Rusting cabin, Allendale County, S.C.

Rusting, vernacular cabin just east of Sycamore, S.C., on Confederate Highway.
Rusting, vernacular cabin just east of Sycamore, S.C., on Confederate Highway.

This old, rusting vernacular house east of Sycamore, S.C., is in the middle of the six-county impoverished area that the Center for a Better South has worked with area and state leaders to apply for a federal Promise Zone designation.  Read about our work here.

While the farmhouse seems to be unoccupied, but may be used as a hunting cabin, it’s easy to see good workmanship in the framing.  Structures like this dot the countryside throughout the Southern Crescent, a reminder of tenant farming of days gone by.

Sycamore, a village to the west of about 180 people, is about 60 percent white with a 35 percent black community of residents.  Unlike the whole of Allendale County with its almost 40 percent poverty rate, poverty is comparatively low at 10 percent in Sycamore.

Photo by Andy Brack, Center for a Better South, Oct. 1, 2014.  All rights reserved.

Center is integral in Promise Zone application

For the last few months, the Center for a Better South has been working behind the scenes with folks at the Southern Carolina Alliance and other organizations to push our South Carolina Work Group‘s goal of ensuring an application for a Promise Zone designation from the federal government on behalf of people living in the lower part of the state.

Today, we can announce that the application has been filed and, while we don’t know whether the Southern Carolina region will be named a Promise Zone, we’re tickled pink at the hard work of all involved.

To get an idea of what we worked on, let us encourage you to read this commentary posted earlier today by Better South President Andy Brack as part of his Statehouse Report weekly publication:

A promising opportunity for a poor part of the state

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher

NOV. 21, 2014 — Imagine if there were some kind of program — a little something extra — that could give pervasively poor places a better chance so they could be more like most of America.

Imagine how such a program could create better job opportunities to stabilize family finances, reduce crime to make communities safer and improve education so children could expand economic mobility.

In January 2013, President Obama announced a pragmatic effort to help overlooked places in America. In his State of the Union address, Obama said he would designate 20 “Promise Zones” — special urban, rural and tribal communities where the federal government would partner with communities to make life better.

14.1121.promisezoneWhat’s smart about this effort is how it doesn’t drop a big pot of money on poor communities. Instead they have to come up with real plans on how to fix things. Then they can apply for federal help through existing grant programs. But the bonus: communities that get the designation will get human capital — trained federal workers who will help make applications for existing grant money to grow jobs, reduce crime or improve education. For these regions with low tax bases, that’s practical help. Next, the Promise Zone communities get a few extra points when an application is scored — a little bump because they’re persistently poor areas with a lot of challenges. That’s smart, too, because it gives these areas a realistic chance to compete for funding, instead of always being on the short end of the stick because they’re small and often forgotten.

Today, South Carolina’s poorest region applied for a Promise Zone designation. The Southern Carolina Alliance (SCA), an economic development nonprofit that covers Allendale, Bamberg, Barnwell, Colleton, Hampton and Jasper counties, is leading an effort to secure the designation for just over 90,000 people in this southern tip of the Palmetto State.

In this area west of Interstate 95, the poverty rate is 28.2 percent, including one sector with a poverty rate just shy of 50 percent of residents. Unemployment is 14.8 percent — more than twice the state average. Crime rates are too high. The schooling that most kids get is substandard, recognized just last week by the state Supreme Court in a long-awaited landmark case on inequitable school funding.

As part of the Southern Carolina Promise Zone application, the SCA, in coordination with the counties, nonprofits and private entities, proposes to energize job growth strategies that would help small farmers grow foods to be sold in the state’s metropolitan areas and keep hundreds of millions of dollars spent on food in the Palmetto State. Some 90 percent of the $10 billion in food we buy in South Carolina goes out of state.

Other job growth strategies call for special attention to agribusiness, such as food processing plants; creation of construction jobs by rehabilitating poor housing and building more affordable housing units; growing green-related jobs through a program to upfit homes to allow residents to save on energy costs and implementing a proven program to boost financial stability of low-income families. Also proposed: a revolving loan fund to generate more small businesses; education measures for more job training to expand skill sets; scholarship programs; early reading help; more prosecutors to curb career criminals and gang activity; and a peer victim advocate program in local schools.

SCA leader Danny Black says his group wants the region to be named a Promise Zone because it’s just plain good for areas that have been ignored for far too long.

“It’s the correct area of the Southeast to do something like this because we are hurting in all of the areas that they want to touch,” he said. “It’s something that allows us to bring quality of life issues and economic opportunities to a part of the state that really needs it.”

Tim Ervolina, head of the United Way Association of South Carolina, said his organization is excited about the possibility of a Promise Zone in the Southern Carolina area.

“It’s not just about the additional resources,” he said. “It’s about the opportunity to use those resources to build lasting community infrastructure which can bring sustainable change.”

Indeed. It’s about time. We’re keeping our fingers crossed.

Green shutters, Williamsburg County, S.C.

13.1001.sc_greendoors

Former editor Linda W. Brown found this old building with fastened green shutters near Workman Crossroads in western Williamsburg County, S.C.

UPDATE:  We first ran this picture on Oct. 1, 2013, and offer it today to steer you to a brand new section of the BEST pictures of the Southern Crescent project.  Click here and you can find more than 30 of the most compelling images that we’ve offered since we got started more than 18 months ago.

“I’m not sure if this was an old store that had a shed added to it or exactly what its function was,” Brown wrote.  “I think it’s a pretty cool old building, whatever its purpose was earlier in its life.”

We wholeheartedly agree.  Old buildings like this can be found across the rural South on farmland that has gone fallow and where tenant families moved on a generation or two ago.  Or in small towns near railroad tracks that no longer carry trains.

Just under 34,000 people live in Williamsburg County, which is about the number who lived there in 1900, according to Census figures.  Population peaked in 1950 at 43,807, but has dropped slowly since then.

About two-thirds of county residents are black, with almost  all of those remaining being white.  Only 2 percent of those in the county are of Hispanic descent.  Some 32.8 percent of residents live in poverty, according to the Census.  Of the county’s 1,921 firms, 36.5 percent are black-owned — a percentage that is three times South Carolina’s average.

Copyrighted photo taken on Sept. 27, 2013 by Linda W. Brown  All rights reserved.

Old store, Jamestown, S.C.

Old store, Jamestown, S.C.
Old store, Jamestown, S.C.

Kingstree, S.C., photographer Linda W. Brown admits that this old store in Jamestown in Berkeley County isn’t technically in the Southern Crescent.  But the surrounding rural community, buffered by tens of thousands of acres of national forest, certainly does fit the image of the Crescent region with its vintage gas pumps that harken back to a time of country groceries as focal points of communities.

Copyrighted 2014 photo by Linda W. Brown.  All rights reserved.

Old commercial building, Millen, Ga.

Old hotel or bank, Millen, Ga.
Old hotel or bank, Millen, Ga.

VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown believes this three-story building in Millen, Ga., once served as a hotel or a bank.  Another view.

Millen, which had a population of 3,492 in 2000, is the county seat of Jenkins County, which was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.

 

Eclectic farmhouse, Ohoopee, Ga.

Farmhouse near Ohoopee, Ga.
Farmhouse near Ohoopee, Ga.

VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown showcased this “eclectic vernacular farmhouse” from Ohoopee, Ga., in rural Toombs County back in 2011.

Vidalia onions  make the county more prosperous than neighboring counties.  Still, about 25 percent of county residents live below the poverty level.  The median household income is $32,464 — more than $17,000 below the national average.

Photo taken 2011, by Brian Brown.  All rights reserved.

Dried sunflowers, Florence County, S.C.

Dried sunflowers dot a field in rural Florence County, S.C.
Dried sunflowers dot a field in rural Florence County, S.C.

Dried sunflower stalks like the field in front an old barn in rural Florence County, S.C., in this photo taken by Kingstree photographer Linda W. Brown.

Florence County had 137,948 people, according to a 2012 Census estimate.  Its poverty rate — higher in the rural areas than the county seat of Florence, averaged 19.4 percent in 2010.

Copyrighted photo taken in October 2014 by Linda W. Brown.  All rights reserved.

“Carolina snow,” Florence County, S.C.

Cotton field near Sardis, S.C.
Cotton field near Sardis, S.C.

Fields across South Carolina are white with “Carolina snow” as the season’s cotton harvest is underway.  This field, captured by photographer Linda W. Brown of Kingstree, S.C., near Sardis in rural Florence County, S.C.

Florence County had 137,948 people, according to a 2012 Census estimate.  Its poverty rate — higher in the rural areas than the county seat of Florence, averaged 19.4 percent in 2010.

Copyrighted photo taken in October 2014 by Linda W. Brown.  All rights reserved.

Bales of hay, Florence County, S.C.

Bales of hay near Scranton, S.C.
Bales of hay near Scranton, S.C.

Recently-baled hay is ready for the winter in this field west of the small town of Scranton in rural Florence County, S.C.

Florence County had 137,948 people, according to a 2012 Census estimate.  Its poverty rate — higher in the rural areas than the county seat of Florence, averaged 19.4 percent in 2010.

Copyrighted photo taken in October 2014 by Linda W. Brown.  All rights reserved.

Autumn, Florence County, S.C.

Barn in Florence County, S.C., overlooks soybean field.
Barn in Florence County, S.C., overlooks soybean field.

This rusting, old barn overlooking a soybean field looks like autumn to photographer Linda W. Brown of Kingstree, S.C.  The barn is in rural Florence County.

Florence County had 137,948 people, according to a 2012 Census estimate.  Its poverty rate — higher in the rural areas than the county seat of Florence, averaged 19.4 percent in 2010.

Copyrighted photo taken in October 2014 by Linda W. Brown.  All rights reserved.