Dear "Mr. Auto-Community Recovery Czar"
Posted by
Rich Harwood
Mar 31, 2009

Today, "Mr.
Auto-Community Recovery Czar," President Obama
will
announce your appointment as director for the
recovery of auto
communities and workers. That's good news.
Simply providing yet more
financial aid to auto companies alone is not
enough. But in the
process of taking this new step, I can only
hope we keep the ultimate
goal in sight. Here's what I hope you consider
as you undertake this job.
Many communities tied to the auto industry are
reeling. Lost
employment, plummeting tax revenues, empty
storefronts, deteriorating
neighborhoods, and other maladies ail these
places. I know these
hardships first-hand after working in Flint, MI
for many years, and
with people from Youngstown, OH, St. Louis, MO,
and many other auto
industry-based locales. This June, we're
launching a new initiative in
yet two more Michigan communities, Detroit and
Battle Creek.
According to news reports, the new recovery
effort will help
communities find ways to create jobs and
attract new industries,
retrain workers, and deal with health-care
insurance. These are all
important things to do, and there is little
doubt that such efforts
are necessary for stabilizing communities. But
alone they will not do
the trick.
My own research and on-the-ground initiatives
show that for
communities to rebound they must re-grow the
very conditions for
change that enable communities to create and
innovate. This involves
generating the necessary relationships,
leaders, organizations, and
norms that give rise to effective and lasting
action.
Indeed, no single program or initiative will
turn communities around,
or give them hope. Instead, it is always a
combination of elements
that both sparks and sustains change. Some of
the key elements for
change include:
- Focus on people's aspirations - often
when recovery and rebuilding
efforts begin, we end up focusing on "wish
lists" which can never be
achieved or people's complaints about what
hasn't happened. Instead,
our focus should be on people's aspirations -
those notions that sit
in people's gut about what they seek in their
lives and what they're
willing to go to bat for. With the wrong focus,
we'll end up on the
wrong path.
- Create and support Boundary-spanning
organizations - communities must
develop organizations that help engage people
across dividing lines,
incubate new ideas, and hold up a mirror to
people so they can see
their shared reality. We've worked with public
broadcasters, United
Ways, community foundations, and even arts
institutions to realize
their potential to become boundary-spanning
organizations. But too
many communities lack such organizations, and
existing groups are
often underutilized or overwhelmed.
- Grow Public Innovators - communities
need to cultivate these change
agents who hold a passion for change, know how
to practically move
ideas into action, and understand the realities
in which they are
working. It's possible to actually grow and
support public innovators,
and I urge you to do so.
- Find the "Sweet Spot" for public
action - it is essential to take
actions that meet two criteria: they are
focused on a specific public
challenge AND they literally create community
conditions for change.
It is possible to find this sweet spot that
leverages resources and
builds the community's capacity and strength at
the same time. This is
how we can accelerate progress.
- Be ruthlessly strategic - times like
these require us to make clear
judgments and choices, something the President
speaks about often.
Indeed, not all ideas are good ones, and nor
should they be
undertaken. If we wish to create hope, we must
show signs of change;
this requires growing a new culture in
communities of making hard
choices - of being ruthlessly
strategic.
- Focus on pockets of change - change
typically does not happen through
one or two large actions, especially in
hard-hit communities. Rather,
what's key is to develop pockets of change that
demonstrate lasting
progress and that offer people real hope. Even
in tough environments,
such change is possible.
Of course, there are no quick fixes for helping
communities that seek
to recover and grow, but there are steps we can
take to make a
difference. Today, people in communities all
across America are
searching for authentic hope - a reason to
believe that they can shape
their future and create the communities they
seek.
My hope is that your efforts help to create the
conditions for such
change.