Thursday, September 22, 2011

Whanganui Regional Museum Event

The "motley crew" sing "what shall we do with a drunken pirate".

At the Creating Our Future Day we talked about the need for celebration and fun as a way of building community. When we realised that Women's Suffrage Day and International Talk like a Pirate Day coincided the Whanganui Regional Museum bravely rose to the challenge of organising a celebration!!
We used Pecha Kucha where presenters talk to 20 slides, each showing for 20 seconds. What a great evening. We laughed a lot, learned a lot and had fun. I got to see a side of some people I'd not seen before and talked to people I'd not met before. A great eveing that certainly built community. Thanks to Carla Donson, Eric Dorfman and Louise Follet for ther work organising.

The History of Women's Philanthropy

In Victorian times we saw strong temperance movements, suffragettes and some of the most strategic philanthropy ever. Horrified by the need of widows to resort to prostitution to support their children, women banded together to start social enterprises to employ these women in dignified employment. Profits were used to provide schools for their children where they were also clothed and fed. I find this inspiring, both for the compassion shown, but also for the strategic approach to addressing social issues. Judith's contribution to the eveing was a children's story was about one adventurous little girl who grew up to start a social enterprise clothing factory.


Carla Donson was our MC for the evening, and also a presenter.




Judith telling her story about Penelope Isabella Rosalind Alice Tompkins-Endersbottom.






Dr. Eric Dorfman sweet talking a bird!






















Suffragettes and Pirates

Elise Goodge from Mainstreet looked stunning, seen here with Stewart the manky parrot and displaying pistols from the Museum collection
Dr Eric Dorfman from the Whanganui Regional Museum seen here with cannon balls. To the side is a treasure chest from the Museum collection.
A real cannon from the museum collection.
A model of a Spanish galleon from the collection. It was so intricate.

Carla introducing Judith Timpany from the Whanganui Community Foundation. Judith's children's story about a little girl who grew up in Victorian times also added some of the history of women's philanthropy.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Victory Village Forum

Victory Village Forum

Nelson, 27 to 29 July 2011

The Victory Village Community
Victory is a low socio economic suburb in Nelson where the school decided that providing education was not enough. (At the beginning of the process the school was decile 2, now decile 3) The school now has a community centre and health centre on the school site as well as a community vegetable garden. It is widely used by the community and has had many positive spin offs for the community.

There is a kaupapa of making it better for children and families. The school believes that all people should be able to:
Belong
Thrive
Achieve

People commenting on negative aspects of the community have been mentored to become active citizens and become involved in action to encourage a better community. Reflection and learning have been encouraged.





For the community it has been important to create spaces for celebration and connection. Diverse funding streams have also been seen as very important.

Presentations

Chaordic was a new word. It is the space between order and chaos and it’s where learning and innovation can best take place. Too much order and there is no stimulation and too much chaos is just a big mess!
In the chaordic space we can learn by doing and reflecting with a range of stakeholders.






We can see communities as either complex or resilient. This leads to different responses

Complex Response: Issues are difficult to frame
Resilient Response: Good enough framing is a good place to start and we can refine as we go along.

Complex Response: There are multiple root causes
Resilient Response: Working across boundaries can help to understand the underlying issues through bringing multiple perspectives

Complex Response: Multiple stakeholders
Resilient Response: A collaborative response and flat “structure”

Complex Response: Emergent responses.
Resilient Response: We learn as we are doing from our reflections


Complex Response: Adaptive learning.
Resilient Response: We go with what we know has worked before and constantly re evaluate and adapt.

Complex Response: Unique situation. This community is unique and needs a unique way of solving issues.
Resilient Response: Customised responses. (See above)

Complex Response: Paradoxes and dilemmas. Finding ways to work in the face of paradox and dilemma can be difficult
Resilient Response: Transparent coping. We start where we are and are open about our uncertainties. We welcome feedback and suggestions.



3 Questions to ask about community

1. Who is in the room ? (And who is not in the room?)
2. Who is visible in the room? (And who is invisible in the room?)
3. Who defines the discourse (What is talked about)?

Connectedness and embededness are important in strong communities. That is people need to feel a part of their communities and constructive ways of working and problem solving need to be ingrained in the community.

Questions to think about.

1. How do we change intergenerational outcomes for families and whanau?
2. How do we take other people with us?
3. How do we increase community resilience?
4. How do we grow active citizenship?
5. Is community a verb that masquerades as a noun?
6. How can we encourage creative thinking?


Judith Timpany
Whanganui Community Foundation

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Red Shoes Day brightens Whanganui




Why were those crazy people, dancing and making noise and having a great time in Victoria Ave? They were celebrating Red Shoes Day to bring a bit of fun and brightness to Whanganui. Well done to everyone who turned out and thanks to all the shopkeepers who waved and cheered us on.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Creating our future – the power of the Whanganui community



Creating our future – the power of the Whanganui community


Preamble
On 8 June 2011, over 100 people attended a workshop convened by Whanganui Community Foundation to start setting some directions for Whanganui’s future. Facilitated by Mary-Jane Rivers, the purpose of the workshop was to re-energise and give shape to the community’s aspirations.

Introduction
Richard Thompson, immediate past chairman of the Foundation, set the scene, asking participants to set aside cynicism in favour of creativity, free association of ideas, and identifying opportunities.

Economic development is important, but we can’t change the macro environment within which we live. So it is up to us to make Whanganui a good place to live, one that people come to or return to because they like the place. Whanganui’s size and physicality give it life and make being here a pleasurable experience. We need to move from deficit thinking to surplus thinking; there are problems, but being happy through friends, family and social interaction matters.

Celebrate being us, and others will come.

Session 1
Participants were asked what attracted them to come to the workshop. Responses included:
• Exploring the potential of Whanganui
• The desire to counter undeserved bad publicity
• Sense of duty: “When you’re summoned, you come”
• The good timing of the event
• Brainstorming with the movers and shakers
• Wanganui is a great place
• Desire to put sustainability as a principle

When asked what attracted people to Whanganui and what keeps them here, responses fell into several areas.

The people
The environment

People are nice to one another Green, peaceful
Innovative The river and the river road
Connectedness The climate
Networks, easy to make contact Affordable housing
Diversity in a small place The character of the place
The expertise and ability to ‘do’ Cleaning up the river – a critical project
“Deep roots and new shoots”



The ambience
The facilities

The scale of the city Schools
Family friendly Buildings
A civilised place Activities
A creative, artistic place The Market
Its aesthetics and character Good coffee!

Others
Whanau
“Getting old in the place where I was born”
Cutting edge sustainability project

Session 2
Celebrating Whanganui

When asked what was best about Whanganui, participants nominated:

Activities Facilities Qualities
Events like E-day Architecture Able to deal with crises
Market Cafes Brave – having a go
Masters Games CES Caring community
Open Studios Cultural Centre, Queen’s Park Collaborative
Primary School Sports (Laird Park) Heritage buildings Common purpose “all on the same page”
Puanga Festival Main Street Connectedness, networking
Skate park Museum Creative
Surfing Sarjeant Gallery Diverse
Tree planting Schools Healthy
Wanganui Opera Week Tertiary education Innovative industries
Youth music scene It has an identity
Leadership
Raw-honest quality
Responsive to need
Safe and vibrant
Tolerance
Volunteerism
And is modest!


It is very probable that there are omissions in these lists. It is hoped that the lists are sufficient to indicate the richness of the responses.


Session 3: Our vision of the future

“We live in the best damn place in New Zealand”

Participants aspired to seeing a place where the leadership prioritises building an inclusive community; which is an oasis of cultural and environmental excellence; where there is a thriving community which embraces its diversity and history; where children have a vision for their future; everyone can lead a meaningful life with good educational and employment possibilities. We want to see sustainable industry; resilience and connectedness in our population; visionary events with buy-in by the community; recognition of the centrality of the river and the resolution of the Awa claim; celebration of our success and our creativity; culturally strong, environmentally responsible, and prosperous.

We hope our young people will be saying that Wanganui is vibrant, “wicked”, “rocks”; a place where the young have a voice which is heard, have opportunities, enjoy and benefit from schooling, have a ‘can do’ attitude; a fun place to live, a place to be proud of, where they want to stay or come back to and bring up their children; a place about which they say “It’s a wonderful city, the 2011 vision worked”.

We hope business will be saying it’s the best city in New Zealand, a place to come back to, it’s a stunning place with warm, friendly people, a safe place where people enjoy themselves; where business can learn a lot and where business opportunities abound, where there is a niche market of high-tech, innovative, collaborative, branded, creative, artistic business.

We hope visitors will want to stay and become residents (“wanna be a Wanga”); where they find a community enjoying itself in a beautiful environment, a place that’s full of surprises and lives up to its good reputation of being safe, friendly, creative and inviting.

Guiding principles

Three guiding principles were identified:

1. Sustainability: sustainability is seen as multi-faceted, covering the environment, the population size, business development and workforce, as well as lifestyle choices and habits. The goal is healthy homes, people, river, children, food and economy.
2. Community connectedness: this relates to the physical environment, ensuring that there are places where people can easily interact; the technical environment, using the technology to maximum effect; the social environment, where no individual or group feels excluded.
3. Being true to Whanganui’s essence: Whanganui’s essence is defined through its history, its geography (the river in particular), its buildings, its diversity, its cultural and artistic environment, its resilience and flexibility, its climate, its innovation, its respect for the past and excitement for the future.

Any future activities and plans should have their roots in these principles. It was strongly recognised that we must do this ourselves – “our job, not theirs”.

Actions and Action Plans

These fell under several headings, illustrating the energy and imagination of participants.

Having fun
Creative displays
Impromptu happenings in public places
“Wanga day”
River Week/raft race
Fishing competition
Live music
24/28 hour competitions
Geo-caching
Sand sculptures
Pirate/suffrage day (19 September)

Clean and green
Street approach to recycling
Keeping streets rubbish-free
“Adopt a street”
Swap meet centre
Resource recovery

Connectedness
Meet the neighbours
Random acts of kindness
Street approach to recycling
CBD broadband connection

Knowing/enhancing what we have
Identify key players
Mapping the way the city looks now
Sharing our stories – newspaper, on-line
Skills register; time-bank
Advertising our artists (20 slides in cafes)
Get the tram going
“For Our Kids” mentoring / volunteering
The port
Transport

Getting started
What have others done that has worked?
• Zero Youth Unemployment scheme
• Imagineering – set up a group for this
• Business incubator; mentoring networks
• Motivational speakers

Identify a “point of difference” (eg expertise in design for the elderly)
Use Whanganui Community Foundation’s blog and Facebook page for sharing
Use Chamber of Commerce’s offer of leadership in sustainability in business
Work with the Council to develop the ten-year plan
Think regionally
Use the “Whanganui and Partners” framework
Recognise the value of small, incremental change

Start the conversation – NOW






Pat Cunniffe
11 June 2011

Friday, June 10, 2011

Red Shoes Day


At the Creating our Future event we talked about becoming an even more enjoyable place to live.

We also talked about no or low cost and fun ideas to achieve this. Well here's a great opportunity that shows what happens when we get our heads in the space that's alert to possibilities.

Red Shoes Day
We all need a cheering up as the days get longer and the weather gets colder. That’s why Friday 17th June is Red Shoes Day.
Please wear red shoes, boots, sneakers, slippers on Friday June 17th If you don’t have a pair of red shoes don’t let that stop you from joining the fun, wear something else that makes you feel happy; a red tie, a red jumper, red coat or jacket, your favourite red undies (we’ll take your word).
To celebrate Red Shoes Day we will be holding a fun event, probably at lunch time. Watch out for more info.