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Posts in ‘Fort Wayne’

Comparing the findings in Fort Wayne and Akron

Vivian Neal is Knight's program director in Fort Wayne and Akron.

Being the program director for both Fort Wayne and Akron, my first impulse is naturally to contrast the two communities to see how our study findings differ in each one. This year, I was surprised by how much the findings in both communities reflected one another. In both communities:

  • Residents' attachment to their communities is driven by social offerings, aesthetics, and openness, in that order.
  • Residents give high ratings to two beautiful systems of parks, playgrounds, and trails, as well as two top-notch higher education programs.
  • Openness and social offerings suggest opportunities for improvement.
  • The most attached residents tend to be 65 or older and widowed.

Given all these similarities, why is it that Fort Wayne comes in above average among all Knight communities for community attachment while Akron comes in below average?

The key ingredient for Akron to focus on seems to be basic services, especially the area's highways and freeways and affordable housing. Residents indicated that these features are important for their community.

That said, Fort Wayne should also continue working on new ideas and listening to organizations like the Young Leaders of Northeast Indiana and the Active 20-30 Club. The young college graduates are examining ways they can support Indiana’s Graduate Retention Program to combat Indiana’s brain drain with internship programs and other initiatives.

Both communities can take pride in having qualities residents cherish, and both communities must continue working to build on their strengths and address their opportunities.

I look forward to hearing your take on the findings in the study.

Poll finds newcomers like it best in NW Indiana - Post-Trib.com

From the Post-Tribune:

Northwest Indiana's newest residents are among its happiest, says a poll of region dwellers released Tuesday.

A survey of 400 people in Lake, Porter, Jasper and Newton counties found region residents are among the least "attached" to their community among 26 metropolitan areas in the "Soul of the Community" study commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. But survey respondents who have lived in the region six years or fewer had a better opinion of Northwest Indiana, noted Knight Foundation consultant Katherine Loflin.

Community praised, panned in survey - JournalGazette.net

From the Journal Gazette:

A bleak local economy topped Fort Wayne residents’ list of concerns this year, but unhappiness over high unemployment hasn’t necessarily translated to unhappiness with the community, a survey released Tuesday said.

More than 400 area dwellers surveyed this spring by Gallup and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation found plenty to love about the community and a little to dislike – including how the community treats recent college graduates.

What binds people to our community - News-Sentinel.com

From the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel:

A Gallup study of the Fort Wayne area - Allen, Wells and Whitley counties - found three main factors that bind area residents to this community. That study, funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, says the most important factors are social offerings (fun places to gather), openness (how welcoming a place is) and aesthetics (an area's physical beauty and green spaces).

The study surveyed more than 13,000 people in 26 U.S. communities. In this area, more than 400 people were surveyed in February, March and April. Surveys were conducted by phone, but cell numbers were included in the pool of potential survey subjects, Knight Foundation officials said.