Southeast Crescent Regional Commission

Southeast Crescent Regional Commission
Type: Regulatory Commissions
Parent organization:
Employees:
Executive: Federal Co-Chair
Budget: $11 million (Expected disbursement in FY 2023)
Address: 1201 Main Street, Suite 1980, Columbia, SC 29201
Website: https://scrc.gov
Creation Legislation: Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (The Farm Bill)
Wikipedia: Southeast Crescent Regional CommissionWikipedia Logo.png
Southeast Crescent Regional Commission
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Mission
The Southeast Crescent Regional Commission aims to promote and encourage economic development in the Southeast region, focusing on areas of persistent poverty. Its mission includes investing in public infrastructure, business development, natural resources, and workforce development to improve the quality of life for residents.
Services

Economic Development Grants; Infrastructure Investment; Workforce Development; Business Development

Regulations

The Southeast Crescent Regional Commission (SCRC) is one of seven federal regional commissions and authorities authorized by the United States Congress to address instances of major economic distress in certain defined socioeconomic regions.

Southeast Crescent Regional Commission
File:Southeast Crescent Regional Commission seal.png
Seal of the Southeast Crescent Regional Commission
Agency Overview
Formed 2008
Jurisdiction Federal government of the United States
Agency Executive Jennifer Clyburn Reed, Federal Co-Chair
Website
scrc.gov

Origins

The SCRC was created by the 2008 U.S. Farm Bill, which also created the Northern Border Regional Commission (NBRC) and the Southwest Border Regional Commission. All three commissions share common authorizing language modeled after the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC). The SCRC received regular appropriations of $250,000 annually from FY2010 through FY2020 but did not form during that time due to the absence of an appointed federal co-chair.[1]

Legislative history

The SCRC concept was first introduced by university researchers working on rural development issues in 1990 at Tuskegee University’s Annual Professional Agricultural Worker’s Conference for 1862 and 1890 Land-Grant Universities.[1]

In 1994, the Southern Rural Development Commission Act was introduced in the United States House Committee on Agriculture, which would provide the statutory basis for a “Southern Black Belt Commission.” While the concept was not reintroduced in Congress until the 2000s, various nongovernmental initiatives sustained discussion and interest in the concept in the intervening period. Supportive legislation was reintroduced in 2002, which touched off other accompanying legislative efforts until the SCRC was authorized in 2008.[1][2]

Governance

In August 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden nominated Jennifer Clyburn Reed as Federal Co-Chair of the Southeast Crescent Regional Commission.[3] The U.S. Senate confirmed her appointment on December 9, 2021. In this role, Reed will work on economic and poverty issues in the Southeastern United States.[4]

Service area

The SCRC was created to address economic distress in areas of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida not served by the ARC or the Delta Regional Authority (DRA).[1]

References

External links

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