Category Archives: Community Building

“We don’t know our neighbors anymore.”

Posted on Tuesday, December 11, 2007 by No comments yet

From Sebastien Provencher today

“It is surprising. There is a crucial sense of community lacking in the metropolitan areas.”  –William O’Hare, co-author of a new study (.pdf) released by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, talking about the plight of poor kids in rich US states. (found in the December 10th 2007 issue of Time Magazine).

In my opinion, urbanization in the 20th century has reduced the sense of community in large urban areas. We don’t know our neighbors (and neighborhoods?) anymore. It actually has become awkward to introduce ourselves to our neighbors. But, as Man is really a gregarious creature (we like to live in “tribes”), I’m a firm believer that the local social web will, in the future, help re-build the social tissue in large cities. These new web tools will allow us to maintain a basic privacy layer while removing some of the awkwardness in the system.

I agree with the diagnosis, but I’m not as certain with the prescribed cure.  Front Porch Forum is one effort working on a solution.

The Story of Stuff

Posted on Friday, December 7, 2007 by No comments yet

The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute video that is worth seeing.  It’s moral jibes with Front Porch Forum‘s mission of fostering community with those around you.

It’ll teach you something, it’ll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.

Mailman earns neighbors’ appreciation

Posted on Wednesday, December 5, 2007 by No comments yet

I know people like to knock big institutions… take the U.S. Postal Service for example. But we’ve got a great postal carrier and perfectly fine post office. And now today Amy in another part of Burlington posts this on her FPF neighborhood forum

Hi Everyone: By now, you may have heard that our wonderful postman, Ralph, is retiring, and his LAST DAY on the job is Wednesday December 19th. He’s like one of the family, and will be impossible to replace. SO – how about we make December 19th into a wonderful neighborhood send-off for Ralph? If everyone left him a card, and did something special to express our gratitude (balloons, banners, marching bands, whatever!), he’d know how much we appreciate his years of devoted service, and that he’ll be missed. Let’s get creative!

What a great neighborhood!

Yi-Tan, rBlock and FPF

Posted on Tuesday, December 4, 2007 by No comments yet

Thanks to Jerry Michalski for inviting me to participate in his Yi-Tan Weekly Call today about community building at the neighborhood level.  There, I learned about other efforts, including…

LifeAt, Meet the Neighbors, Neighborology, i-neighbors, Front Porch Forum, TownConnect, Mesh Tennis and rBlock

Vivek Hutheesin, rBlock’s founder, offered many excellent insights.  And from his most recent blog posting

Fatdoor has just announced in Private Equity Hub their first-round financing through Norwest Venture Partners and their new CEO, Jennifer Dulski, from Yahoo!  Here is a quote from Jennifer, which I know is true from my own experience:

“Building online local communities that scale is an extremely difficult problem to solve, but the market opportunity is immense and consumers are craving a solution that will make this vision a reality.”

To address this immense market, any platform needs to first solve some very difficult problems in four areas – boundaries, applications, verification, and privacy.  rBlock believes that it has solved them all.  However to win a big share of this immense market, rBlock’s solutions must be integrated in a manner that leads to viral growth.  This requires, among other things, a user-interface that’s easy-to-use and scalable.  rBlock believes it has solved this too, paving the way for more plan execution than experimentation.

Dryer’s Ice Cream Survey: Neighbors less neighborly than they used to be

Posted on Sunday, December 2, 2007 by 1 comment

Dryer’s Ice Cream commissioned a phone survey of 1,000 U.S. homes in 2005 as part of a promotion tied to neighborhoods…

More than half of Americans (55%) believe they are less familiar with their neighbors today than their parents were with their neighbors a generation ago. And, according to a recent survey, our hectic schedules are to blame. In this fast-paced world of instant worldwide communications, it’s ironic that sometimes the hardest connections to make are with folks just across the street.

Dreyer’s Slow Churned Ice Cream asked Americans across the country how well they knew their
neighbors. Here’s the scoop:

  • Three out of ten Americans (27%) don’t know their neighbors first and last names;
  • Six in ten Americans (59%) who aren’t friendly with their neighbors say it’s because they’re just too busy to create meaningful relationships;
  • Fewer than half of Americans (48%) have borrowed something, like a cup of sugar, from one of their neighbors

Research and community experts say that on average, students perform better, people live longer, and
crime rates are lower when people who live in the same community have a basic familiarity with each
other.

Pattie tells a good community-building story around this information.

Every neighborhood needs a meeting place

Posted on Saturday, December 1, 2007 by 1 comment

Jean in Williston offered this to her neighbors via Front Porch Forum today…

Today is World AIDS Day and since my brother died of complications from AIDS in 1994 I am doing whatever I can to prevent others from catching it. I think honesty is the best policy and secrets make people sick. A more honest and caring society will keep us all healthier. That is why I’ve joined the cohousing movement where neighbors are encouraged to know and care for each other.

Every neighborhood in Williston could be a cohousing village if each neighborhood had a place specifically designated as a meeting place – just like the New England commons and meeting houses of our past. Does anyone know of a good meeting place in the Lawnwood neighborhood where we could all meet each other in real life? Thank you Marti for offering the public library, but it is not located in our Lawnwood neighborhood. Is there a meeting place at the new fire station?

Pinecrest Village has a pool house I could reserve for our first meeting. I was hoping I could persuade the developer to build a meeting place within his development. Maybe there’s still time.

Hope to meet you all before my townhouse is sold and I have to move to Burlington even if the best meeting place for now is the public library.

Yahoo’s Neighbors

Posted on Thursday, November 29, 2007 by No comments yet

Greg Sterling writes today about Yahoo’s new trial service called Neighbors…

Yahoo! has introduced a very interesting new feature on Local: Neighbors. A new tab will appear, “Neighbors,” that offers a community discussion area and organizing tool…

Seeking Santa Suit… and Santa to fill It

Posted on Saturday, November 24, 2007 by No comments yet

Here’s a first for Front Porch Forum (from Tracy in Westford, VT)…

We’d love to have a guest reader in the form of a big man in a red suit at the pajama story time at the library the evening of December 19th.  We’re in search of a Santa suit… if it comes complete with someone to fill it, that’s great, but if it doesn’t we should definitely be able to find someone to fill that part of the bill, as long as we can find a suit!

Neighbor Mutual Aid Society

Posted on Wednesday, November 21, 2007 by No comments yet

Michele and Tom posted the following note on their FPF neighborhood forum in Essex yesterday…

I would love to see the Forum used for sharing ideas and helping each other out with yardwork, household jobs that need an extra hand, and possibly even lending tools or coming with your tools to help a neighbor. Is anyone interested in an informal group like this? It would be a sort of mutual aid society to help people who may not know how to do certain tasks, just need some advice, or to work together to know each other and get a job done more quickly and done right!!

Great idea!  And one that we’ve seen take hold in several parts of our pilot region where Front Porch Forum is flourishing.

Local Online: Authentic Impact vs. Fluff

Posted on Tuesday, November 20, 2007 by No comments yet

Lauren writes in today…

I just want to write and give my thanks for what you have created. The forum is great. For me it provides a sense of community and neighborliness that I didn’t think was possible to achieve anymore.

I am sure you have much evidence by now of the Forum actively changing communities as well, and I wanted to toss in my own example. I’ve just learned that my community (Westford) doesn’t currently have a food shelf in operation. Thanks to Front Porch Forum, having a community-wide conversation about how best to fill this need is a cinch. I have no doubt that, with the help of neighbors rallied to the cause, we’ll have one up and running in no time.

You must know that not a community meeting – or practically any public-oriented conversation – goes by without FPF being tossed into the mix.

What a wonderful gift you have given to us all.

You know, Front Porch Forum stands conventional Web 2.0 thinking on its head on many points. I’ve heard from several Silicon Valley experts about how we should change course and line up like every other local social networking attempt. It’s a full-time job tracking all these vowel-deprived start-ups and the countless millions of investor dollars that they’re spending.

But sites that make a genuine difference in people’s lives and their sense of local community… that’s something altogether different. We’ll gladly keep moving along our path… and thanks to Lauren for this latest example of everyday folks making great use of Front Porch Forum in their home town.