America’s Rural Future:The Brookings-AEI Commission on U.S. Rural Prosperity held site visits and a field hearing in the Mississippi Delta as part of a two-year, bipartisan effort to develop policy recommendations to strengthen rural communities nationwide. The Commission is co-chaired by former Senator Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) and former Governor Chris Sununu (R-NH), with research led by Senior Fellows Tony Pipa (Brookings) and Brent Orrell (American Enterprise Institute).
The Commission encountered a region marked by local creativity and innovation, institutional resilience, and a deep cultural legacy that shapes community identity and supports locally led solutions amid structural constraints, despite the significant economic and health disparities between the Delta and the rest of the rural United States.
Over three days, Commission members met with residents, business owners, educators, students, health providers, pastors, public officials, and community development leaders to examine how access to capital, community institutions, and public investment shape economic, health, and educational outcomes across the Delta.
Hear Commission Members’ Insights
Former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and Congressman Mike Espy, a native of Yazoo City in the heart of the Delta, oriented the Commission to the fundamental role that history and culture play in the region. Espy, the first African American to represent Mississippi in Congress since Reconstruction, recounted his grandfather’s creation of a mutual financial association that essentially provided workers’ compensation, as well as the first African American hospital in the state, in the 1920s. Espy sponsored the Lower Mississippi Delta Development Act, which laid the groundwork for the Delta Regional Authority. The discussion underscored a central aim of the site visits: to understand how national policy is experienced in practice by listening directly to people shaping rural communities.
Senior Fellows Brent Orrell and Tony Pipa at the evening reception at Hal & Mal’s in Jackson.
Commission Co-Chairs Heidi Heitkamp and Chris Sununu speak at the reception.
Jackson Mayor John Horhn welcomes the Commission.
Bill Bynum and Mike Espy in conversation during a fireside chat.
Public hearing highlights long-term disinvestment as a core constraint
On March 4, the Commission hosted a public field hearing at Mississippi Valley State University (MVSU) in Itta Bena. Delta Regional Authority Federal Co-Chair Corey Wiggins, Greenville Mayor Errick Simmons, and HOPE CEO and Commission Member Bill Bynum testified before an audience that included MVSU students, local residents, and community leaders. The speakers emphasized that the Delta’s challenges stem from long-term disinvestment in infrastructure, financial systems, health care, and education, rather than a lack of local ambition. They pointed to federal programs that are very fragmented, too costly to access, and insufficiently aligned with local realities to deliver meaningful and lasting support. MVSU students used the public comment period to raise concerns about food insecurity and the limited availability of opportunities that would make staying in the Delta after graduation viable.
Dr. Corey Wiggins, Federal Co-Chair of the Delta Regional Authority, at the public forum at MVSU.
Greenville Mayor Errick Simmons addresses the Commission at Mississippi Valley State University.
Commission Member Bill Bynum speaks during the panel discussion.
Commission Members (left to right) Val Davidson, Trent McKnight, Noa Meyer, and Phil Chow follow the discussion at MVSU.
Commission Members (left to right) Stephen Wilson, Tom Halverson, Janti Soeripto, and Phil English listen during the public forum.
An MVSU student speaks during the public comment period.
Commission Member Keith Humphreys speaks to a reporter after the public forum.
Structural constraints and policy-reality mismatch limit access to federal resources
The themes from the public hearing carried across site visits, with participants repeatedly emphasizing that the Delta is not constrained by a lack of ideas or entrepreneurship, but by structural barriers that limit access to investment and resources. Limited administrative capacity amid the complex web of fragmented federal programs, many with sizable cost-share and reporting requirements, prevents many rural communities from applying for and managing federal funds. Access is also mediated by relationships and political capital, which can disadvantage communities with weaker ties to state and federal decisionmakers. Outmigration compounds these constraints.
At the same time, local examples pointed to alternative pathways. Trusted community institutions and embedded organizations often bridge these gaps, expanding access to capital and sustaining development efforts over time. Local leaders emphasized the importance of right-sizing patient capital, and pairing it with hands-on technical support and partnerships with rural development intermediaries, as a means to strengthen rural economic infrastructure and support local renewal and entrepreneurship.
Commission Co-Chair Heidi Heitkamp speaks with former Jackson Mayor Harvey Johnson during a panel in Yazoo City.
Ines Polonius, CEO of Communities Unlimited, addresses the Yazoo City panel on the structural barriers limiting rural communities’ access to federal resources.
Commission Members Keith Humphreys and Bill Bynum take notes as Rhea Williams-Bishop, director of the Mississippi and New Orleans program at the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, speaks about the need for sustained coaching to help small communities navigate federal funding.
Betty Priest Reed, a homeowner and Y-16 participant, tells the Commission she is proud to have purchased her home on her own terms.
Alpresteon “Sabrina” Billings, CEO of Gateway Community Development Corporation, discusses the Y-16 model for converting long-term renters into homeowners.
Jena Reed, vice president of community and economic development at Hope Enterprise Corporation and Hope Credit Union, speaks with the Commission about financing and support structures underlying the Y-16 housing initiative.
Tim Lampkin of Higher Purpose Hub, Clifton Williams of Guaranty Bank, and Dr. Glendscene Williams of Delta State University discuss entrepreneurship and economic development in the Delta.
Faith, community-based institutions, and the architecture of
Progress in the Delta runs through institutions people trust. Local nonprofits, civic associations and partnerships, and churches often serve as these connective pillars. A panel of pastors convened by Mission Mississippi described how churches and faith-based organizations serve as trusted civic anchors, providing charitable services, mentorship, and spaces for dialogue across racial, political, and denominational lines. That role extended across sectors: Delta Health Alliance reaches homebound patients through pastor referrals, while Quitman County Elementary School strengthens its literacy coalition through church-based outreach. Faith and community-based institutions function as a linchpin for hope, progress, and reconciliation, laying the groundwork that connects residents to resources that would otherwise remain out of reach.
Local pastors participate in a roundtable on community needs and rural resilience in the Delta.
Commission Member Charles Cotherman during the panel discussion with local pastors.
The Commission at the Leland Medical Clinic, hosted by Delta Health Alliance CEO Karen Matthews, Medical Director Dr. David Weber, and Board Member Lisa Percy, who outlined rural health challenges and their response.
Commission member Val Davidson asks a clinic staff member about primary care access and community health efforts in the Delta region.
Health and education illustrate local leadership and institutional resilience
The Leland Medical Clinic provided an example of a primary care model built on community trust and data-driven service delivery. Participants described an approach that integrates local relationships with data collection to reach populations the formal systems often overlook. The mismatch between Medicaid work requirements and the reality of the seasonal rural workforce risks limiting access to care, underscoring how federal policies might better reflect local labor conditions rather than applying standardized models across contexts.
Local leaders also educated Commission members on Mississippi’s roughly 20-year reform trajectory to improve early childhood literacy, which has successfully driven significant gains in reading outcomes, particularly when adjusted for demographic and socioeconomic factors. Policy shifts have been supported by sustained, locally led efforts, with Quitman County Elementary School nearly doubling literacy proficiency rates since 2018 through a coalition involving the school, churches, nonprofits, and community partners, each addressing barriers beyond the reach of any single institution.
Kelly Butler speaks with Tony Pipa during the evening program at the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in Indianola, Mississippi.
Principal Katrena Stuckey-Ford leads Commission members on a tour of Quitman County Elementary School.
Panelists at Y.O.U. Early Learning Academy (near Quitman County Elementary School) discuss early childhood education in the Delta. Left to right: Walter Atkins (Superintendent of Quitman County School District), Sandra Wilborn (Director, Y.O.U. Early Learning Academy), Chaquina Taylor (Community Impact Coordinator at Quitman County Development Organization), and Mario Robinson (Community Impact Lead Associate at Save the Children).
Dr. Nakisha Watts, Community Impact Advisor at Save the Children, addresses attendees at Y.O.U. Early Learning Academy.
Looking ahead
As the Commission departs Mississippi, members reflected on a region defined by strong locally rooted capacity alongside persistent structural constraints. The Delta has leadership, ingenuity, and a dense network of institutions—including schools, clinics, churches, and community development financial institutions—that continue to address gaps left by decades of underinvestment. What remains limited, however, is the capacity, coordination, and policy alignment to sustain and scale these efforts.
These dynamics are not unique to the Delta. The Commission observed similar patterns during its visit to North Dakota and Minnesota, pointing to recurring challenges as it continues its national listening tour. These insights will inform the Commission’s ongoing work to develop a comprehensive rural strategy, culminating in its final recommendations in 2027.
Media coverage reflects regional resonance and policy interest
The Commission’s Mississippi Delta visits generated coverage across local and regional media outlets, reflecting interest in the policy questions raised during the site visits.
- Clarion-Ledger, February 24, 2026.
“Listening to the Delta, shaping the nation’s rural future”
(op-ed by Commission member Bill Bynum) - The Greenwood Commonwealth, February 28, 2026.
Gerard Edic, “Commission to visit Delta next week; group collecting ideas for boosting rural communities” - Mississippi Public Broadcasting (MPB), March 6, 2026.
Elise Catrion Gregg, “Rural America is investable: National Commission tours Delta to see what works for rural America” - Mississippi Today, March 6, 2026.
Gwen Dilworth, “National Commission visits Delta to discuss problems, solutions for rural communities” - The Delta News, March 5, 2026.
De’Nautis Liddell, “Leaders nationwide discuss strategies to improve the Mississippi Delta” - The Greenwood Commonwealth, March 5, 2026.
Gerard Edic, “Panel discusses boosting access to federal resources”
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