Skip to content
  • — DONATE NOW —
  • Like it? Steal it
  • IowaWatch
  • IowaWatch
  • About IowaWatch’s role with Investigate Midwest
  • Contact Us
  • Global Navigation
    • — DONATE NOW —
    • Like it? Steal it

IowaWatch - Part of The Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting

IowaWatch (https://www.iowawatch.org/2019/04/29/podcast-trip-to-small-iowa-town-gives-examples-of-needs-for-growth/)

  • About IowaWatch’s role with Investigate Midwest
  • Contact Us
  • Don't Miss
  • The IowaWatch Connection radio program archives
  • News about IowaWatch 2010-2022
  • Databases
small town business

Podcast: Trip To Small Iowa Town Gives Examples Of Needs For Growth

By the IowaWatch Simpson College Journalism Project | April 29, 2019
LikeTweet EmailPrint More
  • More on small town business
  • Subscribe to small town business

Austin Hronich/IowaWatch

Homes in disrepair, like this one in Humeston, Iowa, in March 2019, are a problem for business leaders, Realtors and potential new residents when trying to attract people to move to small towns,.

Listen as reporters in the 2019 IowaWatch Simpson College Journalism Project take you to small-town Iowa and the struggles those towns face.

This report is the result of an IowaWatch Simpson College Journalism Project involving student journalists in Simpson’s spring 2019 journalism seminar.

Reporters for the project were:

  • Randy Paulson
  • Zoe Seiler
  • Emily Carey
  • Austin Hronich
  • Taylor Bates
  • Dustin Teays

The journalists worked on this story starting in January 2019 with Lyle Muller of IowaWatch and Mark Siebert, Simpson assistant professor of multimedia communication.

Lyle Muller/IowaWatch

Left to right, Dustin Teays, Taylor Bates, Austin Hronich, Randy Paulson, assistant professor Mark Siebert, Emily Carey, Zoe Seiler.

Small Iowa towns are seeking ways to stem population declines, while state government invests in larger cities where the population is growing. This is happening even as the state tries some new efforts to revitalize its rural areas.

Reporting this spring by an IowaWatch Simpson College Journalism Project showed cities with populations more than 50,000 people received $61.3 million in direct financial assistance through state and federal grants and loans in 2018. Several of these communities also received assistance in the form of tax benefits.

Meanwhile, rural businesses and communities with fewer than 5,000 people received a little less than $24.9 million in direct financial assistance from the state and federal government, the reporting project revealed.

Assistance was awarded to businesses and communities for economic development purposes that include job growth and expansion as well as capital rehabilitation and renovation.

Read the project’s stories:

IOWA’S SMALL TOWNS STRUGGLE TO GAIN TRACTION AND GROW

HUMESTON SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS BAND TOGETHER TO REMAIN VITAL
VIDEO: UNDERSTANDING SMALL TOWN IOWA 
LEARN MORE ABOUT THE WEEKLY IOWAWATCH CONNECTION RADIO REPORT

LikeTweet EmailPrint More
  • More on small town business
  • Subscribe to small town business

Related Series

Iowa's Rural-Urban Divide

Tags
  • The Lead Story
  • economic development
  • Humeston
  • Iowa Department of Economic Development
  • Iowa towns
  • small town business
  • Travel Iowa

Read Next

  • How Small Town Business Owners In One Iowa Town Are Banding Together

    HUMESTON, Iowa — A small group of businesses in one southern Iowa town has found a way to stay open by banding together to attract spending customers to town, rather than compete against each other. “Why not Humeston?” Leigh Ann Coffey, owner of Sweet Southern Sass, said when asked why business owners choose to open a business in a small town.

Previous Story
Iowa's Small Towns Struggle To Gain Traction and Grow
Next Story
Evans: Free Speech Is Sometimes Uncomfortable
  • IowaWatch
  • Donate
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Staff & Contributors
  • Ethics & Accuracy
  • Work With Us
  • Our Supporters

Search This Site

Browse Archives

© Copyright 2023, Iowa Center for Public Affairs Journalism

IowaWatch is a member of the Institute for Nonprofit News

Built with the Largo WordPress Theme from the Institute for Nonprofit News.

Back to top ↑