Savannah Beacon Magazine: Around the country, regional cooperation is helping communities, both large and small, tackle the big issues

Around the country, regional cooperation is helping communities, both large and small, tackle the big issues

Sara Murphy, Savannah Beacon


In the last 12 years, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg region has suffered severe job losses in manufacturing and textiles exacerbated by insufficient economic diversification, coupled with increasingly higher housing prices. The area also exhibits persistent patterns of racial segregation and ongoing struggles with upward intergenerational economic mobility.

Laudably, Charlotte-Mecklenburg is one of the few regions in the country that has named these challenges explicitly and demonstrated a clear intention to address them. Its Leading on Opportunity plan, a comprehensive framework to close racial gaps, reduce segregation, promote economic mobility, and pursue shared prosperity provides a model for other regions to follow. Leading on Opportunity’s focus on child and family stability, early care and education, and college and career readiness emphasizes the imperative of elevating the cross-cutting factors of segregation and social capital as part of a regional economic development strategy.

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg region is itself a part of a larger regional collaboration. The Centralina Regional Council was created to serve the needs of a nine-county region, working at the regional, community, and individual levels to shape area-wide planning. One of Centralina’s key successes was CONNECT Our Future, a framework built on consensus across two states and 14 counties to guide and invest in the region’s growth.

Michelle Nance, planning director at the Centralina Regional Council, said elected officials’ leadership was key to Centralina’s success. “It started when we were deemed one of the fastest growing regions in the country with no growth plan,” Nance explained. “Elected officials from across the region realized that if they wanted to sustain the benefits from growth, they’d have to manage it.”

Nance emphasized the importance of understanding and accepting that the 14 Centralina counties are not the same, having different needs and barriers. That said, there are also common threads, which became Centralina’s core priorities. Each community implements those priorities in ways most appropriate to them.

Regionalism works best for needs that cut across multiple areas, like transportation. “Gridlock isn’t business friendly,” Nance quipped, “and if we’re going to invest in our infrastructure, it should be done efficiently. Everybody doing their own thing isn’t efficient.” Regional collaboration not only cuts down on the administrative burden and cost of a given program, but also helps to attract federal dollars. “Agencies want to see everyone on the same page,” Nance observed.

It’s also critical to engage all stakeholders, and not to rush that process. “We learned to do things on a slow bake,” Nance said. “Take the time to build consensus. We call it ‘harvesting the worries.’ We make sure everyone is heard, because you don’t want something coming out of left field when you’re 75 percent done with a project.”

While Centralina is deeply ingrained within its communities, local officials know their people best, so Centralina leans on them as critical interfaces between regional efforts and the individuals they serve.

“We make sure our town managers, planning directors, and heads of economic development planning commissions are well versed in our projects and have communication materials to take back to their constituents,” Nance explained. “We don’t have to take center stage for a project to be successful.”

The greater Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) region faces common challenges, including traffic congestion and problems with equity and digital inclusion. The region is less typical in its immense sprawl and permeable borders that people frequently cross for daily activities. As such, coordination across localities on service provision makes sense, and a number of institutions work on various aspects of regional coordination.

The North Texas Innovation Alliance (NTXIA) works collaboratively to improve quality of life, foster inclusive economic development, and increase resource efficiency using data and technology. NTXIA convenes 21 founding members, including 12 cities, a variety of councils and alliances, and the DFW International Airport to help connect cities, the private sector, academia, and trade schools. It plans to establish strategic advisory committees to tackle complex topics including data standards and privacy, cybersecurity, digital inclusion, financial models, and procurement.

Jennifer Sanders, NTXIA’s executive director, says having an independent, non-profit entity running regional efforts is effective in corralling resources and providing focus without risking allegations of favoritism. It all starts with core champions.

“For us, it was a nucleus of 10 agencies and cities that were passionate about the need for a regional approach,” Sanders said. She hammered home the indispensability of involving all sectors of society and clearly defining the mission, and noted the importance of being honest about barriers, such as procurement and funding.

“Regions need to find sustainable financial models,” Sanders emphasized. “Stop relying on a five-year bond cycle. Think about securing private equity funding. If you’re working on a large infrastructure project – which is exactly the kind of thing where regional approaches are effective – collaborate on buying agreements and requests for proposals (RFPs) on infrastructure design deals.”

Sanders highlighted the importance of data-sharing across regions, noting many municipalities don’t fully understand the problems they face without the broader view that comes from pooling information. Consider an extreme example: The authorities had no idea the Golden State Killer’s murders were connected because they didn’t share information. Sanders recommended an instrument called inter-local agreements (ILAs) to help structure data-sharing arrangements.

Educate Texas works with communities across the state to establish and implement strategic and measurable community-specific action plans and to ensure resources are directed toward developing innovative programs or scaling evidence-based practices that lead to better outcomes. The group recognizes that cross-sector collaboration within communities is key to the creation and support of an aligned pipeline between K-12, higher education, and the workforce to support students’ success in school, work, and life.

Chris Coxon, Educate Texas’ managing director of Programs, said regionalism is a mindset. “Whatever issue you’re trying to take on, no one entity is going to be able to turn the ship, and certainly not to accelerate to the level of progress the broader community expects.”

Coxon emphasized the importance of clarity around an initiative’s goals and how they’re measured. “What does success look like?” Coxon asked. “Answering requires some degree of data and analytical acumen, but also an ability to translate that to a publicly digestible message. If you can’t get someone off the street and explain your work to them in simple terms, you’ve lost.”

Asked how to engage the public school system in regional collaborations, Coxon said they have to see that the players are truly there to help. “Most often, school districts are leery of actively engaging in these types of initiatives because it’s just about, ‘Let me show you more data on how our schools are failing our children,’” Coxon observed.

In the Rio Grande valley, Educate Texas brought together two non-profits with school superintendents and university presidents. “Initially, the non-profits started tearing into the school districts,” Coxon said, “and we had to tell them, ‘No, the purpose here is to find solutions, not to take pot shots.’” Successful collaboration means working together to achieve shared goals, and it requires slow trust-building.

Leadership North Texas (LNT) is a graduate-level leadership program aimed at recruiting, developing and supporting leaders who have a commitment to civic engagement, learning, collaboration, and the DFW region. Participants learn best practices in regional stewardship from other successful regions and participate in the development of appropriate strategies for North Texas.

Kimberly Walton, program director of LNT and its parent organization, the North Texas Commission (NTC), said it all came together around a common goal. “People support what they help to create,” Walton said.

One of the highest profile examples of best practice was when DFW hosted Super Bowl XLV through a concerted regional effort. The Dallas Cowboys approached the NTC because it was “Switzerland,” neutral territory, so it didn’t favor any specific municipality. Having a neutral convener is all about instilling trust in the community, Walton explained. The NTC works hard to ensure that its events are balanced, represent all communities in its purview, and build capital with those communities.

Despite the positive examples above, detractors point to fissures in what some characterize as a veneer of regional success. These include regionalism’s propulsion of Dallas’ migrating economic center, dispersing jobs in a way that deepened economic divides and income inequality. Detractors also highlight Dallas’ endemic poverty, crumbling infrastructure, and de facto segregation, attributing these in part to the fact that the city’s and region’s leaders have prioritized a version of economic growth that takes advantage of DFW’s abundant, cheap landmass to disperse new investment across a vast landscape, reaping short-term economic success while ignoring the long-term challenges of sustaining such growth.

Metro is the regional government for the Oregon portion of Portland’s metropolitan area. Formed in 1979, it is the only directly elected regional government and metropolitan planning organization in the United States. Metro’s master plan for the region includes transit-oriented development that promotes mixed-use, high-density development around light rail stops and transit centers and multi-modal transportation investments.

With a broad purview, Metro:

  • Manages land use and development and works with communities to plan for future population growth;

  • Plans investments in the transportation system for its three-county area and decides how to invest federal highway and public transit funds;

  • Acts as a regional clearinghouse for land use information and coordinates data and research activities with government partners, academic institutions, and the private sector;

  • Manages 17,000 acres of parks, trails, and natural areas;

  • Runs various visitor venues, including the local zoo, convention center, and expo center; and

  • Plans and oversees the region’s solid waste system.

Metro has a number of advisory committees made up of elected officials, technical staff, and subject matter experts. Most also have seats reserved for members of the community.

Metro’s President Lynn Peterson took office in January 2019 and has focused on addressing the housing and transportation needs of areas outside the region’s thriving city centers. “We’ve done a great job prioritizing the centers, but what makes a transport system work is the entire corridor, not just a downtown,” she said. “That is the next step in where we need to go. It’s the places that connect those centers that we’ve allowed to decay, or just not be used at all.”

Noting that sprawl is bad for the environment and our collective mental health, Peterson believes density is good, with the caveat that it be done well and in the right places.

“Our job is to lead the conversation,” Peterson said. “We can’t solve all of Beaverton’s or West Linn’s problems as a region. They need to step up and solve their own. But we can certainly be part of the investment tool that brings them closer to being able to do more of what they need to accomplish, rather than overbuilding.”

In 2018, voters let Metro borrow $652 million for affordable housing across the region. “It was the first time we’d really passed a regional initiative to address this challenge, and it shows that people understand we have to address these sorts of issues together,” said Metro Councilor Sam Chase. “People understand now that it’s not just one jurisdiction or two jurisdictions; all 27 jurisdictions in our region need to be part of the solution.”

Creating Smart Communities | A Guide for State Policymakers

Creating Smart Communities: A Guide for State Policymakers

National Conference for State Legislatures, October 2020

Introduction

Policymakers across the nation are looking to intelligently implement new technologies with the goal of creating vibrant, livable communities that offer diverse economic opportunities to all citizens while attracting innovative businesses and workers.

Increased reliance on all-online systems for commerce, government operations, health care and education driven by the COVID-19 pandemic, underscores the importance of having robust and “smart” infrastructure to ensure that daily life can continue as seamlessly as possible during times of emergency. The pursuit of such projects can create jobs, drive economic growth and positively impact community members.

The effort to become smarter and more connected requires state and local governments to consider a variety of factors. These include selecting and implementing technologies in a way that best serves the community, determining needs, creating a plan, leveraging opportunities with local businesses and community stakeholders, coordinating technologies across the many interconnected sectors and offices, navigating state and local regulations, and maximizing implementation with limited resources.

As communities plan for technology and infrastructure investments in this new environment, developing a coordinated, cross-government planning approach can greatly enhance efficiency. With the help of state-level entities, and in partnership with experts in the private sector, a coordinated plan can promote the development of a unified vision for how communities will approach the many different decisions that need to be made.

This report explores how state policymakers can support the smart use of technology to create safe, accessible, livable communities that are rich with economic opportunity and prepared to meet any challenge that might arise. It explores the many ways in which telecommunications, energy and transportation technologies can be used to create smart infrastructure and discusses the legitimate data managem­­­ent and cybersecurity concerns that accompany the use of these technologies.

Defining the Smart Community

The meaning of “smart community” varies among stakeholders, organizations and community members. A common theme among these many definitions is that a smart community leverages information, infrastructure, and communication technologies, often in combination with other technologies, to create economic opportunity and improve the quality of life for its citizens. Livability, efficiency, accessibility and sustainability are among the many other characteristics also attributed to smart communities.

The smart community concept is new and evolving as the number of communities using “smart” technologies continues to grow. Although several communities have taken actions to leverage smart technologies—such as installing smart street lighting, traffic or pedestrian sensors, and developing enhanced communications, smart buildings or smart transportation technologies—few have comprehensively adopted smart community concepts across multiple sectors. While communities may not have capacity to holistically implement every smart technology all at once, many have decided to invest in technologies and infrastructure that can lay the groundwork for future smart community growth.

This paper will focus on the intersection between telecommunications, energy and transportation technologies, exploring how these technologies can be managed and implemented to meet the goals of smart communities. The benefits of smart technologies are already being realized in a number of cities. For example, in Seattle, the traffic management system uses real time traffic data to ease the flow of traffic through the downtown area.

Communities will likely not have the resources and knowledge to build and manage the many technologies that may be available for reaching smart community goals. The need to quickly respond to COVID-19 has led cities and states across the country to reevaluate budgets, and otherwise rethink how best to invest scarce resources in helping communities and community members recover from the outbreak. This presents another opportunity to leverage expertise in the telecommunications, energy and transportation sectors through public-private partnerships (P3s), which can assist in deploying broadband and wireless communications, as well as smart grid, infrastructure and traffic management technologies. These efforts can enhance efficiency, create cost savings, and deliver better services to residents and businesses.

“Living Lab” in Texas, Smart Neighborhood in Alabama

Dallas has tapped private-sector expertise to create the Dallas Innovation Alliance, a P3 composed of stakeholders who are helping to turn Dallas into a smart community. Partners—including AT&T, Microsoft, IBM and area universities—provide input for the city’s “living lab,” which serves as a testing ground for smart technologies and is located in Dallas’ West End. The first phase of the effort was launched in March 2017 and includes smart parking, smart irrigation, smart water systems, interactive digital kiosks and an open-source data platform.

Birmingham, Ala.’s energy-efficient Smart Neighborhood provides another example of a future-focused smart community. The Smart Neighborhood is a collaboration between the city of Birmingham and major utility Alabama Power to develop a microgrid-powered community of high-performance homes, energy-efficient systems and appliances and connected devices. This is the first residential microgrid in the Southeast and is powered by solar panels, battery storage and a backup natural gas generator. The homes’ smart systems help make them 35% more efficient than the standard new Alabama home.

It’s not just urban environments that can benefit from smart community concepts. Rural communities, many affected by population loss, driven in part by a lack of economic opportunities that threaten their vibrancy, can use smart community concepts to improve connectivity and create employment opportunities as more job roles move online.

While most of the decisions around smart communities are made at the town, city and county level, state-level decision-making will play a major role in enabling communities to best tailor smart technologies to their needs. State legislators can provide resources and support to communities on a range of issues, including data security and management, smart community planning, tax incentives, and policies that encourage and facilitate public-private partnerships.

Santander Consumer USA Foundation Awards $1.65 Million in Charitable Grants to Continue to Support covid-19-Related Initiatives

Santander Consumer USA Foundation Awards $1.65 Million in Charitable Grants to Continue to Support covid-19-Related Initiatives

Santander Consumer USA Holdings Inc. (NYSE: SC) (“SC”), announced today support of 29 nonprofit organizations with a total of $1.65 million in charitable grants from the Santander Consumer USA Inc. Foundation to fund programs in need of continued resources during the covid-19 pandemic.


DALLAS – October 21, 2020.

The grants support organizations in the surrounding communities in which SC operates, providing pandemic- related services including: virtual classroom capability, support for homeless residents, childcare services for working parents, clinics and shelters for vulnerable families, and food distribition efforts.

”At SC, we have a commitment to and a continued focus on advocating for our customers, employees and communities at-large in the areas where we do business, especially those most impacted by the pandemic during this great time of need,“ said Mahesh Aditya, president and CEO of Santander Consumer. “Community support is an integral part of the culture at SC, and as this public health emergency endures, the Foundation will continue to invest in – and partner with – organizations that provide positive social change and economic support to those who need it most.”

The grant recipients and the covid-19-related services they support include:

  • Arizona State University (ASU) Entrepreneurship and Innovation (Arizona) - $50,000 to support the existing ASU Entrepreneurship and Innovation “Prepped” program to provide timely and relevant assistance to mobile food-based and primarily minority-owned Phoenix-area small businesses impacted by the pandemic.

  • Avance(Texas) - $50,000 to provide virtual programming support due to covid-19 for delivery of evidence-based, two-generation, Parent-Child Education Program to low-income Latinx families.

  • Bonton Farm (Texas) - $50,000 to support the transportation program for low-income minority “interns” seeking livable wages during covid-19, to aid in economic recovery and security.

  • Boys and Girls Club Metro Denver (Colorado) - $75,000 to provide a safe space and care for young people.

  • CitySquare (Texas) - $50,000 to support service delivery and increased demand for basic need services like access to food, housing and healthcare during the pandemic.

  • City Year Dallas/Denver (Texas/Colorado) - $150,000 to support the implementation of Student Success Coaches in underserved schools.

  • Commons on Champa (Colorado) - $50,000 to provide workshops, training and cohort-based programs for minority and underserved entrepreneurs at any stage of business creation affected by the pandemic.

  • Communities Foundation of Texas (Texas) - $75,000 for the Revive Dallas Fund to support small businesses in downtown Dallas unduly impacted by covid-19, and $50,000 for the Get Shift Done fund to support shift workers – primarily restaurant focused – as they find new shift work during the pandemic.

  • Community Enrichment Center (CEC) (Texas) - $50,000 to support the Empowerment Fund, which provides emergency financial assistance during crisis for participants actively engaged in CEC programs to improve their employment/financial situation.

  • Dallas Hope Charities (Texas) - $50,000 for general operational support to cover expenses related to Meals of Hope and Dallas Hope Center for LGBTQ clients impacted by covid-19.

  • Dallas Innovation Alliance (Texas) - $25,000 to support programming and digital learning via mobile wireless Internet for minority and underserved communities during the pandemic.

  • Farmers Assisting Returning Military (FARM) (Texas) - $50,000 to support one-acre market and education garden that serves veterans and educates the community about growing food to help address covid-19 shortages.

  • Food Bank of the Rockies (Colorado) - $75,000 to support food distribution.

  • Green Flag Mesa – Mesa Community College (Arizona) - $50,000 to provide scholarships for 15 low-income and minority student entrepreneurs to launch new business ventures impacted by the pandemic.

  • House of Refuge (Arizona) - $50,000 to support the Adopt-a-Home program for five families, and related financial literacy and career development services during the crisis.

  • Impact Ventures (Texas) - $50,000 to assist with programming, research and development, and outreach and facilitation primarily directed toward minority-owned and underrepresented small businesses unduly impacted by the pandemic.

  • Junior Achievement (Texas) - $25,000 for operational support and direct costs associated with financial learning curriculum program delivery during the pandemic.

  • New Friends New Life (Texas) - $50,000 for general operational support for services to trafficking survivors struggling due to the pandemic burden.

  • North Texas Food Bank (Texas) - $50,000 to support food distribution.

  • POETIC (Texas) - $50,000 for general operational support to provide trafficked/exploited girls with intensive after care services.

  • Save the Family (Arizona) - $50,000 for general operational support to sustain services to 400 homeless and impoverished families with greater needs for care and services due to covid-19.

  • Seed Spot (Arizona) - $50,000 to support programs serving under-represented and minority entrepreneurs in Maricopa County.

  • T ex as Wome n’ s Foundation ( TWF) (Texas) - $50,000 for general operational support for services to low-income women and their families affected during this crisis.

  • The Dallas Entrepreneur Center (DEC) (Texas) - $50,000 to support minority entrepreneurs impacted by covid-19.

  • United Food Bank (Arizona) - $50,000 to support food distribution.

  • United Way Metro Dallas – Social Innovation Accelerator (Texas) - $100,000 to assist nonprofits in growth, development and operating efficiencies.

  • Vickery Trading Company (Texas) - $50,000 to support financial empowerment through vocational training for refugee women in Dallas, and employment for five associates during the pandemic.

  • Women in Need of Generous Support (WiNGS) (Texas) - $50,000 for general operational support to allow continuation of financial learning curriculum and nurse partnership services during the response and recovery of the pandemic.

  • Year Up (Texas) - $75,000 for general operational support and covid-19 relief to continue serving Opportunity Youth, who are often first-generation students.

“We are incredibly grateful for the generosity of the SC Foundation, which will allow Save the Family to continue providing essential housing and supportive services for homeless and impoverished families in our community,” said Jacki Taylor, CEO of Save the Family. “The pandemic is having a disastrous impact in Arizona and across the country, and Santander Consumer’s partnership will go a long way toward ensuring our organization can continue to address the needs of struggling families as they arise.”

SC has committed approximately $3 million to date in 2020 to support organizations serving vulnerable populations in its communities hit hardest by the crisis. In addition to SC’s giving efforts, Santander  Group announced earlier this year the mobilization of €100 million worldwide (nearly $109 million US) to fund initiatives to combat the coronavirus. As part of this effort, Santander US is expediting $15 million in charitable giving this year across the U.S. and will provide $25 million in financing to Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs).

In addition to pandemic-related community support, Santander Consumer recently joined Santander U.S. in making a multi-year, multi-million dollar financial commitment to address racial equity and social justice in America. Santander Consumers’ commitment includes $100,000 to the Equal Justice Initiative and $500,000 over the next two years for leadership training and racial and social equality initiatives.

To learn more about Santander Consumer’s community giving, please visit

https://santanderconsumerusa.com/our-company/our-community.

Dallas Morning News: How ‘pop up camp’ brings fun and opportunity to South Dallas kids during the pandemic

How ‘pop up camp’ brings fun and opportunity to South Dallas kids during the pandemic

Marvin Anderson stretches his foot out in front of him, feeling around the asphalt for any obstructions. It’s pitch black.

Besides his feet, the only guide he has is the person behind him, steering him by the shoulders. One successful step. He feels around again, this time knocking over something with his foot.

Shortly after, a splash of cold water hits him. Marvin, 12, peels back the blindfold covering his eyes.

He knocked over an orange cone. A water balloon to the face alerted him to that fact.

Marvin and about 40 other kids are playing minefield in a parking lot next to Wahoo Park in South Dallas.

Besides getting relief from the midday heat, the game also serves another purpose: To promote communication, collaboration and problem solving.

After everyone navigates the cones, Renata Surles, community engagement director at Networking Knights, and co-founder Issiah Thomas Jr. ask the kids what they learned from the challenge and what it is like to be blindfolded.

Surles said games like minefield expand the way children see the world.

“Black communities — minority communities — we don’t get these types of opportunities,” Surles said. “We don’t get these questions or thought-provoking things, so we wanted to involve ourselves so that we can allow them to think differently.”

The nonprofit, which provides leadership and entrepreneurial courses for youths, partnered with Frazier Revitalization for weekly pop-up camps this summer.

Frazier Revitalization serves ZIP codes 75210, 75215 and 75223 in South Dallas. Since the first week of June, the organization has hosted the camps on Wednesday in the parking lot next to its community center on Elsie Faye Heggins Street.

For the past four years, Frazier Revitalization has held a week-long summer camp.When the coronavirus caused schools to shut down in March, the Frazier team conducted a survey to assess how students in South Dallas were adjusting.Parents in the neighborhood were struggling. They lacked access to high-speed internet, which made online assignments difficult. And the families with internet had issues learning how to use the different platforms required for virtual instruction.Yasmine Lockett, director of education and engagement, knew that a virtual camp wouldn’t work for the community. That’s how the pop-up camp idea was born.“We were trying to figure out how on earth we would have a cleaning service to help us keep everything disinfected, take temperatures — how were we going to do this?” Lockett said.

Quincy Guinyard, community liaison for Frazier Revitalization, grew up in South Dallas. He said children who don’t know how to express themselves might turn to violence, especially now while adjusting to life in a pandemic.

“The moment you let them outside, they’re not communicating, they’re fighting with one another,” Guinyard said. “With the pop-up camps, it gives them an environment to think outside of the box and see people that care about them outside the home.”

Every Wednesday, Networking Knights provides the children with take-home activities to do throughout the week. Each activity has a goal. On water day, kids received a “Getting to Know Me” sheet that had blanks for prompts such as, “My dream business is…” and, “The most important thing to me is…”

The idea is to teach self awareness and creative thinking.

The previous week’s assignment was a bingo board. Each space had a different activity: Eat healthy, laugh, write a story, take 10 deep breaths.

More than half of the children bring their completed activities back the next week or share them on social media.

“One of the things we really pride ourselves on is building relationships with the youth and creating a safe space for them to be able to express their feelings,” Thomas said.

“Mental health and wellness is really important, especially for our kids.”

Angel Sullivan, 8, has been at the pop-up camps each week. Since the first week of June, she has learned how to grow a flower and make a light with batteries and a wire.

Her mother, Sharron Blair, said the camps have helped Angel socialize more during the pandemic. She has two teenage brothers, so going to the camps allows her to play with kids her age.

Shalonda Anderson, Marvin’s mother, didn’t make it to Frazier until the eighth pop-up camp, but she said it was good for her family.

“It keeps the kids busy and out of trouble,” Anderson said.

Frazier Revitalization is hosting two more camps, with the last one ending on Aug. 12.

“It’s risky. We know that there’s a virus going around,” Lockett said. “But we’re also out there modeling so they understand if you really have to go outside, put your mask on. … The beautiful thing is, we had a lot of kids go home and tell their parents, ‘I got these masks for you from Frazier.’”

Dallas Business Journal: Dallas Innovation Alliance provides free WiFi service to neighborhood with slow connection

Dallas Innovation Alliance provides free WiFi service to neighborhood with slow connection

The Dallas Innovation Alliance launched a learning lab that is providing the “basic utility” of the internet in the form of free WiFi to Fair Park.

The Mobile Learning Lab is a converted school bus that provides about 300 feet of free WiFi, and is available Monday through Friday at Fair Park.

While the lab was designed for use by students, this model could potentially be used to help mobile businesses such as food trucks who have suffered from connectivity issues in southern Dallas, said Jennifer Sanders, executive director of Dallas Innovation Alliance. 

“Internet is a basic utility at this point, and it affects every facet of our ability to be competitive and healthy, locally and globally,” Sanders said.

Read more at Dallas Business Journal

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Dallas Observer: Pop-up Camp Eases Kids Coronavirus Woes

Pop-up Camp Eases Kids Coronavirus Woes

Water balloons, rockets, snow cones and slime get top billing in most kids’ pantheon of summer vacation favorites. Luckily for children in Dallas’ high-poverty Frazier neighborhood, they now get to experience mainstays like those every Wednesday.

After the pandemic hit, multiple Dallas nonprofits teamed to throw Pop Up Camp, a weekly event that aims to relieve kids of coronavirus-induced anxiety. So far, the camp's had its intended effect, said Yasmine Lockett, director of education and engagement.

“At first they used to complain about how hot it was,” she said. "But by week three, I don’t even think they realized it’s in the dead of summer.”

Lockett works for the nonprofit Frazier Revitalization, which helps families in Dallas' 75210, 75215 and 75223 ZIP codes with housing, health care, job and childcare assistance.

Lockett said she and her colleagues created Pop Up Camp to provide kids with access to hands-on programming while social distancing. Since its first session on June 3, each event has been held outside Frazier Revitalization’s office building.

Children from the surrounding area are welcome to join, Lockett added.

Every Wednesday starting at 11 a.m., Lockett said up to 50 children from ages 3 to 13 arrive to engage in various activities. They’re always sent home with a STEM-based learning kit, which they’re incentivized to work on throughout the week. Art projects are also thrown into the mix.

One time, the kids got to shoot off rockets, Lockett said; last week, they made slime. This Wednesday, they’ll get help engraving metal bracelets with words of hope, she added. 

“The whole point of Wednesday is for peace of mind, mental wellness — health and wellness,” Lockett said. “We want to be there to provide that aura of oxytocin to reduce the stress barriers on their brains, because it’s a lot.”

The camp provides mental health, physical fitness and team-building activities, said Issiah Thomas Jr., co-founder and CEO of participating nonprofit Networking Knights. Thomas said Networking Knights has been working with Frazier Revitalization since 2019 to help kids living in marginalized communities.

Camp facilitators remind kids to wear masks, maintain safe distances and sanitize their hands regularly, Thomas said. Pop Up Camp is outdoors, so that mitigates the risk of coronavirus' spread; outdoor spaces are less risky than indoor spaces, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Although safety measures must be enforced, Thomas said that they don’t hinder anyone's happiness.

“Words can't express the joy we all feel to see the youth face [sic] burst with energy once they set foot on the campsite,” he said in an email.

Lockett said the project has attracted a ton of support from other nonprofits and local businesses. TMJ Dance Project, “Tweeners” with Baylor Scott & White, Seeds to STEM, Dallas Photo Lab, Dallas Afterschool, Project Still I Rise, and Dallas Innovation Alliance have all contributed.

Kona Ice has served snow cones each week, and Wings World and Williams Chicken have also provided food.

In addition, DJ Flip plays music, and rappers F.A.T. (formerly Fat Pimp) and M.E. have made guest appearances. Lockett said DJ Flip does his best to make sure that requests are edited to be family friendly.

There’s another music trend that the kids adore, Lockett said.

“Every song that’s on TikTok must be played,” she said with a laugh. “And we love it because when we do play it, they give us their TikTok dances.”

Even parents seem to enjoy the camp, Lockett said. Instead of dropping their kids off for two hours and going back home, some decide to pull up a lawn chair to watch the activities from the sidelines. 

The last official day of the summer’s camp is Aug. 12; after that, Lockett said Pop Up Camp will transition to focus more on kids' educational needs. Frazier Revitalization will continue working with Mobile Learning Lab, a bus that provides free WiFi to kids, she said.

School may be around the corner, bringing with it a new set of worries. But Lockett said that this summer, Pop Up Camp has done its best to help kids navigate the unknown. 

“It’s a very stressful time," she said. "And we know a lot of the kids that come out there, it’s helping them cope with that.”

CBS-11: Bridging The Gap: Old School Bus Turned Mobile Learning Lab Rolls Out In Dallas

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DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) – An old school bus turned into a mobile learning lab and hotspot is bridging the gap for communities needing better access to Wi-Fi and educational resources such as on-board tutors.

The idea came to Jen Sanders and the Dallas Innovation Alliance about 18 months ago, long before the pandemic. For now, changes were made to make it safe, such as outdoor tables and umbrellas. Sanders said the bus is needed now more than ever with school going virtual.

“We really feel like at this point, that Wi-Fi is an essential utility like energy and water. It really impacts the ability to do anything,” Sanders said.

On Wednesday, the bus parked in the Frazier community as a part of a modified neighborhood educational camp. Yasmine Lockett, of the Nonprofit Frazier Revitilization, said it’s areas that struggle with internet connection who will benefit most from their support.

“When we found out what the mobile learning lab was doing we thought — bring it to the neighborhood. And let’s figure out how we can put together a long term situation to be able to support the children during the school year,” Lockett said.

She said having extra resources can take a lot of pressure off parents who have a lot on their plates come this fall.

“Having a good internet connection closes the gap in communication because that’s the world we live in now everything is digital,” said Lockett. “So, this Wi-Fi bus takes the edge off and gives residents more options, more resources.”

Dallas Innovation Alliance Launches Mobile Learning Lab to Provide Wi-Fi and Services 

Dallas Innovation Alliance Launches Mobile Learning Lab to Provide Wi-Fi and Services 

In support of Operation Connectivity and in collaboration with Dallas Independent School District, 10 buses will bring internet coverage to under-connected neighborhoods in Dallas

July 16, 2020 [DALLAS, TX] – The Dallas Innovation Alliance, a 501c3 public private partnership dedicated to supporting smart cities strategy in Dallas, announced the launch of its Mobile Learning Lab, providing Wi-Fi to under-connected neighborhoods during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. With the support of partners Santander Consumer USA Foundation,The Meadows FoundationCiscoCapital OneNetsync, and Presidio, a footprint of 150-300 feet of Wi-Fi coverage will serve the South Dallas-Fair Park neighborhood at Fair Park located just inside Gate 5, off of 2nd Avenue. The mobile learning lab bus was generously provided by FlyBusFly

The program is two years in the making, and through partnerships with Dallas Independent School District (Dallas ISD), a total of 10 buses will be dispatched to provide Wi-Fi access in Dallas neighborhoods identified as having the highest percentage of homes lacking internet. The Dallas ISD buses will serve as mobile hotspots, tech support hubs, and enrollment centers. When school buildings closed due to COVID-19 in March, an estimated 36,000 Dallas ISD households had no Internet connectivity. Superintendent Michael Hinojosa led the charge, known as Operation Connectivity, and believes providing broadband Internet connectivity to all Dallas ISD families is a social justice issue that must be addressed.

Currently, over 40 percent of residents in Dallas lack in-home connectivity, according to research conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, and a recent Dallas Independent School District survey found that nearly 30% of students do not have internet access.

“Having broadband Internet is not a luxury, it is a necessity,” Superintendent Hinojosa said. “Internet connectivity should join water, electricity, gas and wastewater as an essential service.”

“When we asked our neighbors what they want to see at Fair Park, the number one answer was free Wi-Fi,” said Spectra’s Peter Sullivan, General Manager of Fair Park. “When the Dallas Innovation Alliance approached us with this initiative, we saw this as another opportunity to support our surrounding community.”

When pandemic restrictions subside, the DIA’s Mobile Learning Lab will convert into a classroom, and will serve to fill the homework gap during the afternoon and evening hours, providing programming including on-board tutoring, experiential learning opportunities, financial and digital literacy, and more. For parents, resources including job application assistance, access to online services, workforce development, among others, will be available. Weekend programming will include seminars for senior citizens on financial planning, digital literacy and protection against identity theft and fraud online. Partnerships with community organizations will bring additional programming to the Mobile Learning Lab. 

“Digital inclusion is one of the most critical issues of our generation, impacting all areas of our lives, including education, healthcare and access to opportunity; the current crisis has put a spotlight on this challenge, as well as the opportunity to come together to find solutions,” commented Jennifer Sanders, Executive Director of the Dallas Innovation Alliance. “This program is designed to aid in providing access to resources as organizations across the city work together to design long-term solutions. We are honored to support the vision of Superintendent Hinojosa and Operation Connectivity to serve our neighbors, and are so grateful to our partners in making this program a reality.”

 The Mobile Learning Lab will be stationed at Fair Park from 9:00am to 3:00pm with additional programming locations varying week to week. All activities will be outside until further notice as we monitor public health circumstances evolve. The Dallas Independent School District activated two initial buses in June, and will evaluate expansion as summer session commences. For specific locations and schedule, please visit the ‘Where’s my bus?' site. Public, community and private sector organizations interested in partnering on programming are encouraged to reach out to info@dallasinnovationalliance.com. For more information, please visit www.DallasInnovationAlliance.com

About the Dallas Innovation Alliance

The Dallas Innovation Alliance (DIA) is a 501c3 public-private partnership dedicated to supporting the design and execution of a smart cities plan for the City of Dallas. The DIA defines a smart city as one that lives at the intersection of community, data and technology to improve quality of life, inclusive economic growth and resource efficiency. In 2017, the DIA launched the Smart Cities Living Lab, comprised of 10 integrated projects in downtown Dallas, and is the fastest-to-market smart cities initiative in the country. Partners of the Dallas Innovation Alliance include: City of Dallas, Dallas County, Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART), Dallas Regional Chamber, VisitDallas, Dallas Entrepreneur Center (DEC), Downtown Dallas Inc., The Real Estate Council (TREC), Texas Research Alliance, AT&T, Toyota, Santander, Capital One, Cisco, Netsync and Wells Fargo. 

For more information, please visit www.DallasInnovationAlliance.com or follow the DIA on Twitter @DallasSmartCity and Facebook at DallasInnovationAlliance.