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Civic Entrepreneurs
October 1, 2003 @ 6:33 am and 8:20 am on 90.3
Every now
and then an idea comes along that seems a little wacky but ends
up helping Northeast Ohio. For example, an organization that tracks
down former Clevelanders and hits them up for investments back home.
Until recently, civic entrepreneurs--people who come up with those
ideas--had to figure out on their own what it would take to get
them off the ground. But this week, the Cleveland Foundation is
kicking off a new venture to smooth the way for new ideas. As part
of Making Change: Reinventing our Economy,
ideastream's Shula Neuman reports.

The
Civic Innovation Lab is not a real laboratory. There are no steaming
beakers or test tubes with bubbly blue fluid. It's a concept,
says lab director Jennifer Thomas to encourage brainstorming and
try to generate strategies for getting new economic development
projects to work.
JENNIFER
THOMAS: So, yes it's a lab in terms of possibly experimenting…and
hoping to come out with a positive result.
The
Cleveland Foundation created the lab so that people who have ideas
for projects that would boost Northeast Ohio's economy will have
help in making the idea real. Thomas says anyone can submit a
proposal, which a 15-member panel of experienced business big
wigs will evaluate. The panel then selects a few ideas that they're
willing to back -- using their connections and resources to help
get the project off the ground. Thomas says the idea of civic
entrepreneurship has many parallels with starting a business-especially
when it comes to accepting that things don't always work out.
JT:
One of the goals of the lab is to fail often and fail early. It's
going to be the case that some of these ideas will not make it.
But if we feel strongly that an idea has some legs, we're going
to invest some time into it and possibly money.
The Foundation
is putting two-hundred-thousand dollars into the project, to be
distributed in thirty thousand dollar chunks. But failure isn't
something that Cleveland takes to easily. What people want to see
is success…such as the healthy return on the investment Chris
Carmody had when he founded the Greater Cleveland Film Commission.
In its first year, the commission ended up bringing in more than
four times its investment—which pleased the organization’s
funders such as the Gund Foundation. Carmody says, after that first
year selling the concept of a film commission became that much easier.
Still, Carmody says, it would have been nice to have had a Civic
Innovation Lab around. Carmody says it would have helped expedite
his vision --even though he was at an advantage when he started
out since he had connections in town.
CHRIS
CARMODY: People who have good ideas--young, energetic
people who don't have that kind of access--should not be hampered
because of that. We should be looking for those people and cultivating
them. I think the lab's idea to go out and find these people who
don't necessarily have that kind of background and then get them
started and I think that's very important.
And that endorsement
comes from a self-described cynic. Despite general optimism for
the lab, Suzanne Morse, executive director of the Pew Partnership
for Civic Change says the Lab could fail if it lacks broad based
community support and partnership with like-minded organizations.
Morse says a little patience helps too.
SUZANNE
MORSE: Oftentimes in the foundation world we want sure
fire things. We want to know it’s going to work…and
that’s often not how innovation and invention works.
But as Saddhu
Johnston attests, Cleveland’s risk-averse community can be
difficult to sway. That was his experience starting the Cleveland
Green Building Coalition. It took four years before Johnston felt
he and the Green Building Coalition were affecting change and helping
the region…but, he says, four years was too long.
SADDHU
JOHNSTON: It doesn't take long to realize that Cleveland
is the kind of town that you get places when you know people.
And that I think is one of the biggest challenges of being a new
person with great ideas in this town is that it's very hard to
get connected. And until people have either read a newspaper article
about you or have heard about you, they're not going to really
embrace your ideas and embrace what you're about.
However, Johnston
is optimistic about the potential of the Civic Innovation Lab. The
thing is, Johnston-now considered one of Cleveland's most promising
young leaders-is leaving to take a job with the city of Chicago.
His departure has many people wringing their hands over Cleveland's
endemic brain drain. But Johnston says that’s misdirected
anxiety.
SJ:
The fact that there aren't as many people competing for these
opportunities mean that there are great opportunities for the
young people that do come here. We need to really push that as
one of our strengths and build on it so that we are attracting
young people from all across the country so that they want to
come to Cleveland because they know they can do things here they
couldn't do anywhere else.
Johnston says
the Civic Innovation Lab could be one way to turn Cleveland into
an incubator for civic entrepreneurs…so that whether these
future leaders stick around or leave for new opportunities, Northeast
Ohio will still benefit from their having passed through.
In Cleveland,
Shula Neuman, 90.3s
NOTE:
The
Civic Innovation Lab is accepting applications as of October 1,
2003. For a link to the lab's web site-and other information about
civic entrepreneurship-go to the Making Change portion of our web
site, www.wcpn.org. Making Change is produced in partnership with
the Center for Regional Economic issues at the Weatherhead School
of Management – the dynamic, innovative business school at
Case Western Reserve University.
Resources:
- Web
Site for the Civic Innovation Lab
It includes details of how the program works and there is an application
to submit your idea for consideration.
- Pew
Partnership for Civic Change
The
partnership helps communities become stronger through research
and development of civic projects. They also disseminate practical
information about what works to citizens and practitioners everywhere.
- California
Summit on Entrepreneurship and Innovation
California’s annual summit on civic entrepreneurship and
innovation sponsored by the California Center for Regional Leadership.
Read about what the west coasters are up to. Also you can read
about other efforts this organization has to strengthen communities
and develop more effective leaders.
- The
Manhattan Institute’s Center for Civic Innovation
The center’s stated purpose is to improve the quality of
life in cities by shaping public policy and enriching public discourse
on urban issues.
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