I'd have to say that the Como neighborhood (where I work) is pretty "wired". We use the website www.secomo.org to post upcoming/current events like our Peace Coffee and Pansies fundraiser this week along with other info like crime stats, national night out info, and/or volunteer opportunities. There are sections on home loans and business grants regarding NRP and the more than 10 community gardens. Additionally, we have our environmental inventory of local air emitters created 3 years back on the internet so neighbors can learn more about local industry and click on helpful links to learn more about state, city, and federal agencies' role regarding air/water pollution. The neighborhood electronic newletter is also posted along more routine items like montly board minutes.


The website has been effective in communicating with neighbors and even this week during the fundraiser (face-to-face interaction) several people have told us that they routinely check the website for current events and happenings, which we update a couple of times a week (staff time permitting). With the cuts in Phase 2 NRP funding I think it will be increasingly challenging for neighborhoods to continute to provide information in this type of "wired" format, which is becoming the format that more and more people are choosing to get their information in.


Justin Eibenholzl
Armatage


From: "Steven Clift" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Mpls] Event invite,looking for the most "wired" neighborhood association orblock club in Minneapolis
Date: Thu, 14 Apr 2005 12:44:33 -0500



A week from today I'll be giving a public speech at the University of Minnesota titled, "Everyday Citizens: Community Life in the Information Age."

Is anyone impressed with how their neighborhood association has
integrated the use of the Internet in efforts to involve citizens?
Perhaps the lessons of the most "wired" neighborhood can be shared so
our traditional in-person form of participation may be enhanced.

What about your block?  Did anyone create a public or private e-mail
list from addresses gathered at national night out or something?
This is something I'd like to do in my new neighborhood.  I only need
a couple examples of how you have used such an e-mail list.

I plan to put my "E-Democracy.Org" hat on during part of my speech
and speculate on how we might extend the Minneapolis Issues Forum
concept to interested neighborhoods as well as special topic spaces
for information exchange among those working to meet similar public
challenges.  We will be able to do this more easily when we move to
our new open source GroupServer technology (funded by the UK
government!): http://e-democracy.org/groupserver

Thanks,
Steven Clift
Standish-Ericsson

P.S. The full invite to -both- of my speeches next week and a blog:
post http://www.dowire.org/notes/index.php?p=15


------- Forwarded message follows ------- Date sent: Tue, 12 Apr 2005 16:38:40 -0500 From: Loren Terveen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

The University of Minnesota Information, Technology, and
Everyday Life Initiative (http://www.cs.umn.edu/itel/)
invites you to two events featuring Steven Clift, a leading
international expert on "e-democracy".  Both events are
open to all.

--------------------

Everyday Citizens: Community Life in the Information Age
-- A new speech by Steven Clift, http://publicus.net --

5:00 - 6:30 p.m.,  Thursday, April 21, 2005
402 Walter Library
University of Minnesota, East Bank
Map: http://onestop.umn.edu/Maps/WaLib/index.html
Parking details are at the end of this message

Join Steven Clift as he ties together the first decade of
"e-democracy" with a citizen-centric agenda for building
community life and democracy in the the 21st century.  The
Internet allows citizens to become everyday citizens
"anywhere, any time" by deeply connecting them to things
local not just global.

What ideas, lessons, and models can we import and combine
in order to strengthen the quality of life and democracy in
our local communities? After a global speaking tours across
25 countries, places as diverse as Mongolia, Iceland,
Lebanon, and South Korea, Clift connects the best online
realities in an optimistic recipe that will help us defeat
Internet-empowered "politics as usual" and counter the
emerging virtual civil war among partisans online.

A reception follows Steven's talk @ 6 p.m.  The reception
will be Walter Library 402.

-----

Global E-democracy Trends: Leading Governments and
E-democracy
-- A bonus presentation by Steven Clift --

3:00 - 4:30 p.m., Thursday, April 21, 2005
402 Walter Library
University of Minnesota, East Bank
Parking details are at the end of this message

For those interested in an in-depth exploration of
governments and leading e-democracy practices, join Steven
Clift as he presents examples from around the world. A
sample of presentation slides used across a many countries
are available from http://publicus.net/speaker.html

This session includes an eye-opening opportunity to visit
leading websites. Recently presented to top staff in the
U.S. House of Representatives as well as e-democracy
practitioners from the Australian government, this
presentation helps those in the public sector, media, as
well as citizens discover opportunities and challenges for
improving democracy and governance in the information age.



--------------------

About Steven Clift
-- Full biography at http://publicus.net/about.html --

Steven Clift, a leading global expert on "e-democracy," has
spoken hundreds of times in 25 countries.  In 1994, he led
the creation of the world's first election-oriented web
site from Minnesota - http://E-Democracy.Org. He is the
editor of http://DoWire.Org, the Democracies Online e-mail
list, blog, and wiki with participants in over 80
countries.  He shares dozens of the articles he's written
for the United Nations, the OECD, the Internet Society, and
others from his http://Publicus.Net website.

Steven, twice listed on PoliticsOnline.com's "25 Who Are
Changing the World of Internet and Politics," is a frequent
media commentator on e-democracy. He focuses on the
democratically transformative uses of the Internet between
elections.

A past project coordinator for the Markle Foundation's Web
White & Blue project, Clift recently directed four pilot
projects for the UK Local E-democracy National Project.
Between research contracts and projects, he enjoys life as
a professional public speaker on e- democracy.  Over the
last 18 months he shared his insights, often with
governments, and gathered new case studies in Mongolia,
South Korea, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Iceland,
Denmark, France, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, The
Netherlands and Belgium.

Steven Clift volunteers as Board Chair of E-Democracy.Org,
which is currently expanding its local citizen-based online
"Issues Forums" model for citizen engagement beyond
Minnesota. E-Democracy.Org is using the new open source
GroupServer.Org technology along with a development guide
funded by the UK Office of Deputy Prime Minister to launch
forums in the UK and beyond.

Steven Clift and his wife Laurel live in Minneapolis,
Minnesota and can be reached in just about every imaginable
way from: http://publicus.net/contact.html

--------------------

Information, Technology, and Everyday Life Initiative
(ITEL).

These lectures are sponsored by the University of Minnesota
ITEL Initiative (http://www.cs.umn.edu/itel/).  This
initiative is sponsoring a series of public lectures at the
University and a conference that will bring together
visionaries from across the country with scholars at the
University of Minnesota to explore a research agenda around
information, technology, and everyday life. A primary goal
will be to jumpstart an interdisciplinary research agenda
that explores these issues at the University of Minnesota
Department of Computer Science and Engineering.

Contact: Joseph A. Konstan, Computer Science and
Engineering, (612) 625-1831.

--------------------

Parking

Parking is available in the Church Street Ramp
http://onestop.umn.edu/Maps/ChurchGar/index.html,
the Weisman Museum Garage
http://onestop.umn.edu/Maps/WeisGar/index.html or in
the Washington Avenue Ramp
http://onestop.umn.edu/Maps/WashRamp/index.html
^               ^               ^                ^
Steven L. Clift    -   -  -  W: http://publicus.net
Minneapolis    -   -   -  -   E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Minnesota  -   -   -   -   -   - T: +1.612.822.8667
USA    -   -   -   -   -       MSN/Y!/AIM: netclift

UK Office Hours - 1pm - 11pm  -   -  T:  0870.340.1266
Join my Democracies Online Newswire: http://dowire.org


REMINDERS:
1. Be civil! Please read the NEW RULES at http://www.e-democracy.org/rules. If you think a member is in violation, contact the list manager at [EMAIL PROTECTED] before continuing it on the list.


2. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.

For state and national discussions see: http://e-democracy.org/discuss.html
For external forums, see: http://e-democracy.org/mninteract
________________________________

Minneapolis Issues Forum - A Civil City-focused Civic Discussion - Mn E-Democracy
Post messages to: mailto:[email protected]
Subscribe, Un-subscribe, etc. at: http://e-democracy.org/mpls


REMINDERS:
1. Be civil! Please read the NEW RULES at http://www.e-democracy.org/rules. If 
you think a member is in violation, contact the list manager at [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] before continuing it on the list.

2. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.

For state and national discussions see: http://e-democracy.org/discuss.html
For external forums, see: http://e-democracy.org/mninteract
________________________________

Minneapolis Issues Forum - A Civil City-focused Civic Discussion - Mn 
E-Democracy
Post messages to: mailto:[email protected]
Subscribe, Un-subscribe, etc. at: http://e-democracy.org/mpls

Reply via email to