Woodlands will receive $1.89M award
ELKINS — An organization based in Elkins will receive almost $1.9 million to create economic growth in the region, officials announced this week.
Woodlands Community Lender, on behalf of the Mon Forest Towns Partnership, has been awarded $1,897,136 by the Appalachian Regional Commission to deploy a community driven model for sustainable recreation-based economic growth.
The work will be spread across 12 local towns in the Monongahela National Forest region, including Cowen, Davis, Durbin, Elkins, Franklin, Marlinton, Parsons, Petersburg, Richwood, Seneca Rocks, Thomas and White Sulphur Springs.
This award is part of a recently announced $68.2 million award package supporting 65 projects in 188 coal-impacted counties through ARC’s POWER (Partnerships for Opportunity and Workforce and Economic Revitalization) Initiative, which directs federal resources to economic diversification projects in Appalachian communities affected by job losses in coal mining, coal power plant operations, and coal-related supply chain industries.
“ARC’s POWER initiative supports coal-impacted communities’ preparation for the next phase of Appalachia’s economy, while ensuring that residents have a say in the course of their own futures,” said ARC Federal Co-Chair Gayle Manchin.
“The investments announced in this round of POWER will help train workers, advance new industries, and build upon the progress already being made toward a brighter future full of economic opportunity for our region.”
Following the announcement, Josh Nease, executive director of the Mon Forest Towns Partnership, said, “For over seven years, the Mon Forest Towns Partnership has been working together to develop and fine-tune this collaborative model for regional economic growth.
“This funding from ARC and our partners supports the deployment of our strategic plan across the entire Mon Forest Towns region which will better connect the towns to the National Forest and to each other, promote the region as cohesive tourism and recreation destination, and advance our work to firmly establish each town as a gateway to the Mon. Special thanks to Woodlands Community Lenders for their ongoing support of the Partnership.”
Woodlands Community Lenders “fosters entrepreneurship and community revitalization by providing access to capital and technical assistance to businesses and non-profit organizations located in the underserved communities of Barbour, Randolph, and Tucker counties,” according to the organization’s website.
Additional support for the Mon Forest Towns Partnership is provided by the organization’s 12 participating towns, the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation, The Conservation Fund, the West Virginia Department of Tourism, the Just Transition Fund, the USDA Forest Service, the WVU Outdoor Economic Development Collaborative, and Sara Cottingham Consulting.
Including the most recent award package, ARC has invested more than $484.7 million in 564 projects impacting 365 coal-impacted counties since POWER was established in 2015.
ARC’s investments have helped create or retain nearly 54,000 jobs and prepare nearly 170,000 workers and students for new opportunities in entrepreneurship, broadband, tourism, and other growing industries, officials said in a press release.
More information about the Mon Forest Towns Partnership’s ARC award and mission to collaboratively build a sustainable recreation economy in the Monongahela National Forest region can be found at Monforesttowns.com.