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Our Purpose

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Title: Our Purpose


1
(No Transcript)
2
Purpose of Research
  • What are the most effective strategic actions
    to take to reach our full potential as a
    community?

3
Research Methodology (Update of similar
research five years ago)
  • Intuitive
  • 100 interviews with diverse leaders
  • Youth (high school) focus group
  • Young executive focus group
  • Three Leadership Knoxville focus groups
  • Systematic
  • Review of local and regional economic studies
  • Review of Salt and Light community research
  • Review of Nine Counties. One Vision. research
  • Review of national studies on community building

4
Results of Interviews and Focus Groups
5
Dramatic Increase in Optimism
  • Question
  • On a scale of 1 to 10, how optimistic were you
    five years ago that our community was moving in
    the right direction toward achieving its
    potential, and how optimistic are you today?
  • Five years ago 4.68
  • Today 7.40
  • Why?
  • Changes in leadership UT, ORNL, County
    Executive, County Commission, TVA, school system,
    and quality of candidates for Mayor
  • Downtown revitalization gaining momentum

6
What are the greatest obstacles to reaching our
full potential as a community?
7
Need for Connections
  • Were getting better at building bridges, but our
    independence still creates problems
  • Still have difficulty working together
  • Need better
  • Organizational cooperation
  • Governmental cooperation (even unification)
  • Regional cooperation
  • Racial understanding and relationships
  • Connection of the faith community to the real
    needs of the community
  • Need for more of what social scientist Robert
    Putnam calls bridging social capital

8
Losing our Best and Brightest
  • Not fully competitive in retaining or attracting
    creative, talented drivers of the new knowledge
    economy (what researcher Richard Florida calls
    the Creative Class)
  • Regional workforce underprepared for the new
    economy
  • Lack of decent-size corporate headquarters
  • Inadequate support system for new-economy
    entrepreneurs

9
Need for Confidence and Leadership
  • Desperate need for successes
  • Too many starts and stops (particularly downtown)
  • Downtown revitalization is seen as the key
  • Must deepen the pool of servant leaders with
    high standards and a willingness to take risks

10
Environmental Concerns
  • Air and water pollution
  • Urban sprawl
  • Gradually destroying one of our dominant
    strengthsour natural environment

11
Dysfunctional Families, Disadvantaged Kids
  • Overwhelming response in 1997 not mentioned
    nearly as often in these interviews
  • Very positive comments about potential to build
    on Knoxvilles Promise and Project GRAD

12
What are the greatest strengths to build on as a
community to reach our potential?
13
Economic Building Blocks
  • University of Tennessee
  • Great confidence in Dr. John Shumaker
  • Planwith performance scorecardto raise UT to
    international prominence by 2010
  • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Great confidence in Dr. Bill Madia
  • Major facility and scientific upgrade already
    under way
  • Aiming to be seen as the premier federal research
    lab
  • Best place in world for research on new materials
    (Spallation Neutron Source)
  • Other internationally recognized core
    competencies include computational science,
    biotechnology, nanotechnology, nuclear science,
    and energy research
  • Partnership between UT and Battelle Corporation
    to manage ORNL brings together educational,
    research, and private sectors in new wayenhances
    potential for commercialization of technology and
    new business formation

14
Social Capital Building Blocks
  • Good people
  • Strong work ethic
  • Giving and generous spirit, caring and concern
  • Relative absence of racial discord
  • Respect for the importance of family
  • Spirit of volunteerism
  • Love for the community and hunger to improve it
  • Potential of the faith community
  • Potential to build on Compassion Coalition and
    Venture 29/7
  • Good leadership coming together across
    denominational and racial lines

15
Social Capital Building Blocks
  • Bridges already being built
  • Way region has been brought together by Nine
    Counties. One Vision.
  • Potential to build on Project GRAD, Knoxvilles
    Promise, Leadership Knoxville, United Way
  • Increasing awareness of need for cooperation
  • Generational changes and broadening of leadership
  • Size and nature of community
  • Easy to become involved in community
  • Large enough for plenty of options, small enough
    for solvable problems
  • Effective institutions like KCDC, PBA, and
    Airport Authority
  • 91 of kids are in public schoolsmost public
    schools perceived as good

16
Quality-of-Place Building Blocks
  • Natural beauty and geography
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park
  • Four seasons
  • Recreational opportunities
  • Central location
  • Unique culture and traditions
  • Music
  • Folk art
  • Storytelling
  • UT sports
  • Potential of arts and culture community
  • Unique history
  • Historic stock of buildings downtown
  • Great place to live
  • Cost of living well below national average
  • Comfortable place to live and do business
  • Great place to raise children

17
Most Relevant Systematic Studies
  • Three major compilations
  • MDC The State of the South 2002
  • Richard Florida The Rise of the Creative Class
  • Robert Putnam Bowling Alone The Collapse and
    Revival of American Community

18
All Other Studies and Writings Reviewed Validate
the Trends and Implications Detailed in the
Three Major Compilations
  • Economic Review 2002 East Tennessee Economic
    Development Agency
  • Knoxville Economic and Demographic Profile,
    November 2002 Mike McCarthy
  • Cities on the Rebound William Hudnut
  • Entrepreneurial Hot Spots Cognetics
  • Regional Creative Scorecard Catalytix, Inc.
  • Americas High-Tech Economy Milken Institute
  • Small Business Survival Index 2002 Small
    Business Survival Committee
  • Attracting the Best and Brightest to Memphis
    Memphis Talent Magnet Project
  • Measuring Progress Toward a Vibrant Silicon
    Valley Cultural Initiatives Silicon Valley
  • Social Capital Benchmark Survey Seguaro Seminar
    (East Tennessee research by Mary Kay Sullivan,
    Maryville College)
  • ORNL Renaissance Knoxville News Sentinel
  • UT Scorecard Office of UT President Dr. John
    Shumaker
  • Nine Counties. One Vision. A Region Growing
    into Greatness
  • Salt and Light Guidebook Compassion Coalition
  • The Church of Irresistible Influence Robert
    Lewis and Rob Wilkins
  • Seeking the Peace of the City and The Myth of the
    Dying Church Doug Banister

19
The State of the South 2002
  • Report for Southern Growth Policy Board and
    Southern Governors update from 1986
  • Days of economic growth through recruitment of
    low-wage, low-skill manufacturing are over
  • Need a broader vision and new framework for
    economic and community improvement

20
Big Forces Pushing the South
  • Globalization Communities must measure
    strengths and weaknesses in context of a global
    economy
  • Technology Transforming all businesses, yet
    Southern states (Tennessee included) rank low on
    preparation for the knowledge economy
  • Demographic Destiny Population gains turning
    the South from biracial to multiethnic
  • Metropolitanization Shifting from a largely
    rural to a predominantly metropolitan region
  • Fiscal Anemia None of the states has
    modernized its tax system to conform to todays
    more service-and-knowledge oriented economy
    therefore states ability to respond to new
    challenges is weakened

21
In light of the forces of globalization and
technology, todays South confronts a sweeping
economic challenge with an impact more
devastating that the sum of its parts.
The State of the South 2002
22
Three Most Important Priorities
  • Education
  • Regionalism
  • Leadership

23
Education
  • In an economy gone global and technological,
    education has become a lifelong imperative.
  • Education is also an equity issue
  • The line that separates the well educated from
    the poorly educated is the harshest fault line of
    all.
  • Former Governor of Mississippi William Winter

24
Regionalism
Talent clusters in geographic regions good jobs
will grow best in those metropolitan regions that
are the greatest talent collectors
  • The South needs leaders who can guide their
    communities in forging regional partnerships and
    new metropolitan governance structures (such as
    regional confederations)

25
Leadership
Leadership needed that can help communities adapt
and change in a knowledge economy can build a
common vision can create an entrepreneurial
culture can create opportunity for everyone and
is inclusive
  • Every Southern state should pursue leadership
    development at the grassroots, in the civic
    sphere, and for public elective office.
    Universities have a vital role to play in
    bringing knowledge to bear on the major issues
    facing states and communitiesand in arming
    elected and civic leaders with knowledge and the
    skill to lead in an often fractious democratic
    society. Traditional leadership development
    programs that focus on building a network among a
    limited representation of the community are not
    the answer. States, cities, towns, and counties
    require the development of leadersknowledgeable
    of trends and issues, representative of all
    residents, skillful in guiding citizens in a
    participatory processto meet the public-policy
    and human relations challenges of the 21st
    Century.

26
Richard Florida The Rise of the Creative Class
(2002)
  • H. John Heinz III Professor of Regional Economic
    Development, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Substantial new research, and
  • review of existing research, on the
  • people who are driving the new
  • economy, and their effects on
  • communities

27
Major Findings
  • Regions that are succeeding in the new economy
    have high concentrations of creative people (what
    Florida calls the new Creative Class).
  • Access to talented and creative people is to
    modern business what access to coal and iron ore
    was to steel making. It determines where
    companies will choose to locate and grow, and
    this in turn changes the way cities can compete.
  • Cities that retain or attract the Creative Class
    are greatly outperforming other cities
    economically.

28
The Creative Class
  • Distinguished from lower-wage Working Class and
    Service Class, who are paid to execute according
    to a plan
  • Creative Class is paid to create
  • They have considerably more flexibility in their
    jobs
  • Scientists, engineers, architects, designers,
    artists, musicians, educators, researchers, and
    those who use creativity in business, law, and
    health care
  • 30 of U.S. workforce over 38 million people
  • The Best and Brightest
  • Choose places to live on the quality of the place
  • Companies are moving to places with a thick
    concentration of the Creative Class, and
    companies are forming and growing up there

29
Creative Class seeks the three Ts
  • Talent Attracted to places where there is a
    critical mass of other bright, creative people
  • Technology Attracted to areas with a strong
    technology base, and by being there they help
    build an even stronger base
  • Tolerance Attracted to places with tolerance
    for diversity. Creative people come in all races
    and styles. They value individualism,
    self-expression, and openness to differences.

30
Floridas Creativity Index measures the Creative
Capital of every City-Region in the Country
(Composite measures of the three Ts)
  • Knoxville ranks 89th out of 331 U.S. metropolitan
    areas
  • We rank 15th out of 32 Metropolitan Statistical
    Areas (MSAs) between 500,000 and 1 million in
    population
  • At the national average on measures of talent
  • For example, Knoxvilles MSA has college graduate
    of 24.6 Raleigh DurhamChapel Hill region has
    41.2 Austin has 36.7
  • Above average on general entrepreneurship above
    average on patents per capita, but below average
    on supporting technological entrepreneurship
  • Below average on measures of tolerance

31
Importance of Floridas Research
  • A country of rapidly developing economic winners
    losers
  • Widening divide between Creative Communitieshigh
    wage, wealth, and economic prosperityversus
  • Working and Service Class Communities with much
    less prosperity
  • Why communities lose their best and brightest

32
Economic Prosperity
Creative Capital
High Medium Low
33
How to build a creative community that retains
and attracts the Creative Class and creates a
place where it can flourish
  • Creative Class prefers authentic urban cores with
    renovated historic buildings
  • Major research university or research facility is
    a basic infrastructure component, more
    important than the canals, railroads, and freeway
    systems of past epochsand a huge potential
    source of competitive advantage
  • Attracted to a world-class people climate
    urban parks, greenways, bike lanes, excellent
    schools, outdoor recreation, reduced sprawl, and
    a great natural environment
  • Attracted to thriving arts and music scenes, an
    active street and neighborhood life, and
    authentic cultural activities
  • Communities need to be open to diversity and
    invest in the kind of lifestyle options and
    amenities people really want

34
Robert PutnamBowling Alone The Collapse and
Revival of American Community (2001)
  • Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public
    Policy at Harvard
  • Details study after study showing disintegration
    of sense of community (social capital) over last
    30 years, and how it has affected us

35
Over the last three decades a variety of social,
economic, and technological changes have rendered
obsolete a significant stock of Americas social
capital. Television, two-career families,
suburban sprawl, generational changes in
valuesthese and other changes in American
society have meant fewer and fewer of us find
that the League of Women Voters, or the United
Way, or the Shriners, or the monthly bridge club,
or even a Sunday picnic with friends fits the way
we have come to live. Our growing social capital
deficit threatens educational performance, safe
neighborhoods, equitable tax collection,
democratic responsiveness, everyday honesty, and
even our health and happiness. Robert
Putnam
36
Bridging vs. Bonding Social Capital
  • Bridging inclusive (example Nine Counties. One
    Vision.)
  • Bonding exclusive (example country clubs)

37
Putnams Recommended Agenda To yield a more
civil, more trustworthy, more collectively
caring community
  • Focus on civic engagement of youth civics
    education, community service, increased
    extracurricular options in schools
  • Make workplace more family and community friendly
    (reward volunteerism)
  • Reawaken the faith community (arguably the
    single most important repository of social
    capital in the country) to get outside its walls
    and deeply engage in the community (Bridging
    Social Capitalbuilding trust and tolerance)
  • Foster new uses of electronic communications to
    link people
  • Enhance opportunities for active participation in
    arts and cultural life
  • Encourage more active participation in the public
    civic life of the community

38
National Benchmark Study of Social Capital
  • East Tennessee Foundation participated as one of
    40 communities
  • 21 counties in East Tennessee study
  • We ranked higher in measures of faith-based
    participation and generosity with time and money
  • Ranked lower on measures of trust and tolerance
  • Conclusion We need more bridging social capital

39
Strong Sense of Community
Social Capital
High Medium Low
40
Disturbing Fact
Communities that ranked highest on creative
capital ranked low in social capital and vice
versa.
Creative Capital
High Medium Low
Social Capital
41
What is really needed, and what growing numbers
want, is a new model. More and more people in my
interviews are leaving places like the Silicon
Valley to build what they envision as real lives
in real places. They yearn for some balance
between being themselves and having some sort of
community, not the old-style community Putnam
romanticizes, but a new and more accepting kind.
-Richard Florida
42
Social Capital and Tolerance Robert Putnams
Four Types of Society
Low Social Capital
High Social Capital
HIGH TOLERANCE LOW TOLERANCE
  • Individualistic You do your thing, and Ill do
    mine
  • Anarchic
  • War of all
  • against all
  • Civic Community Inclusive, tolerant, bridging
    sense of community (Bridging Social Capital)

Sectarian Community In-group vs. out-group
(Bonding Social Capital)
43
Knoxvilles Unique Opportunity
  • New Model Community that achieves the balance of
    which Florida and Putnam speak
  • Community with its own three Ts
  • Talent.
  • Technology.
  • Trust.

44
Why Knoxville Can Achieve This Balance
Vibrant downtown and confidence Support for
technology entrepreneurship More tolerance for
diversity
More trust and tolerance Need for more
connections
High Medium Low
Social Capital
Creative Capital
Size nature of the community Bridges
already being built Potential of faith
community Giving,generous people
Quality of Place Building Blocks ORNL UT
45
What are the strategic actions to take as a
community to achieve that vision?
46
Talent
  • Building on Project GRAD to ensure educational
    excellence and opportunity for our most
    disadvantaged kids
  • Building on the relative confidence in the Knox
    County Schools to aggressively pursue a
    world-class school system
  • Encouraging and supporting regional and state
    efforts to make excellence in education the top
    public policy and funding priority (Education
    Means Jobs)
  • Creating a strong, authentic downtown with a
    vibrant street life and a creative music, arts,
    and cultural scene
  • Investing in parks, greenways, bike lanes,
    recreational opportunities, and other amenities
  • Supporting policies and initiatives that limit
    sprawl and protect the natural environment

Create a world-class people environment through
47
Technology
Build on the technology research and development
assets of the region by
  • Supporting the efforts of Dr. Shumaker to
    transform UT into an internationally recognized
    research university
  • Supporting the efforts of Dr. Madia and
    UT-Battelle to solidify ORNL as the premier
    federal research laboratory.
  • Using targeted recruitment and the synergy
    between UT and ORNL to become a talent attractor
    for world-class scientists, researchers, research
    and development consortia, and technology
    companies
  • Determining how to support UT, ORNL, and
    Technology 2020 in commercializing technology and
    creating a more entrepreneurial regional culture
    (e.g., incubators, research foundations, seed
    capital, the Center for Entrepreneurial Growth,
    the Technopreneurial program)

48
Trust
Although seemingly at opposite ends of the
individuality spectrum, the strategic actions to
build both tolerance for diversity and
togetherness (stronger community) in Knoxville
are the samethat is, building bridges and new
levels of trust between diverse people through
  • Creating a leader full community by including,
    training, and engaging people in leadership
    development across the full diversity spectrum
  • Making a particular effort to engage young adults
    in the efforts to plan for and improve the
    community
  • Mobilizing the community of faith to get outside
    its walls into bridge-building community
    volunteerism and partnerships, continuing the
    work already started by Compassion Coalition and
    Venture 29/7
  • Seizing every opportunity to build bridges of all
    kindsbetween competing governments, regional
    partnerships organizational partnerships and
    new ways, direct and electronic, to link
    individuals together

49
The New Model Community

High Medium Low
Social Capital
Talent Technology Trust
Creative Capital
50
A place where we want our kids to grow up, and a
place to which they will have an economic
opportunity to return.
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