South Dakota Leaders and National Experts Headline Conference to `Capitalize On Rural America'


DES MOINES, Iowa, July 20, 2006 (PRIMEZONE) -- Three South Dakota leaders join Emmy Award winners Ben Stein and Bill Kurtis to weigh in on the future and fortunes of their state at a major conference that focuses on both North Dakota and South Dakota in Sioux Falls, August 8-9, 2006.

The South Dakota contingent includes Rod Fouberg, CEO of Dacotah Bank in Aberdeen; Sheila Hoffman, founder and CEO, Golden Pond Software in Milbank; and Marty Shukert, partner in RDG Planning & Design and specialist in small-town revitalization. They will be panelists for an all-conference town meeting led by Bill Kurtis.

Governor Mike Rounds will speak at the conference's opening luncheon on August 8, and Representative Stephanie Herseth is scheduled to speak at dinner that evening.

"Capitalizing on Rural America -- the Dakotas" is sponsored by the Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines and continues a three-year series of dynamic dialogues about energizing and revitalizing rural America. The August conference is designed to introduce community leaders and community bankers from North Dakota and South Dakota to new models for everything from economic development to capital formation.

Stein, best known for his nerdy role in the movie, "Ferris Bueller's Day Off," and as host of Comedy Central's "Win Ben Stein's Money," applies his law and economics background to issues facing rural America. Stein will keynote the Sioux Falls conference.

A centerpiece of the conference is this year's version of the dialogue -- a town meeting moderated by Bill Kurtis, distinguished journalist and Emmy Award-winning producer of A&E's "Cold Case Files" and "Investigative Reports." As an angel investor in the small town of Sedan, Kansas, Kurtis is especially suited to his role in the dialogue.

The town meeting features a discussion among panelists and the audience. Kurtis guides the dialogue which is expected to cover issues such as entrepreneurship, jobs, capital resources and quality of life.

Joining South Dakota panelists are Rick Killion, editor of "Prairie Business," Grand Forks, N.D.; John Boehle, founder and CEO of Point2Point Airways, Grand Forks, N.D.; and Mary Erman, senior vice president and CEO of Starion Financial, Bismarck, N.D.

The dual themed conference offers educational forums for community bankers alongside special sessions for community leaders that focus on innovative ways to grow rural areas in the Dakotas.

Tom Walker, creator of the national model to develop an entrepreneurial economy, will lead a session on how to turn innovation into a business. He is COO of i2E in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Jerry Yoshitomi, an arts expert who has worked in small communities across the country, comes from California to share his wisdom and success stories. Andrew Skadberg, chief knowledge officer of AdventGX in College Station, Texas will focus on tourism as an economic development strategy.

Also on tap at the conference: The four towns in South Dakota that have received the Bank's Capital Community Award each year since the dialogues on rural America began. They are Belle Fourche, Highmore, Freeman, and this year's winner, Edgemont. Community representatives will "exhibit" their town, share success stories and interact with conference attendees.

The conference will be held at the Sheraton Sioux Falls & Convention Center. For more information, contact Angie Richards at (800) 544-3452, ext. 1014 or arichards@fhlbdm.com.

Editor's note: There is no charge to attend the conference, but registration is required. The public can register by calling (800) 544-3452 or online at www.fhlbdm.com.

The Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines is a $50 billion wholesale bank with more than 1,200 members which include commercial banks, saving institutions, credit unions and insurance companies. The Bank is owned by its members and receives no taxpayer funding. The Des Moines-based Bank serves Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, and is one of 12 regional banks that make up the Federal Home Loan Bank System.



            

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