We happened to run across this post from April 30 of last year and thought it’s worth remembering (former Denver Mayor Hickenlooper is now current Colorado Governor Hickenlooper):
Smithsonian Travel has written a peaen to Memphis that pays tribute not just to the city but to some of our extraordinary landmarks like Henry Turley. That follows by only a few months a lovefest in the New York Times about the real Memphis.
In the interest of complete accuracy, we can only sum it up this way: the two articles kick Forbes magazine’s ass.
We are so proud that we were emailing the link to the Smithsonian article to friends when we finally get around to reading the comments. God forbid that you should tell some Memphians how great their city is and their comments castigate and libel the city. A couple are written by former Memphians (and we can’t say we’ve ever been prouder to say former Memphians than when we read their comments). It reminds us again why the comments sections on magazine and newspaper articles are fast becoming the printed version of talk radio – lots of sound and fury signifying nothing.
Loving Where You Live
It’s always fun to see Memphis through the eyes of a visitor.
When that visitor is Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper, it’s absolutely invigorating.
That’s because it’s easy in our city to feel overwhelmed by its challenges and undervalued as the sources of change. That’s why Live Where You Live is so exciting. It acknowledges and celebrates a simple fact of life about Memphis: we are the ones we have been waiting for.
President Barack Obama gave voice to the power to change our country one person at a time, and Live Where You Live is the local expression of the same conviction.
Exciting Times
The most exciting things happening in Memphis today aren’t coming top-down from leaders of government, the Chamber of Commerce, or high-profile civic groups. Rather, the best reasons to be excited about Memphis are the number of grassroots and neighborhood programs begun by people who care about their city and are determined that it can be better.
It’s what Geoff Calkins, The Commercial Appeal sports columnist, called “Memphis’ special gift.” Speaking to Leadership Memphis about great cities, leadership, sports, and newspapers, he said:
“People care and look out for each other. Sometimes in the midst of the drumbeat of fear and negativism here, I have to stop and remind myself what I love about Memphis: the opportunity is there for all of us to shape Memphis. Every one of us can make a difference. It’s not that we have an obligation. It’s a gift. It’s an opportunity that doesn’t exist in other places. You can easily get involved in what gives your life purpose and meaning.”
Mr. Calkins summoned up University of Memphis men’s basketball coach John Calipari as the example of what one inspired person can accomplish. “He set out a vision – to be national champions – and people laughed at him. But he kept talking about his huge, great vision, and he inspired others to join in.”
I’m quoting Mr. Calkins (it’s worth remembering this was written before he left University of Mmephis) as I explain Memphis to Mayor Hickenlooper, who’s in our city for the first time for the inaugural edition of Smart City Live. About then, we exit I-55 at Riverside, and suddenly, the bluffs frame our majestic river and riverfront. It’s our “money shot” and as usual, it gets results.
“Oh, my Gosh,” said the mayor. “Oh, my Gosh. That’s incredible. What a sight. What an incredible sight.” The questions tumble out as they always do: “That’s the Mississippi River, right? How wide is it? How did you keep so much parkland on the river?”
Through New Eyes
As we turn up Union, he’s impressed by the “incredible” downtown building stock, and when we arrive in the lobby of the hotel where the Delta begins, we are just in time to hear the first musical notes summoning the ducks to the elevator and back to their penthouse suite. Mayor Hickenlooper comments on the size of the crowd on hand and rushes to snap a photograph of the ducks.
Later, we drive to the University of Memphis past Beale Street, FedEx Forum, Church Health Center, and houses along Peabody, Belvedere, and Central. Mayor Hickenlooper is a student of cities, and his positive impressions remind us that we live where we live for so many reasons.
From forms of music that became the beat driving the sexual and social revolutions to entrepreneurial innovations that changed the lifestyles of the world – from the first motels to the first self-service groceries and drive-in restaurants and from the inventor of overnight international commerce to the place where a radio station was programmed by African-Americans for African-Americans, Memphis has been seminal to contemporary culture.
In his fascinating book, “Cities in Civilization,” Peter Hall distilled the story of Western civilization into the story of 19 cities over 2,000 years. And yes, one of them is mythic Memphis, right up there with London, New York, Los Angeles, and Paris.
Change Agents
Seeing Memphis through Mayor Hickenlooper’s eyes reminded us of how special our city is, and hearing his comments that evening reminded us of the importance of Live Where You Live. Specifically, he talked about how each of us can change the course of our city’s history.
In fact, he has proven it. As a restaurateur in LoDo, he entered the race for Denver mayor with 3% support but his message of change propelled him easily into the city’s top elected office. Through a customer service ethos forged in his string of brew pubs, a determination to ignore politics and hire the best people and a new vision of regional harmony, he achieved an approval rating of 80% as mayor – and that was outside of Denver among people in the metro area who can’t even vote for him.
He converted this reservoir of good will into approval at the ballot box by seven counties and 31 cities of a $5 billion, 119-mile new light rail system. And it all began when he decided that he should get more involved in the future of his city.
So, why does it really matter if we have a positive attitude about Memphis? Why should we stand up for Memphis? Why should anybody really care about Live Where You Live?
It Matters
Because a November 24 Gallup study strong suggested a link between economic growth of cities and the loyalty and passion of their residents.
The survey was taken to explore whether results that show a definite connection between company loyalty and company performance also apply to cities. The study found that key emotional connectors for cities are openness (the sense of welcoming to diverse people) and citizen engagement.
In addition, the study found that it generally takes three to six years for residents to feel highly engaged in their community, and cities need to focus on helping new residents connect to others in their area to increase the kinds of connections that are important to city loyalty.
In this way, community citizen engagement is crucial, according to Gallup, which defines it as an individual’s psychological connection with the community; it goes beyond just their satisfaction with the community and extends to passion and pride they take in living there. And citizens who feel that their community will be a much better place to live in in five years are much more likely to be engaged.
It’s not about happy talk. It’s about celebrating what’s special about Memphis and celebrating our ability to create the kind of neighborhoods and city that we all want.
More to the point, it is about engaging in the kind of community improvement that can change the trajectory of Memphis because each of us is willing to fight for its future, putting down roots in their neighborhood, supporting our local businesses and culture and standing up for what’s right about our city.
In the end, loving where you live not only feels good, but it feeds our economy.
A C Wharton, the great consensus builder, leads from behind. That’s not negative because he has gotten things done. But it’s not the way great mayors act.
Now that he has won a full 4-year term, it’s time for him to lead from the front. Get out front and lead the charge even if it means stepping on a few toes along the way. Make bold moves.
– Get the Chamber of Commerce working for the City, not the opposite as is the situation now.
– Forge direct, sustainable partnerships with all kinds of grassroots organizations, neighborhood associations, CDCs, faith based organizations. Put them to work with real resources and talented support. [make public service in neighborhoods talent magnets]
– Build the bikeways, greenways and connect every neighborhood. Make public transit the choice mode of travel and put the automobile on a 50/50 split with all other modes of travel. Move Memphis from the air quality failure list to the cleanest air in America.
– Pass a payroll tax so entire metro area will share in Memphis’ infrastructure, and property tax burden is reduced so Memphis becomes the City of Choice.
– And when the housing market heats up again, he should stop the construction of cheap houses in large concentrations at Memphis’ edge. Mixed price neighborhoods should be the norm. He should not allow more homebuilding than new household formation & shifts from substandard houses can demand.
– There should be job training, health care, community police in every neighborhood: and schools should be multi-purpose campuses with library services, early childhood development/day care, parent development.
-He should demand that new school district have semi-independent sub-districts matched geographically. [i.e. Germantown/Collierville, Frayser, Whitehaven, etc sub-districts]
“Pass a payroll tax so entire metro area will share in Memphis’ infrastructure, and property tax burden is reduced so Memphis becomes the City of Choice.”
Under state law, he can’t do that and it is highly doubtful that the GOP led state legislature is going to allow Memphis to carve out special legislation to do so, given their anti-big-city stance. He shouldn’t waste time tilting at windmills.
The mayor doesn’t have the power to do half of the things on that wishlist. He’s a mayor, not a dictator. Much of the rest of that list is just unrealistic.
Finegold, great to do list. Nothing on the list requires a dictator, just consensus-building and leadership. These can be done.
There is a state attorney general’s opinion that Memphis could do the equivalent of payroll tax through existing privilege tax laws. We agree that obtaining financial support for the tens and tens of thousands of people who come into Memphis to work. Fortunately, the vast majority of jobs are in Memphis and it deserves serious consideration.