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There’s reason to think that 2004 was a turning point for At TulsaNow we also look forward to the output of the Neighborhood
funds, Vision 2025’s Cinderella, along with the Arts. In the
future, neighborhoods should play a bigger role in a broader strategy for the
way we foster livable, sustainable communities. It was good to see other new, civic-spirited groups emerge in
2004. ‘Home Owners for Fair Zoning’ arose from the 71st
& Harvard fiasco; SaveTulsa.org
protested the demolition of Downtown’s Skelly building. ‘Young Professionals of Tulsa’
hit the streets, dedicated to providing more diverse amenities and a more open,
urban culture for young people to match the attractions of other US
cities. Our ability to attract and keep young professionals in To which economic point, make no mistake:
Even the Metro Chamber is swinging around like the proverbial ocean
liner, confronting new paradigms brought by the digital revolution, the
creative economy and demographic change. TulsaNow exists to stimulate objective civic debate that leads to intelligent
strategic decisions about our community’s future. Among the less enlightening
of 2004’s small-town politicking is the ongoing ‘recall’
effort to eliminate two of the City’s more inconveniently opinionated
Councilors, Medlock and Mautino. This self-serving initiative - denounced
by virtually everyone, including the Mayor and Back in Downtown, the closing days of 2004 saw the Library
system’s failure to win over its own users with its vision of a new Grand
Central Library and upgrades to the region’s libraries. This was a
colossal setback. Among TulsaNow’s early proposals to the
County’s Library system was and is to design a Grand Central Library that
helps create a genuinely walkable and vital, urban neighborhood around
it. The Library’s visual concepts ignored this option, presenting
an auto-oriented ‘icon’ that spurned the pedestrian. TulsaNow
hopes to work with the Library’s managers on a reworked strategy that can
ignite public support next time around.
From Land Run to Planned Run
How did TulsaNow do in 2004? (Permit a paragraph of cheer-leading
here). Considering we’re a bunch of grass-roots volunteers with day
jobs: not too badly. We formalized and publicized our mission,
strategies, values, and set priorities; and we broadcast them on our website. We focused our attention on the
region’s Land Use policies, because these affect every aspect of our
daily lives and because they’re not working any more. We hosted a
‘Land Use’ forum for candidate Councilors in January which
reverberated productively for the rest of the year, and which is beginning to
generate a sea-change in attitudes. Several TulsaNow Board members joined
Vision 2025 Oversight teams. We participated in the Mid-Town Coalition of
Neighborhoods, in the
2005 Priorities TulsaNow’s focus in 2005 will continue to focus on Land Use and
Downtown revitalization in 2005 as being two urgent, economic
imperatives. Land Use policy affects our health, taxes, traffic
congestion, transit options, pollution, zoning, schools … you name
it. Our present policies are out-dated and uncompetitive.
They’re inefficient, expensive and socially divisive. Bureaucratic
rivalries serve to hinder rather than encourage change. Acrimonious ‘Developer
vs. Neighborhood’ disputes are just one symptom of the growing pains
we’re facing that relate to land use. Many cities around the These concerns are all the more significant as we contemplate an
‘Arkansas River Plan’ for development of many miles of the River.
The projected, 30-year time-frame requires long-term strategic thinking about
the environment, demographic change, macro-economic factors, etc., of which
TulsaNow sees few signs. At present it looks more like a business-as-usual
bean-feast for builders and developers.
Preserving Value By natural extension TulsaNow looks forward in 2005 to adding a more
energetic civic discussion about Preservation to these issues. We
see preservation in broad terms: as being about the productive re-use of our older
buildings and existing infrastructure, not the archiving of past glories.
We want to see the preservation and reinvigoration of the City’s living,
breathing personality - particularly
at the heart of our City. This may well require some imagination, clear
thinking and backbone from present and future Administrations. TulsaNow
is glad to offer all three attributes at no charge. But there are grounds
for hope here: whilst the World’s decision to demolish the Skelly
building outraged many, including TulsaNow members, owners of other Downtown
buildings such as the Philtower are seeking to add
value to their buildings instead of destroying it, by converting them to
residential living spaces as well as offices. Now that’s preservation. Day-to-day news reporting dwells more on detail (pot-holes, zoning
disputes) than on the underlying policies that caused the problems in the first
place. Public policy doesn’t fit into sound-bites. So we want
to help Tulsans make sense of the public policies that affect all our daily
lives. We intend to provide more articles and links on our website featuring the wealth of strategies
and experiences of other, more - let’s be frank - innovative
communities. Our mission is to help citizens get ready for change.
We plan more public forums, starting in Spring.
Adding Value, Subtracting
costs Now more than ever we need imagination, courage, clarity of vision and
a cooperative determination to carry through. The visionaries of the 1920s
and 30’s are gone, and we can no longer depend on our founding
philanthropists to decide what’s best for us. It’s up to
informed citizens to take charge of our own destiny. TulsaNow aims to
help by organizing and invigorating working groups of people who
come to the table with ideas and solutions. I was about to say ‘Watch this space’.
Don’t. Get involved instead. Start by joining us at www.Tulsanow.org. Here’s to a
ground-breaking year of visible progress and rational, purposeful, civic
discussion. Jamie Jamieson Outgoing President, TulsaNow
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