Partners board member and Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker was recognized by First Lady Michelle Obama at an event at the White House on Wednesday for his efforts to end chronic homelessness among veterans in Salt Lake City. Mayor Becker was present with the First Lady as she announced a new initiative, the
Mayors Challenge to End Veteran Homelessness, with 77 mayors, four governors, and four county officials on board as of the annoucement.
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The U.S. Senate voted Wednesday to confirm Partners trustee and former Youngstown Mayor Jay Williams as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development, putting him in charge of the Economic Development Administration (EDA).
The mission of the EDA is "to lead the federal economic development agenda by promoting innovation and competitiveness, preparing American regions for growth and success in the worldwide economy." The EDA has a number of tools that it brings to bear in carry out its mission, including "technical assistance, post-disaster recovery assistance, trade adjustment support, strategic planning and research and evaluation capacity".
Williams has served as a member of the Partners for Livable Communities board of trustees for five years, since 2009. Williams rose as to political prominence in 2005 with his election as the first African-American mayor of Youngstown, Ohio.
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Entrepreneurial American Leadership Award
Richard C.D. Fleming is honored for his commitment to building livable and sustainable cities as a civic entrepreneur for more than 30 years while engaged in private sector and civic initiatives to revitalize cities and metropolitan communities in Atlanta, Denver, and, for the past 17 years, St. Louis.
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Terms:2011, Awards, Board, Chamber of Commerce, Community Development, Community Engagement, Downtown Development, Economic Development, St. Louis, MO, Visioning & Planning
Tuesday August 9th will be a big day of change for former Mayor of Youngstown, Ohio and Partners Trustee Jay Williams. Williams will be taking up his new appointment by President Obama as the Director of the Office of Recovery for Auto Communities and Workers which assists areas of the country negatively affected by the retrenchment of the auto industry to identify federal resources that may be used as part of their recovery efforts. By virtue of his being mayor of the largest community in the Mahoning Valley, Williams has had a front-row seat to the reorganization of the auto industry.
Jay Williams was instrumental in helping Partners develop its Institutions as Fulcrums of Change program strategy; which focused on how we can use libraries, museums, performing arts centers, boys and girls clubs, and chambers of commerce to reposition communities that have suffered devastation in the downturn and in the new economic order, and how can they use their creativity and neutrality to be centers of excellence, i.e. fulcrums of change. With the focus on utilizing anchor institutions as centers of redevelopment in Youngstown, Williams worked with Partners to spear the Ten Living Cities Network, a consortium working for identity preservation and economic resurgence in the Ten U.S. Cities most affected by the post-industrial age.
Prior to his appointment to the Office of Recovery for Auto Communities and Workers, Jay Williams was the City of Youngstown’s first African-American mayor, and being first elected at 33 years old, was also it’s youngest. Under the leadership of Mayor Williams, the Youngstown 2010 Vision/Planning “right-sizing” initiative has been recognized and rewarded by a number of notable organizations including, The Wall Street Journal, U.S. News and World Report, the American Planning Association, and Governing Magazine. In August 2009, Entrepreneur Magazine listed the city of Youngstown among the ten best cities in the United States to start a business. Mayor Williams was also recognized in 2009 as one of Governing Magazine’s public officials of the year. He was also the recipient of the 2007 John F. Kennedy New Frontier Award.
You can read more about Jay Williams appointment from the U.S. Department of Labor
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Partners’Board member Geoff Anderson, President of Smart Growth America, was recently named one of the “most influential leaders” in sustainable community planning and development, by Partnership for Sustainable Communities. Alongside Partners’ recent Bridge Builders Award recipient Christopher Leinberger, Geoff Anderson was acknowledged for his dedication and achievements instrumental in growing the Smart Growth field. With a 13 year tenure at the EPA, Anderson was central to creation of the agency’s Smart Growth program, and cofounded the Smart Growth network, the New Partners for Smart Growth Conference, and popular website smartgrowth.org.
Smart Growth America continues to function as one of the nation’s premiere clearing houses reporting on and devising the latest methods for smart growth development. SGA is, “ the only national organization dedicated to researching, advocating for and leading coalitions to bring smart growth practices to more communities nationwide.” Through coalition building, policy development, and research, SGA explores cross-sector efforts dedicated, in the simplest form, to enhance livability for all.
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Partners’ board member Mick Fleming, President of American Chamber of Commerce Executives (ACCE), contributed a cover article to the Winter edition of their publication, Chamber Executive. Mr. Fleming sought to contribute to the thinking and discussion around what makes a person influential.
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"Governor Glendening and Partners for Livable Communities understand the relationship between livable, walkable places and economic prosperity. Smart growth results in places and regions with more housing and transportation choices, better access to shops and schools and a healthy environment. These are the neighborhoods—whether urban, rural or suburban—where people and businesses want to be. They attract new jobs and hold on to them over time as well as maintaining a higher level of housing and property values (Governor Parris N. Glendening).”
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In his recent mayoral address to Salt Lake City, Partners trustee Ralph Becker announced his plans to construct a new light rail system in a broad attempt to “move Salt Lake forward despite tough economic times (Becker, 01/04/11).” Throughout his speech, Mayor Becker highlighted the role in which light rail transit could enable the city to enhance civic assets ranging from small and vibrant businesses to that of the locally treasured neighborhood known as the Sugar House. With the help of a $26 million federal grant, Mayor Becker has continued forward on his ambitious plans to bring back the street cars of the city by first constructing the Sugar House line and expanding the lines beyond the limits and into downtown Salt Lake.
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Partners’ board member Sam Williams, President of the Metro Atlanta Chamber, carried the banner for business leadership in helping to solve urban problems during remarks last month to the TEDxAtlanta conference. Calling for business leaders to fulfill roles as “urban statesmen,” Williams articulated a vision shared by Partners in which business leaders and elected officials can work together as members of a team to find creative and innovative solutions to urban problems. Service on Partners’ board is just one way in which Mr. Williams works daily to translate this vision into reality.
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Partners’ board member William “Bill” Reilly, former Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, has recently concluded work with the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, which he co-chaired along with former Senator Bob Graham. Preliminary reports issued by the Commission this month criticized BP and its subcontractors for insufficiently prioritizing safety in their management cultures and in their operations. The Commission’s final report is scheduled to be released on January 11.
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How does a city aspire to be livable when the outside public seemingly brands it as ‘dying?’ How does the city grow when it is told that is 'shrinking’? With eyes that are turning away from the core industrial cities and onto the technological hubs of the twenty-first century: can the city sustain itself? For Mayor Jay Williams of Youngstown, OH, hearing his city being labeled by Forbes Magazine as one of Americas 10 Fastest-Dying Cities, inspired him to take the city in a new direction; one that leveraged successful development upon its own definition.
At the “ Building Livable Communities” forum held at Washington, DC's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden on September 22, 2010, Mayor Williams held a detailed discussion on how civic institutions in Youngstown redefined their role to promote dynamic change as amenity rich centers.
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The Alliance for Regional Stewardship (ARS) announced today that Robert H. McNulty has been awarded the 2010 John Parr Award, bestowed by ARS for a lifetime of outstanding individual leadership excellence in advancing regional stewardship of metropolitan areas. Read More>
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In his firs  t trip “Down Under”, Chattanooga Mayor Ron Littlefield found many similarities between his community and that of Mayor Paul Pisasale of Ipswich, Australia. Both cities are essentially bisected by waterways and both are focusing on returning to the riverfront, quality of life and sustainable development as keys to a brighter future. “I was very impressed by all that I saw there,” said Littlefield. “Both cities have the same heart. Ipswich even has a walking bridge using an old railroad trestle which mirrors our restored Walnut Street Bridge in downtown Chattanooga.” Littlefield noted that other features were remarkable such as both cities having railroad museums and even such interesting details as back-in angle parking in the downtown area. “We thought that we were doing something different in Chattanooga” Littlefield noted. Mayor Littlefield was invited to Australia to talk about Chattanooga’s transformation from “the most polluted city in America” in 1969 to a clean, green co  mmunity of today that regularly the 2 mayors makes top ten lists of most livable cities. While in Australia, he also spoke to attendees at a conference sponsored by the International Riverfoundation, to a gathering of members of Partners for Livable Communities Australia, and a meeting of the Moreton Regional Council. In a meeting with executives of Cisco Systems in Brisbane, Littlefield outlined Chattanooga’s world class fiber optic smart grid system that is moving his community ahead in the digital age and “once more, putting Chattanooga on the short list of progressive cities”.
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Partners’ long-term board member Neal Peirce has recently announced the expansion of Citistates Group coverage from national to global. Along with this new focus comes a new website- Citiscope.org.
Last Friday, for an audience of several thousand at the concluding session of the Fifth World Urban Forum in Rio de Janeiro, Partners' Board Member Neal Peirce was able to make the official announcement.
The text of the announcement is below. For a full taste of what the service will be like, several lead stories included, please take look at the beta web site—Citiscope.org. It includes the "who, what, when and how" of the new service, which will be launched full-bore in the near future.
Remarks to the World Urban Forum—by Neal Peirce
Across the continents, today's cities are coming up with new and intriguing solutions to the massive problems cities face in this century. From city halls to neighborhood councils, the wave of originality is amazing.
But the mainstream media too often fails to "get it." News of cities' disasters or crises or scandals get coverage. But there are rarely reports of original, noteworthy innovations—stories that could lead to inventive adaptation in other cities, whether they're next door or across oceans.
We think the gap imperils cities' learning and progress. In close cooperation with the World Urban Campaign, assisted by Cities Alliance and UN-Habitat, we've developed a new global news service—we're calling it Citiscope.org.
Our goal: to report regularly on cities' notable new approaches and solutions on every issue from climate adaptation to local food self-sufficiency to slum upgrading. Professional journalists in the breakthrough cities will be invited to write the stories —objectively, clearly, for worldwide dissemination. We'll aim for a constantly growing global reader base. And media worldwide will be invited to pick up the reports.
The website, again, is Citiscope.org. Please check out our first group of stories. Submit story ideas yourself. Help us tap the world's top expert commentary, seek out inventive links, help inventive NGOs spread word of their star experiments, track the vital urban trends—and make a real difference for this Century of the City.
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In his recent State of the City address, Partners' newest Trustee, Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker outlined the amazing livability initiatives Salt Lake City accomplished during 2009.
From encouraging collaborative governance to facilitating the installation of over 38 miles of bike trails, Becker exemplifies Partners’ message of livability. At the end of his address, Ralph quoted his friend Daniel Kemmis, the Director for the Rocky Mountain West at the University of Montana: “We must lead with an emphasis on livability…Livability has become the gold standard of our economy.” With those rousing words in mind, we are excited to see what 2010 holds for Salt Lake City.
To read the Mayor's full State of the City speech, click here>
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