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Free Ice Cream

Rancho Cordova is celebrating its All-America City Award by giving away free ice cream. Link here for more information,

Five  “ice cream socials” will be held at five different locations, all hosted by the City of Rancho Cordova.

The first celebration will be Saturday, August 28th, at Sunriver Park, 11120 Moose River Court, from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Complimentary ice cream and other frozen treats will be served, while quantities last. In addition, commemorative bookmarks will be distributed.

The other four ice cream socials will be 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.:
• Saturday, September 18th, at Sandpiper Park, 11830 Applolon Drive
• Saturday, September 25th, at Tuscany Park, 3460 Corvina Drive
• Saturday, October 2nd, at Mills Middle School track area, 10439 Coloma Road
• Saturday, October 9th, at Lincoln Village Community Park, 3480 Routier Road

“Our All-America City application demonstrated our great pride in our community, the diversity of our civic life, and the vigor and breadth of our community’s proactive and generous compassion,” said Rancho Cordova Mayor Ken Cooley.

Coping with Scarcity: The Lynwood Sports Association and Mobile Recreation Team

One of the biggest challenges facing communities in these tough economic times is just paying for basic services. Things we used to take for granted like a city baseball program for kids suddenly become unaffordable. It’s that or closing a fire station, etc.
That’s where the public/private/nonprofit partnerships really come in handy. The Lynwood Sports Association (LSA) is an all-volunteer organization that started off as a baseball program and evolved into a sort of adjunct parks and rec department, offering a full menu of academic, social and sports activities for 15,000 kids a year, who somehow manage to share the one large and four smaller neighborhood parks in Lynwood.

For instance, the organization partnered with the city to field a “mobile recreation team” that roams the city offering drop in programs for kids who live to far away to walk to the main city recreation/community center. Typically, these are what we often refer to as the “underserved” neighborhoods, some of the toughest, lowest income most crime ridden streets of Los Angeles County.

LSA is an important part of the community’s successful efforts to reduce crime and gang activity in the area.

Gastonia Councilmembers Back All-America City outreach

GASTONIA, N.C. (AP) – Officials in one North Carolina city are putting their paychecks on the line to make sure their community is known for a national honor.

Read the article here.

Chandler, All-America City Projects

We put together this abbreviated version of Chandler, Arizona’s jury presentation video to give you a sense of the community’s accomplishments.

Chandler, Arizona: population 253,393.

Most pressing community challenges: Growth and the need to connect older residents with newer ones. Also, providing resources to older parts of the community.

Community Projects

# 1: The Chandler Community Facilities is an innovative use of public space. What started as a new surface and subsurface water recharge facility for the Municipal Utilities Department, ended up being a combined use community center complete with a police substation, park, fishing lake, community meeting place and an environmental education center.

#2: The Chandler Care Center is a school based clinic to improve health and readiness for school. The center provides free acute-care medical treatment to more than 1300 babies and kids. The number is expected to double with the completion of new facilities.

#3: The Chandler Coalition on Youth Substance Abuse is a partnership to address the issue of underage drinking. The idea came after a local youth group called ICAN identified underage drinking as a critical issue among teens in the community.

Richard Harwood on Civic Engagement

Interesting post from Richard Harwood on why he doesn’t use the term “civic engagement” in his work at the Harwood Institute.

Meantime, we find ourselves in endless, mind-numbing meetings where we examine every element of our civic engagement work. But the real work doesn’t happen in our conference rooms, but in communities. And yet such navel gazing can blind us to the realities of communities, the challenges we must take on, and the true power we must exert to create a new force for change in communities. Endless talk and countless deliberations won’t get us there.

In my own work, the focus is on deeply understanding about people’s lives and the context of communities so people can be more strategic in their efforts to spark and mobilize change. It is about the dynamics of communities and the very conditions that enable or stymie change – such as the leaders, networks, relationships, norms, and boundary spanning organizations that underpin change. It is about how each of us must step forward to root our efforts in community and stay true to ourselves.

That and the fact that some people’s eyes glaze over when you  use the term, but sometimes it is unavoidable. Any ideas about a better way of saying it?

The Times Editorial Board Gets it

The El Paso Times editorial board:

“Mayor John Cook said, ‘I think our focus on children really impressed the judges.’

No doubt, because children are the future of any city and any society. Focusing on them cannot be anything but positive.

And El Paso’s delegation to the awards ceremony in Kansas City, Mo., played on that theme when it emphasized an El Paso program at public libraries promoting child literacy and health.

The award also shows that the reality of El Paso can overcome the myth in some quarters that El Paso is a violent border city. This assumption is too often made because El Paso lives in the shadow of violence of neighboring Juárez.

But that just shows the dangers of assumptions. El Paso is, and has been, designated one of the country’s safest major cities, and the murder rate here is significantly lower than in most other U.S. cities….”

Read the entire editorial here.

The Power of Community Journalism

Shannon Howard served as a captain of Team Ferguson, Missouri, for the 2010 All-America City Awards. She’s a writer and communications consultant who specializes in helping communities tell their story through marketing, special events and new media.

She contributes this guest blog post:

I’m disappointed to report that my hometown of Ferguson, Missouri, was among the 15 communities that did not win an All-America City Award this evening. Although our 22 team members devoted countless hours to preparing for the competition and truly gave it their best, our beautiful town was overlooked…as it often is.

You see, Ferguson is a historic suburb of St. Louis, and for many people in the Gateway City, it’s considered a place that used to be nice but now is just a declining area with a growing minority population. Despite its many successes, including the #1 farmers market in Missouri and a newly revitalized downtown district, many folks in St. Louis – including the local media – have simply ignored Ferguson or abandoned it altogether.

It would be easy to complain about this problem and point to the fact that racial biases have helped to cause it, but I prefer to focus on solutions, especially those that can help other “transitional” communities like Ferguson.

As a veteran journalist and PR consultant, I know all too well that perception plays an enormous role in a city’s success or failure. I also know that sensational stories – especially crimes – fill the local media far more than positive, uplifting tales, and that many communities have to fight very hard to get their good news covered.

But that’s ok, because the playing field has been leveled! If you can’t get your local TV station to cover your community’s success stories, or like Ferguson, your local newspaper simply drops coverage of your entire area, don’t get upset…get online!

With the power of the internet and social media, virtually anyone can develop their own news source and use it to disseminate all the positive stories that are currently being missed. Last October, I did just that when I created NOCO, the online magazine of North St. Louis County (NOCOstl.com), and now I have 30,000 readers discovering things they never imagined about Ferguson and the surrounding area every single month!

Using WordPress and an inexpensive hosting account, I simply started writing about the North County that I know, rather than the one I see on the news every night. And while the TV stations are covering shootings and car crashes, I’m telling stories of neighbors working together to solve problems or communities using innovative partnerships to get things done.

The funny thing is, now that the word has gotten out about NOCO, the local media is starting to use it as a resource! When they’re looking for stories to cover, they check out my site. And what do they find? Only the positive.

In other words, my not-so-secret agenda has worked! By publishing positive local news, I’ve not only opened up residents’ eyes to all the good in their own community. I’ve also made the media’s job easier, and by default, helped to paint an alternative picture of the places and people they thought they had pegged.

Do some St. Louis residents still think poorly of the Ferguson area? Of course. You can’t change every mind. But because of my little blog, I guarantee you there are thousands of people who now know that the good far outweighs the bad.

So embrace blogging and social media! If you don’t tell your community’s story, someone else will!

El Paso is All-America City: Mayor says award should lift ‘pobrecito’ perception

Posted: 06/19/2010 12:00:00 AM MDT

EL PASO — No more “pobrecito” attitude for El Paso.

It and nine other U.S. cities were named All-America Cities at an awards ceremony Friday night in Kansas City, Mo.

The award recognizes outstanding civic accomplishment in innovation, civic engagement and special efforts to respond to local challenges.

El Paso was one of 27 finalists for the honor, which is given by the National Civic League.

It’s the first time in four decades that El Paso has received the honor, Mayor John Cook said earlier this week.

After receiving the award, Cook said it marks an important turning point in the city’s perception of itself. To have “pobrecito” attitude is to say “woe is me,” Cook said Friday.

“Now we can recognize that we’re recognized around the country as a great city,” Cook said.

Read here.

All-America Cities Announced!

The National Civic League announced the winners of the 61st annual All-America City award during a celebration at the Hyatt Regency Crown Center in Kansas City.

  • Chandler, Arizona
  • Lynwood, California
  • Rancho Cordova, California
  • North Miami, Florida
  • Acworth, Georgia
  • Des Moines, Iowa
  • Salisbury, Maryland
  • Gastonia, North Carolina
  • Mount Pleasant, South Carolina
  • El Paso, Texas

Summaries of their projects after the jump

Scott County Guest Blogging

By Kathy Jasnoch

What happens if there is a tear in your community by loss of major industry, crime or the struggle with diversity determines the fabric of who you are and if you’ll grow or become a ghost town.

Our delegation is getting is a better understanding of the real problems that face America in our cities and  towns in first person. Every competitor has brought it all to share the ups and downs, the pains and joys of where they’ve been and how they are not just restoring their communities but how they are building them.

In the fabric of America we have threads of so many different strengths and we are bound by our differences and abilities to not only overcome our challenges but fight back the negative.

At this competition we are the United States. We are your threads. We are the flag you wave. We are the examples exploding with positive solutions that have cemented us in the knowledge that not only are Americans all struggling with their individual issues, we are the backbone of success in this country when we come together as a community and we bring solutions to the table.

And now we know why Scott County is here. We as a community had an idea that we were worthy of the title of All-America City. We knew or we wouldn’t have applied for this competition. But now we understand that Scott County is the reason small towns grow to cities and people move there to expereince quality of life they want for their families and their future.

When it comes down to it here, it’s what you’ve done to see that your community involves every dynamic of your population to ensure the success of everyone. And not just survive – but protect, educate and build your future and the future of our country. What we do in the borders of our county impacts America like the threads of a well woven flag. We help bind a nation. We feel confident. We already feel like we’ve won.

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