Charlie Page wrote:Me testy? I could say the same to your initial response but now I can see it’s sarcasm. I guess I should label my sarcasm so as not to appear testy.
Why does a city have to officially label a specific section of road as an ‘Arts District’? Doing so is kind of like someone giving themselves a nickname because everyone else has a nickname and they don’t want to feel left out. Arts Districts are like Post Offices nowadays, it seems every city has one.
Charlie
I could not agree more, so instead of arguing which block, say the city and move on. Infact
this is a community loaded with artists. It is no longer a defining point, especially when
other cities have much more funding. However in this town it was more about inviting
"cool artists in" and then forcing them out with cool economic development. I actually
believe the correct way to go was what DL was talking about, sustainable districts.
Charlie Page wrote:Freshwater U? Where people come from all over the world? To do what? You lost me on this.
I believe Mel has all my notes on this. There are saltwater universities, but we had never
seen a freshwater one. So why not?
Charlie Page wrote:Marketing ourselves to the blind and handicapped? How about just marketing ourselves to people in general? Why do labels have to be put on people? Safe, clean and fun are attractive to all.
While I agree marketing this city could be huge, and could help. What exactly do we market
and to who? How much do we pay for this marketing? What market. I still send papers to
the Ferries of Manhattan, San Francisco, and San Diego. Do we place an ad in USA Today?
Do we show the clean streets, the pristine Downtown area? The single park you can walk
your dog in? The basketball hoop? While marketing is good we have a lot to go to live up
to the hype already surrounding this town.
Charlie Page wrote:Business groups gouging businesses? I don’t follow you. I’d like to see business groups that help get businesses out of their house/garage and into a store front. Groups that provide help to businesses like free seminars on Quickbooks, tax planning, forming a business plan, basic accounting, marketing, etc. Things that are life and death for businesses, not fluff.
Charlie
We already have one group taking credit for that, though the business did not see it that
way, and while I would say it bares some thought. Why not just open up some regulations
that allow businesses to work out of their homes better? I think that your other comments
make sense, now should a small business be forced to pay big dollars to another business
group that has very little actual business experience for that?
Charlie Page wrote:Community currency? Sounds like a short-lived gimmick. I’m no marketing genius but I would suspect that people would buy Lakewood because stores sell the things people want at a decent price with good service AND people know about them. For example, if more people knew about the Hobby Shop on Detroit (in and outside of Lakewood), that place would be packed.
Maybe, maybe not. The Hobby Shop makes their $$$$$ on very high priced trains, and
parts for those. Community Currency is not a gimmick, buyer's cards, are a gimmick.
Where is Lakewood's Buyer's card today? Meanwhile Community currency in Toronto,
Ithaca and other communities where it was rolled out properly is thriving and helping
those communities keep dollars and buying power in those communities. The one was
nothing more than a slick news release, while many got left holding bad cards. Real
Community Currency is the start, or ending of a whole new way to think about a city and
do business within that community.
Which will take us to food security. No while food security certainly includes canning it also
is another way of life for a community, that many here just do not understand. It is
building long term working relationships with farms nearby, so that as markets fail there
are other ways to keep food coming in. It is about teaching people how to grow in their
yards and in community gardens. Not for the cool factor but so people have healthy
alternatives. It is not about "owning" the faux farmer markets, but creating real CSA's
that serve both the people and the farmers equally. It is about rain barrels, and why
collected rainwater makes more sense for a garden than hose water. It is a lifestyle not
something cool to add to your repertoire. In this city many thought it was something to
conquer and own. Not grow and let flourish.
Cryptic, yeah, was getting ready for an interview about starting civic journalism here in
Lakewood. Wanted to practice feeding thoughts without actually attacking the big
businesses that are now trying to own a community's words, that are having serious times
even staying afloat. And those that embrace "Builders Square" over "Lakewood Hardware."
.