businesses.
“If these rural communities are going to grow and prosper, we have to find
a way to increase employment opportunities, and one way is through the creation of
new local businesses,” Hanninen said. “The lack of jobs in many of these
areas forces people, many of them young people, to leave home to look for work and
better living conditions.”
The Delta Regional Authority is a federal-state partnership serving a 240-county/parish
area in an eight-state region. It is designed to remedy severe and chronic economic
distress by stimulating economic development and fostering partnerships that will
have a positive impact on the region’s economy.
At the local level, the Authority coordinates efforts with a combination of agencies.
Assisting it are Local Development Districts, regional entities with a proven track
record of helping small municipalities, counties and parishes improve basic infrastructure
and stimulate growth. The Authority also partners with USDA’s Rural Development
Administration. Through their network of state and local offices, the Rural Development
Administration assists the Delta Regional Authority not only with project evaluation
criteria for proposed projects but also with the administration of projects.
The Alabama Entrepreneurial Research Network assists businesses in Perry, Sumter,
Greene, Hale, Marengo, Wilcox and Dallas counties, but plans are to extend into Monroe
and Choctaw counties. The Alabama counties are included in the Delta Regional Authority’s
service area, thus the Authority is making the grant.
Sandy Smith, executive director of the Monroeville Chamber of Commerce, welcomed
the news about the grant, some of which will be used in Monroeville.
“If you are a Fortune 500 company you don’t have problems getting business
information, but it costs ordinary people a lot of money to get that information on
their own. What I want to do is bring the information down to the grassroots level
so that everyday businesses can use it.”
Under the terms of the grant contract, the money can be used to identify and analyze
business opportunities that will use local natural and human resources; identify,
train, and provide technical assistance to existing or prospective rural entrepreneurs
and managers; and establish business support centers and otherwise assist in the creation
of new rural businesses.
The UA undergraduate business program at the Culverhouse
College of Commerce, is ranked 53rd nationally by U.S. News and World Report.
The undergraduate accounting program at the Culverhouse School of Accountancy is
ranked number 25 nationally in the latest Public Accounting Report rankings.
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