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Tips for vitalizing small town Iowa

We asked leaders in several rural Iowa towns for ways small Iowa towns could be vital. Jobs are a given, although those interviewed said having jobs, alone, does not guarantee vitality if other dynamics are not present in town.

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Tips for vitalizing small town Iowa
A huge statue, Albert the Bull, greets motorists coming into Audubon, Iowa, from the south on U.S. Highway 71. Bearing the claim of the world’s largest bull, the statue is a nod to the Operating T-Bone days when Audubon area cattle feeders took a train to Chicago to sell their cattle. Albert A. Kruse, then president of First State Bank in town, led the first trips starting in 1951.
READ THE MAIN STORY: HOW A HANDFUL OF IOWA TOWNS THRIVE, RISE ABOVE RURAL DECLINE
With support from the Solutions Journalism Network

IowaWatch asked leaders in several rural Iowa towns for ways those communities could be vital. Jobs are a given, although those interviewed said having jobs, alone, does not guarantee vitality if other dynamics are not present in town.

Have a happy community, growth and community involvement, Sara Slater, Audubon County economic development and tourism coordinator, said. “Your Main Street is full at the end of the day, weekends. I think those are, really, ways to say, ‘We’re doing OK.’”

“Surround yourself with people that believe in your community,” offered Jill Tueth, owner of the Snyder’s gift store in Humeston. “‘Debbie Downer’ does not do well.”

Other factors found during IowaWatch's four months of reporting on this topic:

Pat Kinney/IowaWatch

Denver schools Superintendent Brad Laures stands in the gym of the Cyclone Center.

IowaWatch reporting in this project was made possible by support from the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to rigorous and compelling reporting about responses to social problems. The Caroll Times Herald published this story under IowaWatch’s mission of sharing stories with media partners.

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