The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1981, Side 42

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1981, Side 42
40 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING, 1981 COUNTRYSIDE REDEVELOPMENT IS MAN'S LONG-TIME PROJECT by Elizabeth Whitney St. Petersburg Times Business Editor Promoting “the redevelopment of the American countryside” has been the hobby and the dream of G. B. Gunlogson for the last “30 or 40” of his 92 years. He and his wife Esther leave their winter condo in downtown St. Petersburg to drive to their home in Racine, Wis. Their car is packed with Gunlogson’s briefcases full of his writings and corre- spondence on what he says is an evolving “town and country economy.” Now with mid-census and preliminary 1980 census figures showing a trend back to the countryside, Gunlogson has been busy writing background papers to promote the organization of a nationwide Countryside Association which he envisions as “a coun- tryside chamber of commerce. ’ ’ Across the nation, Gunlogson says, there are about 16,000 countryside communities which, he stresses, are neither “rural” nor ‘ ‘ suburban. ” He defines a countryside com- munity as “any city primarily tied to a rural economy. ’’ In size they range from 1,000 to about 20,000 and have streets, utilities and services already in place. The dramatic migration turnaround of the 1970s — contrary to that predicted by most demographers — is particularly satisfying to Gunlogson. When he established his Countryside Development foundation with his own money after World War II, the big migration was from farm and small town to the big cities. When he first became interested in this movement, he visited more than 500 towns, talking with mayors and business people. Through the years he’s also sponsored surveys and influenced colleges to establish courses on countryside economics, noting especially those at the University of South- western Minnesota and the University of Georgia. His interest was sparked by his own life — which began on a farm his parents were homesteading “on the rim of a wilderness” in North Dakota. ‘ ‘We had oxen and horses but we began to dream of power farming,” he recalls. Later, as a mechanical engineer, he saw how power farming made it possible for each worker to produce 8 to 10 times more. This eliminated jobs for thousands of farm workers who flowed into the cities in search of work, reducing the farm popula- tion from 30-million in 1940 to 7.80-million in 1977 — a time span when overall popula- tion was growing. OVER TIME, we all know what hap- pened to many of these big manufacturing cities as industry and more affluent citizens moved out. Meanwhile notes Gunlogson, a “vast system of, highways, power lines and public facilities was being built across America.” He notes, too, that many big city-based plants have moved or started branches in established towns where parking is usually no problem. Small town people, he adds, have a pride in “their factory” that usually is missing in larger cities. The interrelationships between town and country, he says, “are only beginning to be developed. For example, more than half of all farm families derive more than half of their cash income from off-farm sources. ’ ’ Today, he adds, “Most of what once was rural has become modernized and restruc- tured into a new kind of town and country economy.”

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