Knight Foundation

Informed & Engaged Communities

Knight Blog

The blog of the John S. & James L. Knight Foundation

Knight Commission report spurs $7 million in Foundation investments

Oct. 2, 2009, 8 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

This morning, the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy presents its report - "Informing Communities: Sustaining Democracy in the Digital Age." (You can watch a livestream of the proceedings at KnightComm.org, and follow tweets about the event with the hashtag #knightcomm.) The findings of the Knight Commission have already prompted $7 million in grants from Knight Foundation, as Alberto Ibarügen will announce in his speech at the Newseum this morning. The investments already underway as a product of the Knight Commission's work include:

  • A $3.3 million Library Initiative to go to the libraries of 12 communities.
  • $2.28 million in new broadband access projects in underserved neighborhoods in Miami, Detroit and Lexington.
  • $1 million to National Public Radio for Project Argo, to set up web-first reporting projects and improve member station web sites in a dozen cities, from Boston to San Francisco.
  • A $250,000 grant to help TexasTribune.org promote civic'engagement and discourse on public policy, politics, government,'and other matters of statewide concern.
  • A grant to the Knight Digital Media Center at UC-Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism to support the Bay Area News Project, a new nonprofit news organization in California.
  • $250,000 to the New America Foundation to establish Knight fellows to track what others are saying and doing to follow up on the commission's recommendations.

These are some of the ways Knight Foundation is putting the report into action. Stay tuned for highlights from the report itself.

 

Editorial Supports Residents' Pride Found in Bradenton Survey by Gallup

Oct. 1, 2009, 4:35 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

The Bradenton Herald's editorial board weighed in on Knight's 2009 survey by Gallup:

Hometown pride points to growth potential | Exploit link between economy, resident loyalty

October 1, 2009

Manatee County's determination to diversify the economy and attract new business received a major boost this week. Bradenton's top ranking in a Gallup study, funded by the Knight Foundation and entitled "Soul of the Community," should help convince business prospects that this is indeed the right place to locate their enterprise.

Gallup surveyed 25 other American communities to identify the reasons why residents become emotionally bonded to their town. Thanks to a surge in community passion and loyalty in 2009, the Bradenton-Sarasota-Venice region scored highest of all for emotional attachment. The rise in ratings for three key factors fueled that score: our appreciation of local social offerings, the area's natural beauty and our friendly and open nature.

Not even the sour economy, the worst in decades, could dampen our enthusiasm - even though unemployment took the top spot as the most important problem among survey respondents.

The study also found a strong connection between emotional attachment and economic vitality, suggesting communities can improve the latter by increasing the former. Happy residents make the best employees. Those workers boost the financial performance of businesses. Stronger companies spur a community's economic growth. Pretty simple stuff.

To bring that line of thinking back to the beginning, how can Bradenton score even higher on the resident passion and loyalty meter?

The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation points to Realize Bradenton, the broad vision for a vibrant downtown complete with additional social offerings and cultural options, which, in turn, would increase retail, housing and office opportunities and thus the economy, and ultimately build upon that passion for place. This looks like the proverbial field of dreams. Build it and they will come.

The foundation also provided financial support for Realize Bradenton, a blueprint for cultural improvements and downtown revival created by residents at numerous gatherings. Implementation began some five months ago.

Some of the findings in Soul of the Community point to challenges ahead.

The region scored poorly on the availability of affordable housing, current employment opportunities and whether community leaders represent citizen interests.

Bradenton also rated low on being a good place for talented college graduates.

A community discussion on the study will be held next week, and we encourage citizens to check out the 21-page report on Bradenton beforehand (details at the end of the story).

The end game of Soul of the Community - the 2009 study is the second installment of a three-year project - is helping communities thrive.

Gallup researchers have discovered that communities with greater proportions of loyal and passionate residents have produced stronger economic growth over the past five years.

This new report shows Bradenton's potent potential for economic gains. This also hands our economic development leaders and business recruitment team a powerful tool to help achieve that goal.

Survey results can be found online at www.soulofthecommunity.org/bradenton. A town hall forum on the study will be held Oct. 8 at 5 p.m. at the Selby Auditorium at the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee. Interested parties can register by calling 359-4602 or by visiting www.sarasota.usf.edu/ippl.

Copyright 2009 The Bradenton Herald

 

Discovering what ties people to where they live

Sept. 30, 2009, 1:51 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

This week, Knight Foundation and Gallup announced the second year of results from the Soul of the Community study - a three-year survey of almost 28,000 residents of the 26 Knight communities exploring what attaches people to where they live.

Two years of research have reinforced the finding that the top three community characteristics that connect to the passion and loyalty residents feel for a place are openness (how welcoming a place is), social offerings (fun places to gather) and aesthetics (an area's physical beauty and green spaces). These qualities rose to the top in both years of the study, despite its occurrence against the backdrop of the U.S. financial crisis.

The study also found that community attachment is tied to local GDP growth - communities with higher attachment saw the largest growth in their economies. In the third year of the study, researchers will explore this connection further.

At the Soul of the Community site, you can dig into the findings from the study - compare results from all 26 communities on an interactive map, add your thoughts and insights to the perspectives posted on our blog, view detailed reports from all the communities, read coverage from news outlets like the Wall Street Journal and USA Today, and even download the actual data, if you'd like.