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The Rural Voice, 1989-11, Page 30TAKING CHARGE RURAL COMMUNITIES UNITE TO MAKE THEIR OWN DECISIONS ABOUT THE FUTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT Too often, rural people feel overwhelmed by urban -driven changes. Farming today supports only a small percentage of the population, investment pours into the cities and bypasses small towns, and young people leave to seek jobs elsewhere. Comm- unities seem vulnerable, and rural people wonder how to gain control over their own future. The answer to today's problems in rural commu- nities, of course, is much the same as it has always been: local co-operation. But barn -raisings and husk- ing bees have given way to a different sort of com- munity endeavour. Municipalities are banding to- gether to gain local autonomy, young people are being trained to deal with the realities of rural life today, and change is being directed, not simply endured. Paul Nichol lives on a farm in Huron County, and is a graduate student in Guelph's University School of Rural Planning and Development. Of late, he's been employed as a Community Development Officer for the "Saugeen Community," a group of 10 munici- palities that have joined forces to ensure a productive future for their region. Change is inevitable, it seems, and has been particularly hard on farm families, but communities can make the best of it. We asked Paul to share his observations as a development officer and to describe the work of the Saugeen Community. Nothing is constant except change. And change often creates winners and losers, sometimes dis- rupting traditional ways of life and transfiguring communities. In recent decades, change has not always benefitted the small towns and rural areas of Ontario. Rural parents and grandparents can point out the crossroads that used to support small communities. And while not many communities are threatened with extinction these days, there is cause for concern about the impacts of the trends shaping our small towns and rural areas. As the rural economy has under- gone transformations, the communi- ties it supports have also been forced to change. In the Huron County farm - by Paul Nichol ing community I grew up in, there are fewer farms than there used to be. Oh, the farm land is still there, but in many cases the people aren't. Farms have become larger through consolidations, and were often purchased by non- residents. Some of the homes of for- mer neighbours now stand empty. Others have long since been demol- ished, eroding what used to be a close, strongly knit neighbourhood. And it wasn't long ago that my father could drive down all the back streets of the local village, past each and every house, and tell me who lived there. Nowadays, my father would be hard-pressed to know three- quarters of the community, myself even less. The days of the stable, predictable rural community appear to be gone. This is but one side effect of the changes shaping rural Ontario today. Rural communities in Ontario are not dying, but they are facing pressure from many sources. As farms and farm populations have shrunk in num- ber, communities reliant on agriculture for support have faced decline as well. For some farming communities, the only way to survive has been by diver- sifying the local economy to create new jobs in areas like manufacturing, services, or tourism. And increasingly, this diversifica- tion has been supported by the farm- ing community because farmers and their spouses need off -farm work to keep their operations viable. Indeed, more than a third of the farm operators 28 THE RURAL VOICE