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Oklahoma residents get reliable, safe drinking waterIt's a hard living when your daily major concern is getting safe drinking water or figuring out how you can take a bath because your well has either dried up or the water isn't safe. But now, thanks to a combination of $23.6 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act grants and loans from USDA's Rural Development, the people who live in rural McCurtain County, Oklahoma, will have that safe drinking water and won't have to choose between washing their dirty clothes or taking a bath. Watch this ARRA success story video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vgvs2MBcri0. The folks in McCurtain County are using the Recovery Act funds to build a new water system for the area--four pump stations, three storage tanks and miles of distribution lines. McCurtain County is one of 14 persistent poverty counties in Oklahoma. USDA's Economic Research Service defines counties as being persistently poor if 20 percent or more of the people who live there were poor over the last 30 years--using the decennial censuses. This project is just one of hundreds of USDA success stories made possible through the Recovery Act. Altogether, the Department has announced approximately $27.8 billion of the $28.0 billion in Recovery Act projects, benefiting people throughout the country. President Obama signed The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 into law on Feb. 17. It is designed to jumpstart the nation's economy, create or save millions of jobs and put a down payment on addressing long-neglected challenges so our country can thrive in the 21st century.
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