11/10: SPR: 21st Century agenda in works for South
Southern Political Report: Tom Baxter: Group attempts to forge 21st Century agenda for region
"What kind of place do you want the South to be in 2020? That thought-provoking question was the subject which brought together more than 30 planners, politicians, academics and journalists – your humble scribe included – for a conference at Davidson College this past weekend by the Center for a Better South.
"The Center for a Better South is the grandchild of the LQC Lamar Society, which was founded in 1969 by a group of young Southern leaders, including former Mississippi Gov. William Winter, former North Carolina Sen. Terry Sanford, Alabama publisher H. Brandt Ayers and Mississippi writer Willie Morris, to forge a vision for a post-segregation South that would, as Sanford once put it, 'avoid making Northern mistakes in a Southern setting.'
"Proposing an agenda for the region took more courage 40 years ago took more courage than it does today, but arguably it has never been harder, in what the center’s president, Andy Brack, described as 'increasingly partisan and media-saturated world of small soundbites for big problems.'"
(Read more.)
Also in the South:
ARKANSAS: Pedestrians in state face more danger than many
FLORIDA: Gov. Crist moves away from previous support of stimulus package
GEORGIA: Smoking ban in state extended to prisons
KENTUCKY: State Chamber says state workers should pay more for health insurance
LOUISIANA: State turns to 'career diplomas' to cut high school dropout rate
MISSISSIPPI: State considers textbook rental system at public universities
NORTH CAROLINA: State pays millions to for state vehicles to sit parked
SOUTH CAROLINA: Wind turbines could be 8 miles offshore in SC
TENNESSEE: Nashville the site of today's Tennessee Solar Symposium
VIRGINIA: Rep. Perriello defends 'yes' vote on health bill
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Labels: health, smoking, solar, stimulus, textbook, transportation, turbines, vehicles

