This entry is reposted, with permission, from our Kansas City affiliate Community Housing of Wyandotte County's blog: http://chwckck.org/blogs/blog.
By Steve Curtis
Community Housing of Wyandotte County
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Youth volunteers participating in our Community Alley Restoration (C.A.R) program. |
It can mean everything or it can mean nothing depending on who
has defined what it means for your neighborhood. If you ask your
neighbors what they want they will undoubtedly produce a list of things –
like better sidewalks and curbs, faster police and fire response, less
vandalism and fewer stray dogs and feral cats. Others want coffee shops,
retail stores, bike trails, community gardens, or entertainment and
recreational centers, even wireless Internet. It's true these things can make life in
the neighborhood more enjoyable, more convenient and even healthier but
what these things really do is create a sense of place.
A place where people can gather, can meet, share ideas and get to
know one another. These environments are essential for our
socialization. In urban neighborhoods many of the things that used to
bring us together – like downtown shopping districts, neighborhood
schools, mom and pop stores, park and recreational centers have been
shut down, moved on or are under funded. Citizens have to deal with
aging infrastructure, higher taxes and now bear the responsibility of
maintaining alleyways, sidewalks and curbs or bringing their 100 year
old homes into code compliance of new home standards.
Quality of life means a lot of things. It involves almost everything that influences a neighborhood from government regulations
and ordinances, variety of housing stock, ratio of rental property to
home ownership, household incomes, type of schools, cultural diversity,
park services, youth programs, leadership and resident accountability.
If you don’t have the recipe – that can be a tough cake to bake.
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Freshly painted bike lanes in Wichita, Kansas |
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New plants being installed during Arbor Day at Waterway Park in Kansas City, Kansas |
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Unfortunately, there isn’t a recipe that fits every neighborhood or maybe any neighborhood. You can have meetings and sounding sessions that may help exposure the most pressing issues, concerns or trends but any long term solutions come from neighbors getting to know one another. Developing lines of communication and trust with government, civic organizations and surrounding neighborhoods. It comes from creating a common sense of
purpose about why we live here and why it is important that we learn to
work together toward common goals. Its about believing in who we are and that what we do matters.
Creating those gathering places is the
first step in moving those types of conversations from small groups on
our front porches to engaging the greater community. Sharing our ideas
and cultures. Developing trust and friendships. Working on projects
together, engaging our youth and our government and finding ways we can
work together to make our communities better.