Monday, October 31, 2005

ROSA PARKS / A FITTING TRIBUTE TO A TRUE PIONEER FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE



NEVER FORGET
and
GOD BLESS















Detroit Free Press / October 31, 2005
http://www.freep.com/index.htm

Photo Gallery's
http://www.freep.com/index/rosaparks.htm

http://www.freep.com/photos/2005/parks1024/index.htm

http://www.freep.com/photos/2005/parks1027/index.htm

http://www.freep.com/photos/2005/parks1028/index.htm

http://www.freep.com/photos/2003/bus_012703/index.htm

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

YOUTH AND THEIR FUTURE SUCCESS DOMINATES TOWN HALL DISCUSSION













CITY RESIDENTS CONCERNED ABOUT KIDS
Oakland Press Article / October 25, 2005
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102505/loc_2005102502.shtml

Community in Action / Studs Terkel / NPR Radio
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4963443

Students Say They Can Help Solve Racial Issues
http://www.freep.com/news/metro/race29e_20051029.htm

Monday, October 24, 2005

Terry Poling, Micheal Roblee & Kent Roberts

Pontiac Cafe facilitators with Meta Dynamics and the Civility Center respectively.

Coming soon the collective wisdom of their efforts gathered from the meeting on October 11, 2005


NEW!

Pontiac Cafe Dialogue 10-11-05

Session One – Round One

What are the strengths of our community?
Location
People
Strong sense of community
Service and organizations
Diversity of people
Diverse service organizations
People are relentless –They care
Sense of safety
Sticking together
Faith-Based community
Strong infrastructure
City with a heart
Senior strength
Secure Pension Fund
Diverse Housing stock
Growing economic development
City experiencing rebirth
GM Power Train HQ
Home Ownership
Business Diversity
Ethnocentric Pride
Successful community events
Silverdome Property
Crystal Lake Property

What is working well in Pontiac?

Session One – Round Two

Why are these strengths?

Why does it work?


Session One – Round Three

What are the common Themes and Patterns we see regarding our Strengths?
People
Diversity
Faith Based Culture
Location
Reputation
History
New Housing and Growth

What is working?


Session One – Round Four

What’s important about what we are hearing in terms of themes and patterns?

Session One – What’s Next?

Each one bring one youth and one senior to the next dialogue gathering on November 15, 2003
Communicate the outcomes from this October 11th gathering
Bring people from low and moderate income groups and other stakeholders
Must build trust between all assembled
How do we build trust?
Pull elected officials together to help development and implement action plan to improve the school district
Encourage leadership with great vision (align arrows)
Continued enlightenment and developing learning tools
Increased skill sets
Social Responsibility to share
Bring a friend
Get sponsorship
Need Money
Identify more resources
Continue this process throughout the entire community to help change the Pontiac Culture (encouraging people to share the same mind set and purpose)
Develop global and local projects using the dialogue process
Engage more people encourage more perspectives in the room
Young people must at the table
Build trust
Create an environment where its safe for all people to express themselves thru dialogue and implementation
Focus on positive and engage all stakeholders
Bring people together to get beyond “bickering”, “murmuring” and “complaining”
Increase involvement and perspectives
Hold dialogue sessions in all of the Districts and with all the different stake holders
Host a dialogue session with all of the candidates, elected officials and key stake holders before the general election
Touch and talk to those who can’t necessarily do anything for you
Share the rules of community engagement

Where do we go from here as a community?

What’s the Glue?

Faith-Based Community and the Churches
Desire & Passion for Pontiac
Family
People working together willingly and independently
Challenging the Status Quo
Rich Traditions
Children and Seniors

OUTCOMES

Learn how to better understand and respect each other’s perspectives
Recognize that you cannot build bricks without straw (there must be substance and meaningful outcomes)
Be willing to hear each other’s thoughts and ideas.
Be willing to agree and disagree and not be disagreeable
Give everyone a voice
Build a broad shared view of issues facing Pontiac
Understand where we go from here
Be committed to the process
Everyone matters



Sunday, October 23, 2005

Clarion Call from the Oakland Press

NEW!
Summary Editorial / Oakalnd Press / November 1, 2005
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/110105/opi_2005110105.shtml

Pontiac has 3 things going for it: Location, location, location
Web-posted Nov 1, 2005

EDITORIAL

There is a natural tendency to contemplate Oakland County's innumerable communities and to conclude there must be something wrong in Pontiac.

Stores, restaurants and related amenities abound everywhere, it seems, but in Pontiac. There, most homes are older and smaller, and the people are less prosperous as a whole. Also, the schools are older and chronically described as struggling.

The obvious questions arise: What is Pontiac doing wrong? Why doesn't it share in the county's overall prosperity?

Our thorough series of articles on the subject have been as accurate a description of the city and its residents as we could make them.

Among other things, we've all learned that city officials and many residents through the years have recognized the problems and have worked with mixed success to overcome them.
Any fair assessment of Pontiac is that it is light-years ahead of the condition it was in just 30 years ago.

The downtown is not thriving, but it is no longer virtually abandoned. The residential neighborhoods are seeing an unprecedented amount of refurbishing and new development.

And while the traditional public schools continue to fall short academically, the data say they've improved. In addition, there are new options for youngsters that no longer tie them to the school district. Independent charter schools within the district thrive, and neighboring districts welcome enrollees from Pontiac.

It is no longer possible, if it ever really was, to assess Pontiac without considering its geographic context. It is in the middle of one of the wealthiest counties in the nation in terms of personal income.

As a result, the finest names in upscale retailing, along with the biggest discounters, are within minutes of Pontiac. A big league basketball team is just across the city limits, and professional football, baseball and hockey franchises are less than 25 miles away. The biggest names in popular music perform routinely within minutes of the city's center.

Like Flint and Saginaw, Pontiac is accurately described as an "old factory town," but it has something they don't and can't have - location, location, location.

So why, then, aren't more middleand high-income families attracted to Pontiac?

It's an aging city with most homes more than 50 years old. They're also smaller than the homes factory workers, much less executives and professionals, now want and can afford.

Pontiac is not the only city in the county with neighborhoods that were middle-class but now are home to people with lower incomes.

To make Pontiac a city of higher than average incomes and education levels, it would be necessary to replace most of its homes with larger, more expensive ones. That would automatically improve the school districts' scores because the income and educational levels of the parents are refl ected in grades earned by their children.

Meanwhile, Pontiac's downtown could do a better job of taking advantage of its location in the midst of wealth, not that it hasn't had considerable success already. If middle-income residences were built there to bolster it and the city as a whole, we might have to do a quick update of our stories.

Who Cares About Pontiac? WE DO!
Oakland Press / October 23, 2005
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102305/loc_2005102301.shtml

Housing BOOM! City at a Crossroads / Part-2
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102405/loc_2005102403.shtml

Changing Demographics / City at a Crossroads / Part-3
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102505/loc_2005102501.shtml

Schools in Decline / City at a Crossroads / Part-4
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102605/loc_2005102602.shtml

Downtown DILEMMA / City at a Crossroads / Part-5
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102705/loc_2005102702.shtml

We Deserve to Feel Safe / City at a Crossroads / Part-6
http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/102805/loc_2005102802.shtml

City at a Crossroads / Part-7

City at a Crossroads / Part-8

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Pontiac Cafe Meeting Tuesday, October 11, 2005 6:00PM

Welcome Friends!

Please add your impressions, insights, ideas, concepts, etc. regarding this meeting and perhaps some comments about what you feel should be the foundational elements for the next meeting on Tuesday, November 15, 2005.

Thank you for your participation. Together we can make a difference!