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Posts in ‘Charlotte’

Q&A with local official Robert Bush on the findings in Charlotte

In addition to publishing thoughts from our program directors in the 26 Knight communities, we're also reaching out to other local civic leaders. This is an email interview with Robert Bush, Senior Vice President for Cultural and Community Investment at the Arts & Science Council of Charlotte, N.C.

What jumped out at you from the results of the study?

The high ranking of aesthetics. We sometimes forget that this is a beautiful place to live both from natural and built perspectives. Visitors and newcomers frequently comment on this beauty – from the tree canopy, skyline, parks, public art, etc. and how Charlotte has done a much better job than other cities in attention to this critical part of making this an attractive place to live, work and play.

Did any of the Gallup findings surprise you?

No, in fact the Gallup findings mirror in many ways the findings of other studies done in the recent past.

What do you consider to be the key takeaways from the findings?

We can’t take anything for granted and there is critical work that still needs to be done.  We have made great strides in building a great city; however, we face challenges that still need our attention – real leadership (both political and civic); need for basic services (affordable housing, public transit); and social capital/openness (it is hard to live here if you are different – racial and ethnic minorities, gays and lesbians; singles).

Do the findings reinforce the value of any local initiatives and, if so, which ones?

Yes, there is a close tie between the findings and the Crossroads Charlotte effort that is working to address many of our deficits.

What questions does the study raise for you?

If we have known these are the issues that need to be addressed (and have heard it time and time again), why haven’t we had the civic will to address them?

Charlotte has much to laud, and work on - CharlotteObserver.com

From the Charlotte Observer:

First, the good news. A new Gallup/Knight Foundation poll shows Charlotte area residents proud to live here and ready to recommend it to others. It shows residents enraptured by the area's beauty and openness to newcomers.

Still, trouble is evident: Most polled were pessimistic - 53 percent - about the area's outlook for the future. The bleak economy figures into that. Seventy-six percent said the economy is bad, and 68 percent said it is getting worse.

But there's also this: An astounding 70 percent give low marks to the quality of leadership in this community, and more than half don't see this as a place where "other people care about each other."

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/opinion/story/976367.html

Residents love natural beauty, but there's work to do - CharlotteObserver.com

From the Charlotte Observer:

Residents find there's a lot to love about Charlotte, but lots of room for improvement, too.

That's what a newly released poll from the Gallup organization and the Knight Foundation shows. Researchers interviewed about 1,500 area residents early this year and found that they loved its openness to newcomers, its green spaces and its education systems - especially its colleges.

But on many of those same measures, respondents felt the region could do better, or rated it less highly than respondents polled in similarly-sized cities such as San Jose and St. Paul.

Thoughts on the findings in Charlotte

Susan Patterson is Knight Foundation's program director in Charlotte.

Reading the Gallup study results for Charlotte, I was not surprised that the area’s physical beauty is one of the reasons people are so attached to this place. Whenever I fly in and see the green carpet below, I instinctively sigh in contentment.

I fear, however, that we’re taking our tree canopy for granted. Twenty years ago, Hurricane Hugo did a serious pruning job on many of the oaks in our oldest neighborhoods. Now, drought, old age and development pressures are taking their toll as well, and the city’s tree-planting efforts can’t keep up.

I can’t imagine Charlotte without towering oaks arching over streets and backyards, but it takes years to grow them. We need to be planting trees now so we don’t lose the beauty that fuels our passion for this place. Just imagine what would happen if we all decided to plant a tree today. We’d be green today and tomorrow.