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Posts Tagged ‘Economic Development’

CEOs for Cities

Thursday, November 12th, 2009
by Craille Maguire Gillies

rethink11062009jpgThe connection between business and civic life is a little discussed but intertwined. (Jeremy Derksen wrote a bit about this for Unlimited in “City of Jobs.”) If the urban space was a Venn diagram, the civic, business, philanthropic and academic sectors would overlap. Each applies, to varying degrees, pressure points on city hall.

Now, one sector of that diagram is looking beyond corporate balance statements. A group of civic-minded CEOs in the U.S. started CEOs for Cities in 2001 to look at ways that cultural and financial capital contribute to the vitality of a city. Member include some big names, such as Richard M. Daley, the famed mayor of Chicago.

I first heard about CEOs for Cities from the great New York designer Scott Stowell. (Stowell’s Open created a new design identity for CFC.)

The group does all sorts of geeky things like commission studies such as “The Role of Colleges and Universities in Urban Economic Development.” Policy wonks and urban planning aficionados love this kind of stuff; in laymen’s terms, the point is to find ways that innovation in areas such as environmental stewardship can foster economic growth.

CEOs for Cities also had Portland-based economist Joseph Cortright develop something called City Dividends, which

calculates the monetary gains the top 51 metros could realize if they increase their college attainment by one percentage point (The Talent Dividend), reduce VMT by 1 mile per person per day (The Green Dividend) and reduce the number of people in poverty (The Opportunity Dividend) by one percentage point.

For instance, Portland has boosted its local economy by US$2.6 billion each year simply by having residents drive an average of roughly five kilometres fewer every day.

Even if you don’t live in the U.S., its blog is an interesting read for businesspeople who want ideas to implement in their own concrete jungles.

Majora Carter at Resilient Cities

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009
by Craille Maguire Gillies

I’m at the Resilient Cities/Gaining Ground conference this week in Vancouver. (You can followup updates by delegates by seaching for the #ggrc09 hashtag on Twitter;  one speaker joked about not believing he was saying “hashtag” in Vancouver.) The conference focuses on too many things to get into here, but part of it was re-imagining the city after peak oil. And part of that re-imagining was economic. Which explains why people such as entrepreneur-environmentalist Paul Hawken turned up to inspire the crowd of what I’m estimated was more than 500.

McArthur “Genius Grant” recipient Majora Carter came in yesterday from the Bronx, where she runs a green economic development consulting firm. Carter was one of the warmest speakers, smiling and sweeping her arms around. (Some people talk with their hands; Carter talks with her arms.)

“There was a time when local wasn’t a bad word or a buzzword. It was just a word. It was just how things were,” she said, while sharing stories about some of the economic and community redevelopment she’s done in the Bronx and elsewhere. She happens to be a TED alumnus also. Here’s a taste of her ideas.