An open letter from Bill Berkowitz of Community Tool Box Re: “Taking Action in Your Neighborhood”

in community engagement, community stories, Place-based communities

I got this note from UMass Professor Emeritus Bill Berkowitz earlier this week, and with his permission have posted it here so you can share your own thoughts and suggestions. Dr. Berkowitz is a writer, editor, and core team member of the Community Tool Box, the most extensive web site on community health and development on the planet (which we featured here). His books deal with skills, ideas, personal qualities, and stories relating to community organization and improvement. Bill is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and a recipient of its award for Distinguished Contributions to Practice in Community Psychology.

I’d forwarded this email to some of my contacts in the neighborhoods movement, and with their permission will be posting excerpts from their responses here as well.

Hi, Leo – Thanks very much for your April 12 note. It’s so easy to be impressed by it – both by your statement of purpose and by the people you’ve been gathering around your ideas. I surely hope your work gains momentum, takes off, and soars.

In this note, I’m sending along a concept of our own, titled “Taking Action in Your Neighborhood,” which perhaps you might reflect and comment upon.

In some ways, it’s a variation and extension of Our Blocks. Some differences are that it’s more explicitly action-oriented, and more explicitly participatory. It also structures the content by topic, rather than have the user do it via tagging. And it centralizes and gives a specific focus for much of the needed neighborhood work.

What’s here could be a rather big idea, probably calling for both synthesis of existing content and creation of some new content as well. The potential payoff, though, could be very large.

So take a look if you can, and see what you think; we’ll be very grateful to learn of your own reactions, others’ as well, whatever they may be.

We’re also very comfortable with your sharing any or all of this with your other neighborhood contacts – actually we’d encourage this, since more feedback may both help strengthen this concept, as well as Our Blocks itself, and potentially lead to mutually-beneficial collaborations.

Thanks very much again, Leo, and be talking to you.

~~ Bill

* * * * *

In response to your note and request for feedback, I’m writing to sketch out some neighborhood thoughts, and more specifically around developing a centralized “Taking Action in Your Neighborhood” resource that I’d mentioned before.

We’d certainly be interested in any of your own thoughts you might have on this, especially (if the idea has merit) for moving this idea forward. I’m also copying Jay here, since this relates pretty closely to some work he has done.

Here’s the rationale: There’s a lot of neighborhood-related stuff in print and in cyberspace, which may not be very surprising. Much of what exists is both good and useful. A lot of it can be found on Our Blocks. Some of it is on the Community Tool Box, and I’m sure also on many other sites as well.

But a real downside is that it’s scattered all over the map – so if someone is interested in a particular neighborhood topic or issue, they might find themselves looking in a lot of places, and having to patch together what they need from a bunch of different sources. This is both time-consuming and often not all that effective.

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Feeling Artsy? Help Finish Myrtle’s Mural

in community engagement, community stories, Place-based communities

[ takeaway: murals brings community; and they're fun ]

Wanted: local painters, no artistic training required.

Tomorrow the Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Project and the South of Navy Yards Artists will roll out brushes, pencils and buckets of paint for the young, and young at heart, to put the final brush strokes on a community mural.

Since last Sunday, local residents have been adding their artistic flair to the 80-foot stretch of wooden fencing that surrounds the gaping hole left by the collapse of a Myrtle Avenue building on June 21. What could have been an eyesore is now a collage of blue, gray, purple, green, red and white mixed with drawings of everything from hearts to peace signs to faces.

“Collaboratively painting large scale murals like this allow the whole community to come together to create something,” said Ellie Balk, a SONYA board member who is supervising the project. “Kids and parents paint together and can walk by later and take ownership of the whole mural. I love to hear people walk by and say, ‘I did that!’”

The mural is part of the Move About Myrtle project that MARP started on Sept. 7, closing off seven blocks along Myrtle Avenue to create temporary, vehicle-free public space on Sundays in September. Tomorrow is the last day of the street closing.

“We organize a number of different activities to take place during the event to ‘program’ this new public space,” said Meredith Phillips Almeida, director of community Development for MARP, which is marking its 10th year. “And this mural is one of those activities.”

Organizers see the mural as an opportunity to build and strengthen a sense of community through painting. Business owners, as well as residents, are appreciating the locally made art.

For Chong Kim, owner of the J. Love Gift Shop on Myrtle Avenue, the opportunity to share art is cause for celebration.

“It is very beautiful,” said Mr. Kim, who brought his grandchildren to see the mural last Sunday. “You see everybody painting with the kids.”

Read the full story: Feeling Artsy? Help Finish Myrtle’s Mural – The Local – Fort-Greene Blog – NYTimes.com By Ines Bebea