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Dignitary Day In Kent...

Thursday is turning out to be a busy day for politicos in and around Kent.  First, Governor Ted Strickland will be arriving at Kent State early this afternoon to tour the 3D Biology Lab and Liquid Crystal Institute.  And later this afternoon, Senator Sherrod Brown will be in Ravenna checking in with his constituents.  It’s not often we get such distinguished visitors, so Mayor Fender and I will be part of the welcoming committee at both events in hopes of sharing a few of Kent’s legislative needs and priorities in between thanking them for their continued support of northeast Ohio.

With Kent State employees contributing 35%  of the total income tax revenues that keep City services running, the state of higher education funding in Ohio is very important to the state of Kent’s economy, so we’ll be listening very closely to what the Governor has to say this afternoon.  I know he’s put forth a tuition stabilization effort that in the long run promises more money to state universities, but in the short run puts pressure on university budgets.

Last Tuesday, the Ohio Board of Regents, the University System of Ohio and the Third Frontier commission agreed that they should combine financial resources totaling $122 million to propel our state’s higher education university system and economy forward.

Kent State was already a recipient of $8 million in the last round of Third Frontier funding, and given Dr. Lefton’s desire to grow the research capabilities of the University, this agreement sounds like great news for Kent.


Here’s the details of the announcement that the Governor announced last week:

8.21.07 – Governor Strickland Announces $122 Million Partnership Between Ohio Third Frontier and University System of Ohio

Columbus, Ohio – Governor Ted Strickland today announced the approval of a $122 million partnership between the Ohio Third Frontier Project and the University System of Ohio to significantly increase the state’s investment in cutting-edge scholarship and centers of excellence at Ohio’s colleges and universities.

“This partnership creates an unprecedented and powerful collaboration between the Ohio Third Frontier Project and higher education,” Strickland said. “The pledge announced today reinforces our administration’s commitment to building on our existing strengths in research and technology to bring the best talent to Ohio, and keeping them here.”

The new partnership, approved at the Ohio Third Frontier Commission meeting Tuesday, will recruit senior scholar research talent from disciplines directly related to the five technology focus areas defined for the Third Frontier Project: advanced materials; biosciences; information technology; power and propulsion; and instruments, controls, and electronics.

“This proposed joint funding program involves a close collaboration of the Third Frontier Project with the University System of Ohio and guarantees that our research goals are fully aligned with the State’s economic development strategies,” said Chancellor Eric D. Fingerhut. “This use of combined funding to endow and equip world-class research scholars at our universities underscores the importance of innovative academic research to the success of Ohio’s ongoing technology commercialization initiatives.”

The Ohio Third Frontier Project will provide $72 million for the recruitment program, and the University System of Ohio will fund the remaining $50 million from the Ohio Research Scholars Program that was initiated with the enactment of House Bill 119. This program makes the Commission and the University System of Ohio partners in the oversight and approval process for funding recommendations, aligning their shared goals in science and technology.

“This action by the Chancellor and the Commission deepens and leverages the Ohio Third Frontier Project by combining Third Frontier funds with funds from the University System of Ohio in a joint competitive process consistent with the mission of the Third Frontier Project. This demonstrates the drive and vision to elevate Ohio to the next level in research and commercialization,” said Lt. Governor Lee Fisher, who also serves as Director of the Ohio Department of Development and Chair of the Third Frontier Commission. “Our goal is to work every day to create and retain well-paying jobs for Ohioans, and this collaborative effort demonstrates that it is the role of every state agency to further economic development.”

“The ability to attract high-quality research talent is critical in becoming a nationally and internationally known industry leader,” said Mark Collar, Chairman of the Third Frontier Advisory Board and President, Special Assignment, The Procter & Gamble Company. “Nurturing the resources to keep that talent can be the key to bringing projects to successful commercialization.”

Members of the Ohio Third Frontier Commission and Chancellor Fingerhut will develop a joint request for proposals to offer talent-attraction grants consisting of funding components including operational support for endowed chairs and research personnel, as well as capital support for the acquisition of scientific facilities and equipment. Private research institutions are also eligible to participate in this initiative.

The Ohio Third Frontier Project is a 10-year, $1.6 billion initiative to expand Ohio’s high-tech research capabilities by building world-class capacity and financing manufacturing technologies to build on Ohio’s existing industries.


It surprised me to learn that for years the state support for higher education has declined to the point where Kent State only receives 23% of its funding from Columbus — the other 77% is tuition and fee supported.  I’m guessing the Governor will talk about how he hopes the new agreement will begin to turn the tide on state funding.

Here’s the details on the Governor’s visit today in Kent:

Ohio Gov. Strickland to Visit Kent State, Hold Press Conference to Discuss Higher Education – Aug. 30

WHAT:
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland will tour Kent State University’s 3-D Immersive Classroom and learn about the university’s liquid crystal technology biological applications on Thursday.

A press conference will be held following the campus visit to discuss Ohio’s higher education initiatives, including the new University System of Ohio.

WHEN:
Press Conference – 2:10 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 30

WHERE:
Kent Student Center’s Risman Plaza

WEBCAST INFORMATION:

The press conference will be available via a live Webcast beginning at 2:10 p.m
. Watch the Webcast live from your computer. (Note: the Webcast link will not be live until a few minutes before the event.)


Competing For The Future...

Through the years I’ve become a big fan of Fast Company Magazine.  They do a great job of keeping readers current on the latest issues and trends in business and technology innovation, with a strong emphasis on entrepreneurship — all of which adds up to exactly the kinds of businesses we want to build Kent’s economy around.  So it was no surprise that Fast Company did an insightful story last month on what cities were on the rise and what cities were struggling.  The kinds of things they look for are exactly the kinds of things were trying to build in Kent, so I thought there was value to sharing the article here.  I particularly like the way they phrase:  what are we doing now to compete for our city’s future?

Keep in mind that this article is global in nature, so they examine cities around the world.  And yes, most of them are a bit larger than our humble Kent-ropolis, but the point wasn’t really to create a who’s who list of cities, as much as it was looking for bits and pieces of insights that contribute to our economic strategy.

For example, I was encouraged by Fast Company’s statement that “energy and enthusiasm begets more energy and enthusiasm” and “smart people want to be around other smart people.”   I’d argue that on a per capita basis, we’ve got a lot of smart people living and working in Kent — we’ve just got to figure out how to get excited about that and leverage our unique combination of street and book smarts that few other places could replicate.  To me, that’s an opportunity waiting to happen.


Fast Company
July 2007

You’re smart, young, newly graduated from a university with the whole world before you. You could settle in a small town with well-tended lawns, pancake suppers, and life on a human scale. Or you could truck it to the big city, with all its din and dog-eat-dog lunacy. Your choice?

Fuhgedaboudit: There is no choice. For all the challenges cities face–congestion, crime, crumbling infrastructure, environmental decay, plus occasional issues with basic civility–they are still where jobs and youth gather, where energy begets even greater energy, where talent masses and collides. Worldwide, the pace of urbanization is only accelerating. This year, for the first time, more of the earth’s population will live in cities than in rural areas–a cool 3.2 billion, according to United Nations estimates. “In a world where we can now work anywhere, we’re tending to concentrate in fewer and fewer places,” says Carol Colletta, president of CEOs for Cities, an advocacy group. “Smart people are choosing to live near smart people.”

Of course, not all “urban agglomerations,” in the parlance of demographers, are created equal. Rapid growth has a way of laying bare the gap between cities that merely get bigger and those that actually flourish. For every Karachi, which is on pace to double its population every 20 years but mired in poverty and violence, there’s a Shanghai, the emerging creative engine for an entire continent. For every Havana, which looks pretty much the same as it did 40 years ago (except worse), there’s a Curitiba, which has spent 40 years mapping its extremely livable future. For every St. Louis, a spot as bland as a flat Bud Light, there’s a hip joint like Fort Collins, Colorado, a high-tech hub that’s also the microbrew capital of America.

In other words, there are winners in this battle for the future. We call them Fast Cities. They are cauldrons of creativity where the most important ideas and the organizations of tomorrow are centered. They attract the best and brightest. They are great places to work and live.

To find them, we started with data from Carnegie Mellon assistant professor Kevin Stolarick, the numbers guru behind Richard Florida’s The Rise of the Creative Class, which helped define what makes great cities tick. We relied on CEOs for Cities’ CityVitals survey, authored by Joseph Cortright of Portland, Oregon–based Impresa Inc.; sustainability data from SustainLane; and insights from the Institute for the Future in Palo Alto.

What makes a Fast City? It starts with opportunity. Not just bald economic capacity, but a culture that nurtures creative action and game-changing enterprise. Fast Cities are places where entrepreneurs and employees alike can maximize their potential–where the number of patents filed is high, for instance, or where the high-tech sector is expanding.

The second component: innovation. Fast Cities invest in physical, cultural, and intellectual infrastructure that will sustain growth. “The real forces for change in America and around the world are the mayors and the local communities,” says Florida, now a professor of public policy at George Mason University.

Finally, Fast Cities have energy, that ethereal thing that happens when creative people collect in one place. The indicators can seem obscure: number of ethnic restaurants, or the ratio of live-music lovers to cable-TV subscribers. But they point to environments where fresh thinking stimulates action and, by the way, attracts new talent in a virtuous cycle of creativity.

Sifting through the data, we identified 30 Fast Cities around the globe, which we’re presenting in nine categories, from Creative-Class Meccas to Green Leaders. We’ve also noted 20 locales on the verge of Fast City status, plus 5 Slow Cities–and 5 too fast for their own good.


Too-Fast Cities

Five spots where the risks outweigh the upside.

Cairo, Egypt

The push for democracy has stalled, and corruption is as rife as ever. No wonder so many Egyptian entrepreneurs are looking elsewhere for opportunities.

Almaty, Kazakhstan

There’s new construction everywhere. There’s also crime, corruption, and nuclear waste. Culture? Uh, no.

Greenwich, Connecticut

A luxe enclave of superrich hedge funds. But one meltdown and this party’s over.

Las Vegas, Nevada

An environmental pileup in the making. Can the casinos find enough water to fill all those pools?

Shenzhen, China

Think Vegas, except in China. Home prices have doubled in four years.


Slow Cities

Urban centers that are going nowhere … slowly

Budapest, Hungary

Breathtakingly romantic–but its economy is broken. Among the world’s 150 biggest cities, last in predicted GDP growth, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers.

St. Louis, Missouri

Too normal for its own good. It ranks dead last on CityVitals’ “Weirdness Index,” a measure of passion and engagement.

New Orleans, Louisiana

We wish it weren’t so. But NOLA was slow before Katrina. The cleanup debacle has only reinforced that reality.

Detroit, Michigan

Last one out, shut off the manufacturing line. Tragically, inevitably bound to the U.S. auto industry’s failings.

Havana, Cuba

Celebrating a half-century of economic decay. Thanks, Fidel. Seemingly no cars on the road made after 1968.


Cities On The Verge

These great urban centers almost made our list of the most innovative cities.

Creative Class Meccas
  • Atlanta, Georgia
  • Los Angeles, California
  • Mumbai, India

Global Villages

  • Boulder, Colorado
  • Seattle, Washington

R&D Clusters

  • Boston, Massachusetts
  • Rochester, Minnesota
  • Tokyo, Japan

Green Leaders

  • Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Sacramento, California
  • Tallahassee, Florida

High-Tech Hot Spots

  • Des Moines, Iowa
  • San Diego, California

Urban Innovators

  • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Culture Centers

  • Nashville, Tennessee
  • Omaha, Nebraska

Unexpected Oases

  • St. Petersburg, Russia

Startup Hubs

  • Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • Bozeman, Montana
  • Beijing, China

Fast Cities 2005

They’re 15 up-and-coming hubs for creative workers–places that draw people who are talented, tech savvy, and tolerant. Meet the home of your next big opportunity.

From: Issue 100 | November 2005 | Page 63 | By: Bill Breen

Not so long ago, some techies proclaimed that communications technology and the Web would make geography irrelevant. In fact, the opposite is true: Talented people keep congregating in cities because they understand intuitively that working with other talented people spurs them to be even more creative.

For the first time, people aspire–even expect–to do work they love and to live in a community where they can be themselves. At the same time, the world of work has become increasingly temporary and insecure. As a result, talent is shifting to regions that offer dense concentrations of other talented people, tolerance of differences, and a great quality of life. These are the places that lure what Richard Florida, the Hirst Professor at George Mason University’s School of Public Policy, calls the “creative class.” They’re scientists, engineers, artists, cultural creatives, managers, and professionals, who together comprise more than 30% of the total U.S. workforce and nearly half of the economy’s wage and salary income.

The country’s epicenters of such talent–San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles–are well-known. To find out which up-and-coming places show the highest rates of creative-class growth–the country’s truly fast cities–we drafted Florida and his crack team of data crunchers, led by Kevin Stolarick, assistant professor with the Information Systems Program at Carnegie Mellon University. They identified the seven U.S. cities with populations between 1 million and 5 million and the three cities between 400,000 and 1 million that have offered the most potent mix of talent, technology, and tolerance in recent years. To top it off, we found a member of the creative class in each emerging city to tell us what’s appealing about where they work and live.

Florida, the author of The Rise of the Creative Class (Perseus, 2002) and The Flight of the Creative Class (HarperBusiness, 2005) asserts that for 60 years, the United States had much of the world’s talent pool to itself. But now, his research shows that the creative class has gone global. U.S. cities are competing with Dublin and Helsinki for creatives. And so we also asked Florida to pick five international cities that are winning chunks of the world’s talent pool. Maybe one of this new generation of Fast Cities, in the United States or abroad, is the next San Francisco. You won’t know until you make it happen.

Sacramento, California

[Poster Child]

Sandra Gonzalez grew up in a family that picked fruit throughout California. “I got into the wine business by osmosis,” she says. But it was during her 10 years working for the Wine Institute, a California trade association, that she came to realize that wineries were doing little to cater to Latino customers. In 2002, she founded Vino con Vida (“wine with life”), a wine-education company, to change that. Gonzalez, 36, has worked with such wineries as Round Hill Vineyards, writes for trade publications, and appears at industry events. She picked Sacramento rather than San Francisco because it’s between some of the largest wine-producing regions and because “Sacramento represents a lot of the changing demographics in the country.” Living in the state capital also helps her stay attuned to new legislation that could affect the wine industry. And as California goes, so goes the country. As Gonzalez says, “I don’t think people realize the impact that Sacramento has on the world.”
-Michael A. Prospero

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: Between 1999 and 2003, the average annual growth rate of the creative class demographic was 4.3%, one of the highest upticks of our 10 U.S. cities. The University of California, Davis, in the midst of California’s wine region, is a worldwide center for viticulture and food-science research. Lake Tahoe, Yosemite, and Napa are all within a few hours’ drive. Daniel Libeskind is building a condo tower downtown.

Caveats: Plans to revive Sacramento’s downtown entertainment options are admirable but have seen years of false starts.

Phoenix, Arizona

[Poster Child]

When the New York ad agency that Louie Moses worked for opened a Phoenix office and shipped him out to work there, “it was kind of like being sent to Siberia,” he recalls. But within a couple of years, the Pittsburgh native came to like Phoenix’s desert sunsets and red-rock mountains, and at the young age of 23, he opened his own ad shop, Moses Anshell, in the Valley of the Sun. “I remember thinking, This is the perfect place for an artist. You can think freely, and you have time to open your mind to new ideas.” More than 20 years later, Moses, 45, runs his agency–which expects $69 million in billings in 2005–from a converted 1920s warehouse in Phoenix’s revitalized downtown. With clients such as the Arizona tourism board, creative director Moses is helping to tell others what he already knows: Phoenix, now the fifth-largest city in the country, is a lot hotter than Siberia.
-Jena McGregor

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: That biotech cluster in the middle of downtown is no mirage. In March, the city opened the Phoenix Biomedical Center, a 28-acre campus that already houses both the Translational Genomics Research Institute and the International Genomics Consortium. Phoenix’s tourist and convention attractions–Sedona’s red rocks are just two hours away, and Scottsdale’s galleries, golf courses, and spas are even closer–aren’t bad for the locals, either.

Caveats: Metro Phoenix’s population, currently 3.5 million, is one of the fastest growing in the country. With nearly 5 million more people expected in the next 25 years, smart planning will be crucial to prevent boom from becoming bust.

Salt Lake City, Utah

[Poster Child]

A few years ago, Shawn Nelson was driving between two of his funky furniture-design stores in Los Angeles when, in his words, “I went insane on the 405 freeway.” The 28-year-old founder and CEO of LoveSac, who had lived in Taiwan and Shanghai (he speaks fluent Mandarin), decided to move back to his hometown of Salt Lake City. It wasn’t crazy at all: A large number of former Mormon missionaries, like Nelson, return to Salt Lake, ensuring a steady supply of educated, bilingual workers for his 75-store, $30 million company. That’s especially helpful when your manufacturing is in Mexico and your material comes from China. The abundance of four-season outdoor activities at hand–skiing, mountain biking, boating–doesn’t hurt, either. Nelson is establishing LoveSac as a “hard-core leisure” brand. That thinking almost certainly endeared him to Sir Richard Branson, helping Nelson win Branson’ s reality show, The Rebel Billionaire.
-MP

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: Between 1997 and 2004, the number of women-owned firms in the metro area increased 36%. The money local VCs have available to invest in the past five years has grown from $75 million to $700 million. The Sundance Film Festival hosts some screenings here each January.

Caveats: Florida’s “Gay Index,” which measures an area’s gay population as an indicator of its tolerance–and therefore the talent it attracts–ranks SLC second lowest of our 10 cities.

San Antonio, Texas

[Poster Child]

Lea Ann Champion arrived in San Antonio five years ago, and she immediately fell for the Alamo city. Coming from the Bay Area, the SBC executive found San Antonio to be affordable, family-friendly, and blessed with a rich Hispanic culture. Those same city selling points helped her recruit top entertainment-industry folks from New York and Los Angeles to Project Lightspeed–SBC’s initiative to bring IP-based voice, video, and data to the home–which she heads up as senior executive vice president of IP operations and services. “It’s been easy to attract amazing talent,” says Champion, who’s drawn more than a dozen team members from outside San Antonio. In the five years she’s been there, Champion, 47, has watched as San Antonio’s economy has diversified away from the military, adding tourism, manufacturing, and high-tech jobs. She expects the SBC-AT&T merger only to add more. “I already see the effects of [SBC] attracting other companies to locate their key personnel here in this city,” she says. “There’s truly a pulling effect going on.” -JM

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: SBC, the Baby Bell about to swallow its mama, AT&T, will become the largest telco when the merger goes through. Artpace is one of the country’s most respected contemporary arts residences.

Caveats: San Antonio is diverse, thanks to its Hispanic population, but there’s not much melting of the pot going on. Its “integration” measure, which looks at how well ethnic groups are dispersed, is the lowest of our U.S. cities.

Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina

[Poster Child]

When Ryan Wuerch’s Nashville-based software company acquired a small Raleigh, North Carolina, firm last year, he naturally thought he’d move the headquarters of the merged mobile software company to Tennessee. But then his wife reminded him how frustrated he always was at the lack of top-notch tech talent in Nashville and suggested he think about Raleigh. “I knew what [a fertile talent region] looked like, and that was the exact feeling I had when I went to Raleigh,” he says, noting the city’s deep educational resources. Since the merger, his company, Motricity, has grown from 46 to almost 300 employees, and in turn is moving from Research Triangle Park to downtown Durham, where it will call home a 100-year-old converted tobacco-factory complex with restaurants, waterfalls, Wi-Fi, and jazz bands. “People want to work in a place where they feel inspired,” says Wuerch, 38. “That means not only being in a creative city, but being in an environment where creativity can take on a new shape.”
-JM

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: The area has the highest patent-growth rate (17.5%) of our 10 cities and is home to three prestigious research universities: Duke, UNC, and NC State. It’s becoming a hub for medical-device companies. And the biggest job surge between 1999 and 2003 wasn’t in computers or medicine but in knowledge professions like education and consulting. The creative-class community–nearly 40% of the population, the highest among all our cities–is fueling downtown renaissances in both Raleigh and Durham.

Caveats: The Triangle’s traffic snarls are mounting. A commuter rail system between Raleigh and Durham is coming eventually, but the state recently cut the region’s transportation funding by $300 million over the next six years.

San Diego, California

[Poster Child]

Born and raised in Montreal, Jennifer Luce, 45, started her architecture firm Luce et Studio in San Diego. Why? With the ocean, desert, and mountains all nearby, “there are so many contrasting images,” she says, “so to build in that environment is very exciting. It’s one of the most diverse landscapes I’ve ever encountered.” Her 15-year-old, eight-person firm has done mostly corporate work, particularly for Nissan, garnering seven architecture awards and $2.3 million in revenue last year. Now Luce wants to do municipal projects, such as helping to redefine San Diego’s public spaces. “It’s a growing city,” she says. “And we’re there at the perfect time to help formulate a physical identity for the place.”
-MP

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: Last year, the city pulled in more VC funding than Los Angeles. Per capita, there are more biotech companies here than in any other city in California–something that only stands to increase as the state rolls out its $3 billion stem-cell initiative. Locals have adopted the trendy bars and shops in the revitalized Gaslamp Quarter, prompting city planners to invest in further downtown developments like Petco Park.

Caveats: San Diego isn’t cheap; geographic constraints keep property values high in the city. The New York Times branded San Diego “Enron by the Sea” last year after a raft of investigations and financial problems in city government.

Portland, Oregon

[Poster Child]

Jeffrey Butters sold his Xterra SUV a little over a year ago. “It was senseless driving into downtown Portland,” he says of his commute to work that now takes 12 minutes on his bike. A native of Oregon, he and several members of his family founded the Butters Gallery–an international contemporary-art gallery that has showcased everything from gold-leafed cow dung to sophisticated modern sculpture and paintings–in 1988. “Maybe five or six years ago people would’ve been surprised to find a modern gallery like ours in Portland, but not today.” Butters, 42, is an artist as well as a gallery owner and has his own downtown studio for painting. His passion for the city matches his passion for art. “I think we’ve developed a sense of city pride that revolves around being creative,” he says. “The city is a wonderful, vibrant place to be.”
-Lucas Conley

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: The Pearl District, an 80-year-old warehouse area, has seen more than 50 residential and commercial projects in just over a decade, transforming it into a hip place to live. It’s a mix of 19th-century industrial buildings and modern condos and art galleries. Home to the largest wooded city park (Forest Park) in the country, the Portland area is lush with outdoor opportunities.

Caveats: As real-estate prices continue to rise, residents have been fleeing to the suburbs. Big-box stores such as Pier One have been cropping up on the fringes, drawing shoppers from inside the city and stalling development of the downtown shopping district.

Madison, Wisconsin

[Poster Child]

Brian Vandewalle knows what Madison, Wisconsin, has to offer better than anyone. The founder of an eponymous urban-planning firm, he helped develop “The Healthy City,” a report by the Madison mayor’s office mapping out a progressive development plan for the community. Recommendations include linking two local assets, bioscience and agriculture; creating more space for the arts; and working with developers to produce live-work neighborhoods. “The idea is to study each of these layers,” says Vandewalle, “and try to develop a comprehensive model.” It’s a model that Vandewalle, 56, thinks will let Madison entice the University of Wisconsin’s 41,000 students, nearly 30% of whom are pursuing advanced degrees, to put down roots here.
-MP

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: A progressive-minded enclave where unemployment is a rock-bottom 2.5% and the creative class continues to expand at an average of 7.8% a year. Madison owes much of its success to the 26,000 people who work in high-tech fields–a number that’s growing every year. The vast majority of Wisconsin’s recent $750 million biotech initiative will wind up here.

Caveats: Local business owners describe Madison’s city council as an “indecipherable bureaucracy” of red tape.

Tucson, Arizona

[Poster Child]

Dr. Shibin Jiang knew he was in the right place when he moved to Tucson to work at the University of Arizona’s Optical Sciences Center in 1996. It was a big change from North Carolina (especially the weather), but the work was too appealing. “We call Tucson ‘Optics Valley,’ ” he says. “If you’re an optical engineer, it’s the best place in the country to be.” By 1998, Jiang, now 40, had cofounded NP Photonics, a company that makes advanced fiber-optical lasers used by the Department of Defense and scientific researchers to monitor conditions deep beneath the sea. As for the weather, it’s now one of Jiang’s favorite parts of life in the Southwest. “I travel to the DC area a lot, and it’ll be snowing and raining and cold,” he says. “When I get on the plane back to Tucson, I’m so glad to come home.”
-LC

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: Technology companies have transformed Tucson into the fifth-fastest-growing high-tech community (in terms of goods and services) in the nation. Recreation is also serious business: The city’s spas, golf courses, and desert retreats account for more than $1.5 billion in leisure and hospitality spending. Nearly a third of Tucson’s 900,000 metro residents were born in Mexico, giving the city significant cultural diversity.

Caveats: The large population of immigrant workers means one in five here still lives in poverty. Urban sprawl is taxing the city’s infrastructure; local authorities have identified some $3 billion in much-needed transportation improvements.

Colorado Springs, Colorado

[Poster Child]

“Software companies actually exist in Colorado Springs?” That’s what new clients of XAware invariably ask its CTO and cofounder, Rohit Mital. He understands their disbelief. His first visit here came as a Columbia University electrical engineering PhD candidate, applying for a job with Hewlett-Packard. He headed back that same day, even though HP had paid for the weekend. But after MCI moved part of its IT force here in 1992, things changed, and Mital founded XAware with a former MCI executive in 1999. “The technical force we needed was available,” Mital, 42, says. So was the customer base for this integrator of complex computer systems. The big defense contractors, including Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Raytheon, were XAware’s bread and butter for the first couple of years. Since then, his company has been able to build on the products it developed for those contractors and pitch them to the insurance and financial-services companies it almost exclusively serves today.
-Jennifer Vilaga

[Creative-Class Cred]

Cornerstones: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman, the nation’s top-three defense contractors, all have offices here, and it’s also the home of the Air Force Academy. They’re magnets for talent and create opportunities for startups. Residents here enjoy 300 sunny days a year. The 14,110-foot Pikes Peak acts as a scenic backdrop.

Caveats: The reliance on the military means a pinch on the local economy whenever troops ship out. This largely Christian conservative city’s Gay Index score, at less than 70% of the U.S. average, hints at low tolerance.

CSX Delaying Track Repairs on Stow Street...

Last week I advised Kent drivers to stay away from Stow Street this week, because CSX had plans to close the street in order to make necessary rail repairs. As of today, CSX changed their plans. Stow Street will now remain open this week, but it will be closed from Tuesday, September 4th through Friday, September 7. So the week of Labor Day, you’ll need to use alternative streets. I’m sure CSX apologizes for the inconvenience.



Here’s the updated press release:

***CLOSURE DELAYED***

NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

August 27 , 2007

RAILROAD CROSSING CLOSING

STOW STREET AT CSX TRACKS

THE REPAIR WORK ON THE CSX RAILROAD CROSSING AT STOW STREET HAS BEEN DELAYED FOR ONE WEEK.

THE NEW CLOSING DATE IS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2007 THROUGH FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2007.

THE RECOMMENDED NON-POSTED DETOUR DURING THIS TIME IS FOR WEST BOUND TRAFFIC TO TURN EAST ON WEST SUMMIT STREET, NORTH ON SOUTH WATER STREET (SR 43) AND THEN WEST ON HAYMAKER PARKWAY (SR 59). EASTBOUND TRAFFIC SHOULD GO EAST ON HAYMAKER PARKWAY (SR 59), SOUTH ON WATER STREET (SR 43) AND EAST ON WEST SUMMIT STREET.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, RESIDENTS MAY CONTACT THE DIVISION OF ENGINEERING AT (330) 678-8106.

City of Kent Ohio
Christopher J. Tolnar, P.E.
City Engineer

Kent Police at Work...

Each week, the Kent Chief of Police sends around a letter to everyone in the Police Department advising of any special events to be aware of, any road closures, construction sites, new laws, etc., that the officers should keep in mind while on patrol. He also highlights any particularly good work and recognizes officers for performance above and beyond the call of duty. Since those stories don’t often make the newspaper, I thought I’d share some here.



Here’s the highlights from the last 6 months:

Kudos to Mark DiJerome, the Investigations Section, and the Northern Ohio Violent Fugitive Task Force (NOVFTF) for the follow-up investigation, and subsequent arrests of two Aggravated Robbery suspects located in Ravenna.

Kudos to Marty Gilliland, one of five former students of Holden Elementary School who were recognized Wednesday as distinguished alumni members. Marty was recognized during the annual Distinguished Alumni Award Program for being a positive role model for current students by serving six years in the U.S. Army, and having 17 years of service with the Kent Police Department. Congratulations Marty for your deserved recognition.

Kudos to Officer Jim Fuller for being recognized in the Ohio Department of Public Safety’s Hot Sheet News for the arrest of — on December 17, 2006, for her SIXTH OVI offense. Nice job, Jim!

The Portage Council for the Prevention of Violence recognized Jeff Langstaff this week at a Local Heroes recognition luncheon. Jeff was honored for his dedication and work in assisting victims of crime and other associations working with Safer Futures. Congratulations Jeff for your well deserved recognition!

Kudos to Afternoon shift and the Portage County Drug Task Force for the arrest of two drug traffickers, and the seizure of cocaine and over $6000. Special recognition is due to Norm Jacobs and his K9 sidekick Codi, who had to chase and “apprehend” the fleeing suspect.

Congratulations to the Afternoon shift officers and dispatchers for the response, search, chase, and apprehension of four burglars last Friday. Although the investigation continues, it appears very likely that they are responsible for the numerous burglaries experienced in Kent and Franklin Township over the past several weeks. The coordination of effort and communication between dispatch, our officers, and officers assisting through mutual aid played major roles in the success and apprehension of the fugitive felons. The burglaries were an issue of concern of city council over the past several weeks. When Councilman Wayne Wilson provided details of the call, chase and apprehension, City Council gave the police department a round of applause. Nice job!

Kudos to all three of our K-9s and handlers. Bil Jac Food and the German Shepherd Dog Club of Northern Ohio held their annual Police K-9 Recognition Ceremony last Saturday, May 5, 2007. Eighty K-9 teams from northern Ohio law enforcement agencies were invited to participate in the award ceremony, by submitting information about K-9 teams and how they aided their communities in 2006. Forty (40) police K-9 teams responded and were considered for awards. All three Kent PD K-9 teams were recognized, and each received plaques for their performances in 2006. Marty Gilliland and his former K-9, Bak, received the 2006 “Special Recognition” award, Jim Ennemoser and Jessy, received the Top Honor 2006 for Pursuit (the best pursuit and apprehension of a criminal offender), and Norm Jacobs and Codi received the Top Honor 2006 Versatility Award for top overall performance. Congratulations to our K-9s and handlers for their outstanding performances. The awards help reinforce the fine reputation of our K-9 teams throughout the State.

Posted in ‘Roll Call is a letter and “Thank You” card from a resident of Overlook Drive, representing the University Heights neighborhood. The resident appreciates our efforts in resolving a disruptive neighborhood problem of barking dogs in their neighborhood. She writes, “…………my neighbors and I appreciate the contribution you and your staff have made toward peace keeping in our neighborhood. I hope this note will remind you that your efforts, however small they may seem to you, can have a powerful and positive impact on others……”. This letter reminds us that those calls we often view as “less significant” can be really important issues to others, and how we respond to the situation can make a big difference in their daily life.

Kudos to Jeff Langstaff for being appointed as a member of the Portage County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services Board. The two-year appointment was made by the Director of Ohio’s Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services. Congratulations Jeff, for this noteworthy appointment!

A resident of Windward Ln. in Forest Lakes called today in reference a call last night of a suspicious vehicle. He and other residents were extremely impressed with both Dispatch, for their helpful attitude, and patrol for their response and extra patrolling afterwards. Good job!

Kudos to Detectives Mark DiJerome and Mike Roberts for their investigation and interrogation of two suspects in the stabbing and felonious assault on Joyanne Court last week. Despite the two suspects difficult attitude, Mark and Mike maintained their professional poise, stayed focused, and were able to obtained confessions from both of them. Great job guys!!

Kudos to Officer Eric Dreger for his vigilance and identifying an individual in the downtown area who was suspected of stealing and using stolen credit cards. Eric recognized the suspect from a surveillance photo from a KSUPD case which was shown to his shift at Roll Call. Until Eric saw him downtown as being the person on the tape, no one knew who the suspect was. KSUPD was contacted and transported the suspect to their department for the investigation. Great job Eric!

Congratulations goes out to night shift and specifically Ptl. Gormsen for the identification and arrest of a subject providing false information to his identity. Through his efforts they were able to identify a known felon wanted on a parole violation from Sacramento, California and get him out of our city. Good job to all!

New Business For Kent...

We work a lot of economic development leads, putting prospective businesses in contact with Kent property owners and creating incentive packages to help make new business plans work.  We chase a lot which makes landing one that much sweeter.  We got notice from one of those leads yesterday that their deal works, and they made an official announcement of their plans to spend $4 million to open a state of the art light manufacturing facility in Kent.  They are expecting to hire 30-40 people right away and they expect that number to double within a couple of years.  Read more about our newest corporate neighbor.

I am delighted to report that Cambria (out of Minneapolis MN), the only producer of natural quartz surfaces in the United States, purchased the old Penn Engineering Building located at 1510 St. Clair Avenue (Davey Industrial Park) where they plan to spend $4 million to open a state-of-the-art operations facility slated to open in early 2008.

Cambria plans an initial employment of 30-40 employees, but they expect that number to grow to 70-80 in the next couple of years. I’ve attached the official press release from Cambria (see below) that offers more insight into their interest in Kent and their product line.

In today’s tough economic climate, it’s a real challenge to grow and attract businesses, so this success story is a credit to the hard of work of our staff to help pull the deal together and make it happen.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Jayme Brandanger

952.944.1676

Jayme.Brandanger@CambriaUSA.com

CAMBRIA TO OPEN STATE-OF-THE-ART OPERATIONS FACILITY IN OHIO

Natural Quartz Countertop Enterprise to Bring New Jobs to Kent Area

MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (August 21, 2007) –

Over the next several months, Cambria will install quartz fabrication equipment in the Kent facility located at 1510 St. Clair Avenue. The new operations facility will serve all of Ohio and greater Pittsburgh, PA.

Cambria natural quartz surfaces are used for residential and commercial applications including countertops, shower and tub surrounds, vanities and flooring. The 75,000 square foot facility will also manufacture custom-made furniture tabletops, fireplace surrounds, desk tops, coffee and end table tops, wet bar areas, and window sills. Cambria is available through kitchen and bath retailers throughout Ohio.

The $4 million operations facility is the sixth Cambria-owned facility in the United States. Cambria is a Minnesota based company with multiple operations in the United States and Canada including  Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, North Carolina and Toronto. Cambria is available through builders, designers/architect and kitchen/bath retailers throughout all of North America. Cambria is a privately held, family-owned company with more than 500 employees. Headquartered in Le Sueur, Minn., Cambria is one of the few quartz surface plants in the world and the only producer of natural quartz surfaces in the United States. Cambria has a North American network of stone fabricator and installation partners that share Cambria’s commitment to quality and craftsmanship. Cambria focuses on quality, innovation and growth in their respective markets. Cambria is available to consumers via retail partners throughout North America. Cambria also exports its products throughout the world. For additional information about Cambria, or to locate the closest Cambria dealer, call 1-866-CAMBRIA or visit Cambria on the web at www.CambriaUSA.com.

“We are excited to open major operations in Ohio bringing new jobs to the Kent area,” said Tom Annexstad, Cambria’s Senior Vice President of Sales. “The strong local economy makes Kent an ideal location for our $4 million facility and we look forward to growing Cambria’s presence throughout the region.”

Cambria is the only producer of natural quartz surfaces in the United States. It is non-porous and certified by both NSF International as the safest type of surface for food preparation and is GREENGUARD Indoor Air Quality® and GREENGUARD For Children & Schools certified as the lowest-emitting type of building material – there is no safer surface available to consumers.

About Cambria

Cambria, the only producer of natural quartz surfaces in the United States, purchased a building in Kent, Ohio for their state-of-the-art operations facility slated to open in early 2008.



Street Closure To Avoid...

Traffic in Kent, even when the University is in session, tends to flow quite good — which is why I wanted to be sure you knew about the closing of Stow Street (Summit Street extended down by the railroad tracks) next week so you could plan your trips around town accordingly.  The closure is being done so that CSX can perform track maintenance.  Here’s the press release.



NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

August 20, 2007

RAILROAD CROSSING CLOSING

STOW STREET AT CSX TRACKS

IN ORDER FOR EMPLOYEES FROM THE CSX RAILROAD TO PERFORM MAINTENANCE, STOW STREET WILL BE CLOSED BETWEEN MOGADORE ROAD AND HAYMAKER PARKWAY FROM MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 2007 THROUGH THE END OF THE DAY FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 2007.

THE RECOMMENDED NON-POSTED DETOUR DURING THIS TIME IS FOR WEST BOUND TRAFFIC TO TURN EAST ON WEST SUMMIT STREET, NORTH ON SOUTH WATER STREET (SR 43) AND THEN WEST ON HAYMAKER PARKWAY (SR 59). EASTBOUND TRAFFIC SHOULD GO EAST ON HAYMAKER PARKWAY (SR 59), SOUTH ON WATER STREET (SR 43) AND EAST ON WEST SUMMIT STREET.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, RESIDENTS MAY CONTACT THE

DIVISION OF ENGINEERING AT (330) 678-8106, E-MAIL: tolnarc@kent-ohio.org

IF THERE ARE ANY CHANGES OR DELAYS REGARDING THE REOPENING OF STOW STREET RESIDENTS MAY TUNE INTO RADIO STATION 1620 AM FOR UPDATED TRAFFIC INFORMATION.

City of Kent Ohio

Christopher J. Tolnar, P.E.
City Engineer

Signs In The Public Right of Way...

Since the issue of hanging signs in the public right of way has become a matter of great debate around town, I thought it was worth clearing-up any confusion people might have regarding the City’s interest in signs.  I hate to take the controversy out of this issue, but the City has no interest in what the sign says — just where the sign was put.

Despite how the issue has been reported in the media, the City’s involvement is not nearly as exciting as a philosophically or politically motivated denial of free speech case. This began, and has remained, a routine action to ask for compliance to a law that’s been on the books for years that prohibits advertising or hanging signs in the public right of way. Admittedly, the individual in question has chosen to use this as a way to make national news by framing it as a freedom of speech issue, but honestly we have no issue with his message, only where he puts it.

Laws prohibiting signs in the public right of way are common everywhere, and like most cities, Kent does not aggressively go after violators of the law. So indeed, if you drove around Kent, you’re likely to find garage sale signs, weight loss signs, and maybe other political signs at various locations along the public right of way. Like most cities, we don’t have Police stake out street corners looking for sign violators, and frankly we don’t have the resources to spend trying to track down who put the sign up. So, like most cities, we have found that it’s usually just easier to pull crews off of street repair duties and remove the signs at particularly bad locations or when we receive complaints. And when they do come in to pull the signs, they don’t discriminate based on what they say, they pull them all.

That being said there are occassions where we actually happen to catch people in the act of hanging signs up in the right of way. If we see someone hanging these signs, we ask them to stop because they are technically breaking the law. Usually, the Police advise the person of the law, and the person apologies for not knowing the law, and takes the sign down without any trouble and no citation is issued. However, there have been occassions where the person refused to take the sign back down, and as a result, the officer cites the person. These cases get handed over to our Law Director and as part of his routine court process he offers the person to pay a $25 fine and the case will be over.

In the recent case that has caught the media’s attention, the officer happened to see the person in the act of hanging the sign so he asked him to stop. Despite the officer’s explanation of the law, the person refused to cooperate so the officer made the citation. As standard practice in these cases, the Law Director offered the $25 fine. Again, the person refused, and at that point he (or his attorney) appears to have started calling the national media reporting a violation of his first amendment rights.

As this thing grew with all the media coverage, the Law Director asked the person to just agree to not hang any more signs in the public right of way in Kent, and we’ll drop the whole thing. So far, he’s refused that as well.

So regardless of what his sign said, the City has followed the same procedure in this case as we have used in others. We treat Grandma’s garage sale the same as political signs, so as I said, this has never been a matter of what the person was saying, only where he put it. The difference here seems to be the interest of the individual cited to use the City’s routine action as a means to draw media attention to his political issue. Seriously, we said we’d forget about it if he just agreed to not put up any more signs on the Kent right of way, so that hardly seems to be an oppressive request on our part, yet he keeps it going by refusing our offer.

The thing is, if Council desires, we can certainly change the law to allow signs on the right of way but at this point it is the law so in the end, if the person won’t come around to what I think are reasonable requests, we have to honor what’s on the books. And to be honest, I still think it’s a good law because if the right of way was officially “open” for signs, not only would we have a lot of junk hanging all over town, we’d also have to be willing to accept racial slurs, profanity, and other potentially offensive signs because to deny those signs would in fact be a denial of free speech. I’m thinking those are pretty good reasons to keep the law in place.

I hope this at least gives you a slightly different perspective than what’s been reported in the media.


Need A Lift?...

When walking, biking or driving a car won’t work, I’m pleased to report that your transit options in Kent are growing.  In recent weeks I’ve had an opportunity to hear a presentation from PARTA announcing their new bus routes that are significantly increasing bus service to and from downtown Kent and Kent State University, as well as other retail locations like grocery stores.  And for those late night revelers, a Kent State graduate has started a new van taxi service, called Go2Go, that also offers a safe trip home when you need it.


Our Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority (aka PARTA) has been busy.  This summer they redesigned some of their routes to better match-up with where people are and where they want to go. They’ve posted all their routing information on-line with their recently redesigned website:

http://www.partaonline.org/

The re-routing was a great example of listening to their customers.  You will see more service to and from grocery stores, and more service between Kent State campus and downtown.  More service means less time waiting for the bus and more options for where you want to go.  As a person in the business of public service, I’m very impressed with the work PARTA has done on behalf of its customers.

See for yourself — or better yet, ride for yourself.  And remember it only costs $1.00!


If you’re looking for something a little more personal than the bus, there’s a new business in town called Go2Go.  This young entrepreneur is looking to fill a late night transportation niche where his company will make sure you get home safe from one of Kent’s many watering holes with a door-to-door service for $2 using a van.

This service keeps drunk drivers off the road and out of backyards as they stumble their way back home through the neighborhoods.   Sounds like a win-win to me.  See what you think.

Arts In Kent...

Lately, recreational opportunities (like kayaking or biking) have received a lot of press in Kent, which is great, but I didn’t want anyone to think that’s all we’re about. I noticed that the Art in the Park banners are up downtown promoting the largest of our art shows for the weekend after Labor Day, so that got me thinking some more about cultural arts and its importance to the quality of life and our local economy. The arts are another piece of the Kent mosiac that makes Kent unique. The arts and recreational opportunities won’t solve our economic challenges by themselves but together they help create the kind of place people want to live and work.



I read a good article in American Style magazine that rated the best cities for art, and it came as no surprise that the cities at the top also have some of the best economies. We’ve got some wonderful artists in Kent, I’d say we just haven’t done a great job at creating more venues to enjoy and experience the art. I’ve been banging around the idea of trying to create a cultural arts commission that would help advise, advocate and promote cultural arts opportunites. It seems to me that we’ve got the arts, we just need more opportunities to engage it, and I’ve seen other places do great things through the focus that an arts commission can bring.



American Style

Issue Date: June 2007,

Top 25 Arts Destinations: From Sea to Shining Sea
by Christine Kloostra

F rom the Lincoln Tunnel to the Golden Gate Bridge, from the sunny shores of the Florida Keys to the windy streets of Chicago, 2007′s top arts destinations can be found in nearly every corner of the United States.

AmericanStyle readers cast a record number of votes in this year’s readers’ poll for their favorite U.S. arts destinations, selecting 75 cities and towns divided into three categories.

In the Big Cities category, perennial favorite New York City once again tops the list. The remainder of the Top 25 contains last year’s favorites, most of them in new positions. The biggest climber was Phoenix, Ariz., jumping from No. 15 in 2006 to No. 8. This year, Charlotte, N.C., made the list, replacing San Jose, Calif.

The Northern Rust Belt staked its claim on the top of the Mid- Sized Cities category, with a large number of Pittsburgh citizens casting ballots for their hometown. The more temperate Southwest proved a reader favorite with Albuquerque, N.M. (No. 2), Scottsdale, Ariz. (No. 4), and Tucson, Ariz. (No. 9).

But the Southwest’s appreciation for art truly stood out on the Small Cities and Towns category, topped by Santa Fe, N.M., and Sedona, Ariz., followed by Taos, N.M. (No. 4), and Tubac, Ariz. (No. 19). New towns on this year’s list included the much chillier Brattleboro, Vt. (No. 24), and Portsmouth, N.H. (No. 25).

For lists of all 25 winners in each category, see below. Continue reading for profiles of the top three cities in each category.

Big Cities

New York City
Just when the thrill of the new Museum of Modern Art was beginning to wane, visitors to New York can now look forward to the anticipated 2011 opening of the Whitney Museum of American Art’s twice-as-large satellite location in the city’s trendy meatpacking district. If you can’t wait that long, the New Museum of Contemporary Art opens its new building in the Bowery later this year.

In readers’ own words: “How can you top NYC? It’s my favorite art city in the USA. … Maybe they should not be included and given top billing overall!” -Sue Frause, Langley, Wash.

Not to miss: “Richard Serra Sculpture: Forty Years.” This retrospective runs June 3-Sept. 10 at the Museum of Modern Art.

Chicago
Since the 1999 “Cows on Parade,” the origin of the nation’s obsession with fiberglass art animals, and culminating with the 2004 opening of Millennium Park, which features artworks by Anish Kapoor and Jaume Plensa, the Windy City has made a name for itself in the public art arena. Another effort, the International Sculpture Exchange Program, is bringing vast outdoor sculptures by artists from Chicago’s sister cities to a variety of “gateways” into the city, including O’Hare International Airport.

In readers’ own words: “Chicago’s art museum with Grant Park and the lakeshore museums makes an awesome scene.” -Bill Lands, Berkeley Springs, W.Va.

Not to miss: The Renegade Craft Fair. This homespun fair features a wide range of do-it-yourself craft artists. Organizers anticipate the 2007 show will take place in Wicker Park in mid-September.

San Francisco
You can read elsewhere in this issue about the more traditional venues for art in San Francisco. But a city with a program that allows homeowners to donate part of their property tax payments to an arts fund clearly has an appreciation for the arts that goes beyond museums and galleries. To wit, the city’s art commission runs an Art on Market Street Program that brings contemporary artwork to kiosks, as well as other temporary installations along the busy downtown street. The current project, by artists Amanda Hughen and Jennifer Starkweather, explores various natural and man-made systems in the city.

In readers’ own words: “San Francisco’s diverse population demands consistently changing contemporary art.” -Beth Krauss, Austin, Texas

Not to miss: Ride the city’s Third Street Light Rail line, a recently completed project that features art enhancements throughout the route, including pole-mounted sculptures, paving designs and posters.

Mid-Size Cities

Pittsburgh, Pa.
A clear favorite of its residents, Pittsburgh has launched an all-out effort to make a name for itself in the glass world. This year, the city hosts the annual Glass Art Society conference (June 7-9) in the midst of a yearlong “Pittsburgh Celebrates Glass!” celebration. If less-fragile art is more your style, the city boasts a large number of museums, from the Carnegie Museum of Art to the popular Andy Warhol Museum.

In readers’ own words: “Pittsburgh, in particular, is loaded with wonderful and very top notch arts and performances. For a city of its size, it should be a prize destination for anyone serious about the arts.” -Kevin Noe, Dripping Springs, Texas

Not to miss: “Chihuly at Phipps: Gardens & Glass.” Part of “Pittsburgh Celebrates Glass!,” this exhibition of Dale Chihuly’s work will be on display at the Phipps Conservatory May 10-Nov. 9.

Albuquerque, N.M.
The recent opening of the nonprofit 516 Arts Center is yet another addition to the art scene in Albuquerque that moves beyond the city’s traditional Native American artistic roots. The museum-style gallery features interdisciplinary works, such as a May 26-July 21 retrospective of Patrick Nagatani’s “obsessive and meticulous use of masking tape” in photography, collage, assemblage and painting, plus an accompanying exhibition of others’ “obsessive, time-consuming and complex” use of alternative, inexpensive materials. Plenty of venues for traditional Southwestern art remain, including the Albuquerque Museum of Art & History and the National Hispanic Cultural Center.

In readers’ own words: “The artwork is so interesting and different than anywhere else! Incredible assortment of artists and mediums from all over the world who are obviously inspired by the beauty of the Southwest!” -Carol Wright, Clarkdale, Ariz.

Not to miss: The Albuquerque Fiber Arts Fiesta takes place May 24-26 in the Creative Arts Building at EXPO New Mexico.

Las Vegas, Nev.
There is more to Vegas than gambling, showgirls and all-you-can eat buffets. And surprisingly, enough readers have discovered Sin City’s artistic side to catapult it to No. 3 on our list of mid-sized top arts destinations. Without leaving the Strip, visitors can see everything from a Chihuly (lobby of the Bellagio) to the Guggenheim-Hermitage Museum at The Venetian hotel and resort. Venture farther out and visit the Las Vegas Art Museum and the city’s Downtown Arts District.

In readers’ own words: “Vegas has come a long way from tacky to interesting art.” -Olivia Robinson, Seattle, Wash.

Not to miss: First Fridays in the Downtown Arts District feature galleries and artists’ studios, including the Arts Factory, Dust Gallery and Holsum Lofts.

Small Cities

Santa Fe, N.M.
The University of New Mexico’s School of Business ranks Santa Fe as the second-largest art market—by sales—in the country, following New York. With more than 250 galleries and thousands of resident artists, the city’s economy is largely driven by the arts and cultural tourism. Adding to the creative atmosphere are new artist live/work lofts opening this year at the Santa Fe Railyard development, home to SITE Santa Fe and Santa Fe Clay.

In readers’ own words: “I don’t need to travel to any other city to find great art.” -Lynden Galloway, Santa Fe, N.M.

Not to miss: Art Santa Fe, a biennial contemporary art fair, takes place July 12-15 at El Museo de Cultural.

Sedona, Ariz.
The artistic center of the city is the Sedona Arts Center, which features a community school, intensive art workshops and exhibitions, including shows in its Members Gallery. Make time to visit Sedona’s myriad galleries, many featuring work by the city’s hundreds of resident artists.

In readers’ own words: “Sedona is eclectic and has world class artists in residence. More galleries per capita than anywhere in the U.S.!” -Bill Allison, Laguna Niguel, Calif.

Not to miss: The Sedona Plein Art Festival, Oct. 22-28, brings 30 painters to town for a weeklong festival where they will capture the Sedona area on canvas.

Key West, Fla.
Like many of the small towns in the Top 25, Key West is home to a large number of artists, drawn by the unique architecture, temperate weather and breathtaking ocean scenery. The city is filled with dozens of galleries, many located on historic Duval Street.

In readers’ own words: “I know of no other city that could be more contemporary in the arts.” -Penny Vennare, Pittsburgh, Pa.

Not to miss: Sculpture Key West, an outdoor sculpture festival, takes place annually in three locations on the island, from January until mid-April.

TOP 25 SMALL CITIES (populations fewer than 100,000)

Santa Fe, N.M.
Sedona, Ariz.
Key West, Fla.
Taos, N.M.
Asheville, N.C.
Carmel, Calif.
Charleston, S.C.
Boulder, Colo.
Laguna Beach, Calif.
Aspen, Colo.
Berkeley Springs, W.Va.
Naples, Fla.
Chapel Hill, N.C.
Annapolis, Md.
Corning, N.Y.
Sarasota, Fla.
Burlington, Vt.
Eureka Springs, Ark.
Tubac, Ariz.
New Hope/Lahaska, Pa.
Cumberland, Md.
Northampton, Mass.
Saugatuck, Mich.
Brattleboro, Vt.
Portsmouth, N.H.



Gary and Jeff at Standing Rock do great work on a shoestring budget, and of course Bob and Cass at the McKay Bricker Gallery have done amazing things to promote Kent and the arts. Throw in the Kent State gallery and yes, even the body art parlors, and we’ve got something for everybody.

When I see the variety, the quality and passion invested in these efforts, I imagine what we could do as a community if we rallied around the arts and really committed to their success.

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Kentucky Art Fairs Sweep Nation’s Top 10 Art Fairs & Festivals List
Three art fairs in Kentucky have swept AmericanStyle magazine’s third annual Top 10 Art Fairs & Festivals readers’ poll. Kentucky Crafted: The Market in Louisville, Ky., won the top spot this year, with its more than 300 artists drawing visitors from across the country.

(12/19/2006)
Three art fairs in Kentucky have swept AmericanStyle magazine’s third annual Top 10 Art Fairs & Festivals readers’ poll. Kentucky Crafted: The Market in Louisville, Ky., won the top spot this year, with its more than 300 artists drawing visitors from across the country.

The St. James Court Art Show, also in Louisville, Ky., ranked third, and the Francisco’s Farm Arts Festival, in Midway, Ky., ranked tenth. Both of these festivals made their debut on their year’s list.

The 2006 Top 10 Art Fairs and Festivals are:

1. Kentucky Crafted: The Market (Louisville, Ky.)

2. Paradise City Arts Festivals (Northampton, Mass.; Marlborough, Mass.; Philadelphia, Pa.)

3. St. James Court Art Show

(Louisville, Ky.)

4. Scottsdale Arts Festival (Scottsdale, Ariz.)

5. Bayou City Art Festival (Houston, Texas)

6. Festival of the Arts/Pageant of the Masters (Laguna Beach, Calif.)

7. Ann Arbor Art Fairs (Ann Arbor, Mich.)

8. La Quinta Arts Festival (La Quinta, Calif.)

9. Downtown Festival & Art Show (Gainesville, Fla.)

10. Francisco’s Farm Arts Festival

(Midway, Ky.)

Update on Fish Creek Watershed Plan...

The second Watershed Action Plan was held on June 19th so for those interested, I’ve copied the minutes from that meeting.  Really, what we’re talking about here is urban stream restoration, which is something cities are struggling with all across the country.  Recognizing the importance of these stream tributaries to watershed management, ecology, and quality of life in a community, many cities are paying to re-open the pipes and sunlight the streams.  We don’t have as much piped but some of our older “urban” streams need a little TLC.



MEETING MINUTES
Interested stakeholders identified at the organizational meeting held June 19th, 2007, as well as those previously identified as having an interest in the development of a Watershed Action Plan for the Fish Creek Watershed, were invited to attend the second Fish Creek Watershed Action Plan meeting held at the City of Kent’s Service Administration Complex located at 930 Overholt Road on Tuesday, July 17, 2007 at 3:00P.M.

Meeting Attendees:

Crystal Cherry, Portage County Soil & Water Conservation District

Christine Craycroft, Portage Park District

Claudia James, Portage County Regional Planning Commission

Mike Mennett, Home Builders Association Serving Portage and Summit Counties

Carrie Gavriloff, Kent City Council

Bill Schultz, Kent City Council

Jerry Gubanich, City of Kent, Stormwater Consultant

Gene Roberts, City of Kent, Service Director

Sheri Chestnutwood, City of Kent, Administrative Assistant

· Fish Creek – Issues and Problems to be Addressed

Mr. Roberts said that he and Mr. Gubanich recently walked Fish Creek from the Cuyahoga River to S.R. 59. Through a power point slide presentation Mr. Roberts showed various conditions found within this area of Fish Creek.

During the presentation the following conditions were noted and discussed.

Trash & Debris

Some trash was found along the Creek’s edge, however it was noted that this area of Fish Creek was found to be relatively clean and free of debris. Wood debris was found at several locations; which is typical for a creek setting.

Water Quality

The water was cloudy looking and in some locations having a filmy residue floating on top. Phosphates or emulsified oils were two of the possible contaminants discussed. Tests would need to be performed to determine pollutants.

Riparian Areas

Private property lawns are landscaped to the edge of the Creek. Private property lines are often located at the center of the Creek.

Stream Flow & Outfall

Slides showing areas of different flow classifications, outfall locations, and storm sewer discharge pipes within this section of Fish Creek were discussed.

· Presentation of possible process to implement Watershed Action Plan

Through the power point presentation Mr. Roberts went over the process of developing a Watershed Action Plan for the Fish Creek Watershed.

Mr. Roberts emphasized that placing blame on any person or entity is not the answer.

No one person or entity is at fault, it will take everyone to correct. Education is the key, we must start with ourselves. Learn what the stream is telling us. Obtain the knowledge of the experts, then educate others, develop educational materials, develop outreach programs and develop a method to determine our progress.

We need to define what was done wrong in the past, which is now having a negative impact on the Creek. Implement plans to mitigate past wrongs found currently in the Creek and determine what needs to be in place to prevent future wrongs to the Creek.

In addition to the previously mentioned tasks, Mr. Roberts identified the following tasks that need to be completed to implement a Watershed Action Plan for the Fish Creek watershed.

Watershed Action Plan

· Beginning the process of understanding the stream

· Identify what is there

· Walk the creek and identify general lay of the land

· Define, using best available mapping, where identifiable land marks are located

· Generate maps for detailed location of every headwater outfall (Class I, II or III)

· Note discovered issues that require further investigation

· Prepare Maps

-Maps need to be as accurate as possible

-Maps need to be relative to a grid (Northern Ohio State Plane Coordinate System)

-Maps need to show as much detail as possible

-Maps must be prepared so that others can use map to define location for what is discovered in the field well into the future

-Maps are a living document

Reach Calculations
-The “Reach” is based on the center line of the stream and is defined typically in miles

-The “Reach” defines how far upstream any point is along the stream

start at outfall

-For Fish Creek this is the Cuyahoga River

· Stream Right/Left

-The right or left side of a stream is defined from the prospective of looking upstream

-Purpose of reach measurement

-To locate where an identified point of interest is

-To tie different maps of scale together

-To be used to plan work

-For planning a stream cleanup knowing where large objects are located that need to be removed

Defining further investigation for all flows contributing to the total flow in the stream

-Class I – Cold year round flow

-Class II – Warm mostly year round flow

-Class III – No flow in dry weather

· Every flow that outlets to Fish Creek needs to be defined and located
Who does what
-We need to define each of our strengths

-Some of us may be better able to do research

-Some of us may be better able to do field work

-Some of us may be better public speakers

-Some of us may be better at getting policy implemented

-Our strengths will help us define what each of us can do
Next Steps
-Field work

-Continue with mapping Fish Creek Main Channel

-Develop maps of all Fish Creek infalls

-Develop tests to be conducted

-Types of testing

-QHEI

-Water analysis

-Micro-Invertebrate sampling and Identification

-Fish sampling

-Mitigation planning

-Stream clean up

-Access through adjoining property owners

-Develop mitigation partners

-Boy Scouts

-Service organizations

-Educational materials

-Gather educational materials and edit for Fish Creek (From WEB)

-Develop history of Fish Creek

-Develop news letter

-History of Fish Creek

-History of development along Fish Creek

-Outreach planning

-Determine adjoining property owners

-Determine all property owners

-Plan educations events

-Stewardship enrollment

-Determine interested parties that live along Fish Creek

-Develop mailing list for news letter

-Develop a program for Scout Merit Badge

-Develop interest from people using Hike & Bike Trail

Throughout the presentation the importance of mapping the creek and the surrounding area was emphasized. Detailed mapping of the area should help determine the source of pollutants entering the creek and assist in the removal of debris from the creek during stream clean up events. A large area of Stow drains into the Fish Creek watershed; detailed mapping of the watershed and surrounding area is important.

The process of mapping the area using data already available from the City of Stow, City of Kent, FEMA, Portage and Summit Counties was discussed.

Ms. James said she may be able to assist with the mapping of the watershed and agreed to look into the costs that would be involved to map the area.

Mr. Shultz asked if a FEMA grant could be obtained to purchase properties that flood repeatedly as a direct result of the river overflowing its banks.

Mr. Roberts said that there is only one property that he is aware of located on Middlebury Road that has flooded repeatedly as a result of the Cuyahoga River overflowing its banks.

Current Projects and Activities
Ms. James asked about the public outreach meetings held during 2005 in conjunction with representatives of the Cuyahoga River Remedial Action Plan.

Mr. Roberts said most of the people who attended the first meeting came because of private property flooding concerns. It is difficult to get the public to participate in a sustained effort of watershed stewardship. The attendance at following meetings was very disappointing.

Mr. Roberts said flooding within the Fish Creek Watershed will never be eliminated because we have built in the flood plain.

Mr. Gubanich sets up a booth and provides educational materials to residents during events such as the Heritage Festival and Art in the Park. The City has also distributed storm water educational materials to residents that attended the Arbor Day workshop and to Adopt-a-Spot stewards.

Mr. Gubanich also works with Community Service workers who have been assigned by the courts to stencil storm drains and distribute information door tags throughout neighborhoods within the City.

Educational workshops are being held this summer in cooperation with The Ohio University Extension and Portage County Master Gardeners that include a rain garden demonstration, water quality and the importance of riparian buffers, natural lawn care, and the ecosystem of the Kent Bog.

Mr. Roberts said that he and another City employee are registered to attend a Stream Bank Workshop on stream morphology and stream bank stabilization at Adell Durbin Park on August 16th.

· Identification of additional participants that would be of value to watershed plan

Summit Metro Parks was identified as a possible participant that should be invited to future meetings.

· Next meeting agenda items and date

Mr. Schultz said he is interested in saving what natural areas still remain within the Watershed, and asked what tools are available to maintain the natural corridor.

Mr. Roberts said the new requirements regarding riparian setbacks, which are being implemented as part of the NPDES Phase II Storm Water Regulations, should help to save the natural areas still remaining. Most of the area within the Watershed is already built out. Educating the individual property owners within the watershed about stream stewardship and riparian buffer zones is the key.

Best management practices regarding water quality and the construction of retention ponds in new developments were briefly discussed.

Removal of the Cuyahoga River dams in Kent and Munroe Falls and the improvement of rivers water quality were discussed. Mr. Roberts said that the removal of the dams should help the Fish Creek Watershed; without the rivers flow being impeded by the dams, the water from the Creek now has a place to go.

Mr. Shultz asked about grants that may be available and inquired about who would contribute the match; each community?

Ms. Craycroft said that the Lake Erie Commission is currently accepting Great Lakes Aquatic Habitat funding grant applications; the application deadline is mid September.

Mr. Schultz asked who writes the grant application.

Ms. Craycroft said she is not able to commit a lot of time due to her obligations to the Portage County Park District.

Ms. Cherry said she could assist with the grant application; but was also hesitant to commit to the amount of time required to complete a grant application.

Ms. Craycroft said that a grant may be able to be obtained to help with public out reach and education. Ms. Craycroft suggested “No Fish in Fish Creek” as a phrase that could

be used for an educational campaign, and asked if the history of the creek could be researched to determine if there ever were any fish in Fish Creek.

The possibility of obtaining grant funding to cover the costs of mapping the area was briefly discussed.

Mr. Schultz asked Mr. Roberts to request Council approval to submit a grant application to the Lake Erie Commission for the benefit of the Fish Creek Watershed.

The next meeting was scheduled to be held in the 1st Floor conference room of the City of Kent’s Service Administration Complex, 930 Overholt Rd. on Tuesday, August 28th, 2007 at 3:00P.M.

· Adjournment

Meeting was adjourned by Mr. Roberts at 4:30P.M.

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