Category Archives: Neighborhood

neighborhood rallies for good cause quickly

Posted on Tuesday, March 24, 2009 by No comments yet

Amy posted a note on Front Porch Forum seeking donations yesterday in Burlington’s South End.  Today she followed up with this…

Thanks so much for your generous response to my request for household goods for Bethan, the young mother in need.  We had a great time yesterday driving around picking things up from all you kind folks.  It was like being Santa in reverse.  Then we set her up in her new apartment and voila, a functional home.  I know this request came on no notice.  It’s great to know a neighborhood can rally for a good cause so quickly.  On behalf of Bethan and her baby, thank you all.

Bear Market finally hits Baldwin Rd

Posted on Monday, March 23, 2009 by No comments yet

Bill’s not letting the economy — or a bear attack — get him down (as posted to his Hinesburg neighbors on Front Porch Forum today)…

Bear Market finally hits Baldwin Rd

Delighted with the Budd and Schubart bird delis and their cornucopia of curious feeding devices, a hungry black bear, out for a Saturday evening ramble on the old French Farm, made short work of the feeders and poles, leaving a scattered array of mangled metal and plastic on the deck and front lawn of each residence and making a great deal of noise. Great fun.

Bill@Schubart.com
http://www.Schubart.com

BeLocal: citizen empowerment through digital media

Posted on Monday, March 16, 2009 by No comments yet

BeLocal three circles

Kevin Harris blogs today

“I’m involved in a new initiative to try and help maximise the potential of digital media for community engagement. In recent weeks I’ve been working with Simon Grice, Steven Feldman and Hugh Flouch (Harringay Online) to set up BeLocal Consulting, starting with a series of workshops. Here’s the blurb:

“BeLocal Consulting contributes to the community empowerment agenda by helping local authorities, community groups and citizens to exploit digital media around community issues.

“With a combination of expertise in community development, new media and service management, we help local authorities through the following process:

  1. Understanding the issues
  2. Establishing partnerships and building a strategy
  3. Supporting implementation of the strategy
  4. Assessment and review.”

“Now is the time for experiments” -Clay Shirky

Posted on Saturday, March 14, 2009 by No comments yet

Clay Shirky’s much blogged about essay about newspapers is — surprising for a topic so over analyzed — fresh and mind-opening…

… there is one possible answer to the question “If the old model is broken, what will work in its place?” The answer is: Nothing will work, but everything might. Now is the time for experiments, lots and lots of experiments, each of which will seem as minor at launch as craigslist did, as Wikipedia did, as octavo volumes did.

Journalism has always been subsidized. Sometimes it’s been Wal-Mart and the kid with the bike. Sometimes it’s been Richard Mellon Scaife. Increasingly, it’s you and me, donating our time. The list of models that are obviously working today, like Consumer Reports and NPR, like ProPublica and WikiLeaks, can’t be expanded to cover any general case, but then nothing is going to cover the general case.

It’s a thrill to be deeply involved in one such experiment… Front Porch Forum.

On 99-cent iFarts and progress

Posted on Friday, March 13, 2009 by No comments yet

From MeetUp.com‘s Scott Heiferman’s blog

@JoeTrippi: “I live in a world in which BILLIONS of people live on less than $2 a day yet many of us will pay 99 cents for an IPhone app that makes our phone fart. But I don’t write this out of guilt or to guilt you. Its just a fact that I find really strange… I am not much of an idealist any more — at least not in the way I considered myself an idealist before I found my way to Africa last year — but I still believe in the power of people conducting simple acts together for the purpose of achieving what is right.”

That’s my approach to Front Porch Forum.  It’s not single-handedly finding a cure for AIDS or reversing global climate change… but it is connecting neighbors and leading to increased civic engagement.  And there’s something profound about helping humanize the guy next door, while directing people’s attention to local issues, conversations and actions.

FPF on The Radiator

Posted on Friday, March 13, 2009 by No comments yet

Thanks to host Jonathan Butler who interviewed me on his new radio show “The Browser” on The Radiator… fun times.  We discussed Front Porch Forum, Facebook, Craigslist, local online and more.  Click here to listen.

UPDATE: From Jonathan today on FPF’s Neighborhood Volunteers Forum…

I am a Volunteer at the Radiator 105.9fm, BTV’s community-access public radio station, where I host a weekly program called ‘the browser’.  The program is all about “the people who bring the world wide web to BTV & VT”.  My guest this week was Michael Wood-Lewis of Front Porch Forum.  You can hear the interview here: http://thebrowser1059.wordpress.com

The success of the FPF is a multi-angle story and I’m sure I’ll host future discussions or interviews about the Forum.  If you have any suggestions for guests/topics (related to the Forum or other), please feel free to drop me an email.  I can’t use the Radio to overtly and actively promote the Forum, but it is a great story that could merit additional coverage in the future.

Better than classifieds?

Posted on Thursday, March 12, 2009 by No comments yet

Online classifieds are a dime a dozen… but many of these services are failing lately.  As reported on Local Onliner

Jay Schauer, a friend who runs Ad2Ad.com, … complains that “people seem to assume that classified advertising is an easy business to understand and enter. It’s not. It’s a business that demands fierce commitment to localization, understanding the nature of the small local advertiser, and a commitment to small, individual sales.”

Schauer notes that it is “hard ground for start-ups driven by dreams of an IPO. In the past year I’ve seen three competitors drown. Two others are careening toward the treacherous shoals…

“What those failing groups seem to have lacked is the desire to get down and get real with the individual advertiser who will actually pay for classifieds. That customer is not rich, not sophisticated, not interested in pretty, elegant or cool.”

He goes on to note that “the bulk of classified advertisers live in small towns and tight neighborhoods. They don’t build social networks. They are typically the salt of the earth — and hence of little interest to VCs. This customer wants RESULTS FAST. They want to get information to their neighbors — who are also their customers. Most important, they will pay a reasonable price to do so.”

“Classifieds are not pretty,” says Schauer. “But the economic engine they support is large and remains robust. More important, the neighbor-to-neighbor business interaction is core to the strength of the greater economy and to our political well-being.”

While Front Porch Forum is more about neighborhood conversation than classified ads, many of the postings are, essentially, classified ads shared among clearly identified nearby neighbors.  And FPF postings often out perform classified ads on Craigslist and other platforms.  In fact, a member just posted this on FPF in Burlington’s Old North End…

Hi Neighbors, In my recent posting offering to sell several items  (coffee table, accordion, shelves, etc.)  I received way more response then I ever expected!  I sold/gave the items to those offers which landed in my inbox first.  I apologize to all those who I did not respond back to… if you did not hear back from me, the items are gone!  Many thanks.

Calling civic-minded nearby neighbors

Posted on Tuesday, March 10, 2009 by No comments yet

Lorna-Kay in Burlington’s New North End is using Front Porch Forum to call her nearby neighbors to action.

Dear Neighbors – Our neighborhood is suffering very badly from the effects of winter debris and scattered litter. Are you a civic minded resident of the New North End who would like to join me in a pre-spring clean up? We could work collaboratively or individually to make our neighborhood cleaner and neater. I will have bags and gloves for volunteers.

About 50 households in close proximity to her received this posting.  How else could she accomplish this?  Flyer door to door?  Posters on utility poles?  Start a Facebook group or neighborhood blog?

And when these folks do gather, bags in gloved hands, they’ll chat about the other postings they’ve been sharing on FPF… proposed development projects, recent local elections, the lost pet bunny that showed up on someone’s front stoop.  This will further draw people into local involvement and getting to know their neighbors.

Civic Engagement, Elections, Community Building… and Spring!

Posted on Friday, March 6, 2009 by No comments yet

The lead up to this year’s Town Meeting Day was a busy time for the 130 FPF online neighborhood forums.  Some folks groused about all of the political postings… and then there was Betsey’s response from Burlington’s New North End…

Thank you to the voters of Burlington for turning out on Town Meeting Day.  What a great city this is!  We have beautiful parks, terrific schools, an engaged citizenry, and an engaged and enthusiastic government.  We work on our challenges together, and support each other in times of trouble.

Thank you to the Front Porch Forum for giving us a chance to connect with our neighbors and share our hopes for our city.  I am looking forward to hearing exciting news from my neighbors about ways they are making a difference, and improving our yards, homes, schools, businesses, and futures.  With spring in the air, good news should be shared.

I’m looking forward to putting away the shovel and picking up the rake.  I would love to hear what you’re planting — and hope that if anyone out there needs a “barn raising” that we’ll hear about it in FPF first!

Amen!

Economic hardship revealed

Posted on Tuesday, March 3, 2009 by No comments yet

A Front Porch Forum member in Richmond asked his neighbors if anyone was in need of his used minivan…

Thanks to all who responded. New Inquiries will not be considered. Between freecycle… and… Front Porch Forum, about ten people wrote to encourage me to donate to Good News Garage, which I had considered and chosen not to do, and about 15 folks or families have expressed interest in taking the van. In the way of need, several stories were redolent of hardship, and I do not wish to add more empathy strain than I now have. Several people wrote with thanks for making the offer, and one wrote to thank me, without wanting to receive it. Some stories were wrenching, and overall this is an interesting momentary adventure.