Lost dog in Nevada City found through this blog

On Saturday, I posted an item about a lost dog at the Farmers Market in Nevada City and ran the photos.

This morning, I received a photo call from her owner — Lynette — who was contacted after her friend read about the dog on this blog.

Her name is “Daisy,” and the owners were relieved to find her. Her son had been upset all weekend, she said. She got out through the fence. Being a lab owner, I know how that works.

“Daisy” is a lab resuce dog. We’re now in the process of reuniting the two this morning. The internet is changing how we communicate!

Drawing military families to the foothills

For years now, we’ve been distributing our magazine at Beale Air Force base. We learned that the military personnel there enjoy making trips up to the foothills for day jaunts — and read about them in our publication.

It’s not your average distribution run: We call in advance to our regular contact and are stopped at the gate, where they check your driver’s license, registration and your vehicle. I always seem to fumble around with the paperwork. I just remember “Yes sir!”

In our current issue we worked with the Nevada City Chamber and Grass Valley Downtown Business Association to promote Cornish Christmas and Victorian Christmas to out-of-towners (pages 13, 15).

In it, we also talked about a Beale Appreciation Day for Cornish Christmas (we’re a sponsor of that), as well as Nevada City’s new plan to attract military families with discounts. (You may not have heard about it, but it’s a voluntary program with the merchants to attract military families).

The Nevada City effort is being led by Chuck Shea, owner of the Parsonage B&B. Chuck and I had a long talk about it the other day when he dropped off one of his fresh chickens from his farm. Chuck mentioned that a van from Fallon Naval Air Station also comes here regularly.

In a down economy, you have to think creatively to drum up business.

Democratization in small towns: Is the “old order” listening?

Like many of you, I’ve been watching the tea party movement, and now the Occupy Wall Street movement, with interest. It cuts across the political spectrum — but also business. Much has been written about the impact of all the protests on our nation, but less has been written about the impact on our local towns.

What’s happening here reminded me of a thoughtful reader comment that was first posted here in April 2009 in response to my own post “Go wider rather than deeper in small towns” — not long after I started this blog. It is observations of “democratization in small towns” in the foothills, based on Sierra Business Council President Steve Frisch’s comments about the changes going on. Steve gets around the region.

Steve nails what is happening in our towns here, too — a transition from the “old order” — in politics and, yes, business and economic development — to one that accepts a wider diversity of thoughts. “As the WSJ aptly points out, civic leadership has been concentrated in the hands of too few.”

This area traditionally has been highly conservative, but it is becoming more “purple.” In our towns, at least in the most simplistic sense, the Occupy Wall Street movements represents the more “purple” side, while the tea party represents what has been the traditional political and economic center. The tea party here is not “new.”

The transition also requires more regional collaboration — not just collaboration among the Rotary Clubs across town or within our western county region. We have to reach out to Truckee, to Auburn and beyond. We are not big enough to “go it alone.” This threatens some, because they thrive on being the “big fish” in a small pond.

It’s been a very rough transition, judging from some of the responses, but it’s happening. And it will continue to happen. Here is the comment:

Jeff,

Thanks for sharing this insightful article. In the last 6 months I have spent a great deal of my time traveling to the small town in the Sierra Nevada usually catalyzed specific requests to help identify economic strategies to adapt to the recession. There are about 150 communities with populations between 100-2500, and 30 with populations between 2500 and 30,000, in our region. I am hearing about the “decline of civic infrastructure” everywhere I go.

I am noticing that in many cases “decline” may be the wrong word. There is another cultural and demographic trend playing into the change we are seeing: we are witnessing an intergenerational transfer of power within our civic infrastructure concomitant with our recession.

The traditional economic power centers in our small towns (chambers of commerce, economic development commissions, large single employers and old line multi-generational families) supported the more traditional economic development strategies of growth for growths sake and many younger people are seeing that as a failed strategy.

The intergenerational transfer is driving key changes that civic leaders should be aware of and could adapt to in order to improve results.

1) There is a strong desire for greater ‘democracy’ driven by discontent with the old order in our communities. Many younger business people and community leaders, more attuned to the values of a younger generation, want a greater say for more people in civic processes. Many people believe that unresponsive government has disempowered large segments of our communities, business organizations have valued the status quo over change, and we have allowed oligarchic decision-making processes.

2) There is a growing respect for and acceptance of diversity in class, ideology, political philosophy, gender, race and thought. New leaders are put off by divisive language and personal attacks often seen as a lack of respect for equity.

3) There is a changing definition of leadership with the old order possessing a command and control leadership style where power is rarely shared unless forced and position and turf is jealously protected. The younger leaders preferring a collective leadership model where power is deeply shared and decisions are more collaboratively developed.

As the WSJ aptly points out, civic leadership has been concentrated in too few hands. I suspect that we have also allowed the baby boom generation, my generation, too hold too much power for too long. We need to learn how to share power.

If we can embrace a key business and ecological theory, that diversification of a system creates resilience and increases adaptability to new conditions, we may be able to turn the current recession, and 20% correction in the global economy, into an opportunity for civic improvement.

The following quotes are from an August 2007 article in the Harvard Business Review titled The Next 20 Years: How Customer and Workforce Attitudes will Evolve, by Neil Howe and William Strauss:

Defining the baby boom generation (born 1943-1960 now age 47-64), “…Boomers loudly proclaimed their scorn for the secular blueprints of their parents—institutions, civic participation, and team playing—while seeking inner life, self-perfection, and deeper meaning.”

Defining Generation X (born 1961-1981 now age 26-46), “…Xers learned early on to distrust institutions, starting with the family, as the adult world was rocked by the sexual revolution, the rise in divorce, and the R-rated popular culture. …..After navigating the sexual battlegrounds of AIDS and blighted courtship rituals as young adults, Xers have dated cautiously and married late. Many of them have begun to construct the strong families that they missed in their childhood. In jobs they prefer free agency over corporate loyalty, with three in five saying they want to be their own boss. They are already the greatest entrepreneurial generation in American history; their high tech savvy and marketplace resilience have helped America prosper in the era of globalization.”

And their final conclusion on Gen X, “Gen X political leaders will seek pragmatic, no-nonsense solutions and will argue far less than the Boomers ever did. Having grown up in a time when walls were being torn down, families dissolved and loyalty ties discarded, they will focus on reconstructing the social frameworks that produce civic order. They will waste no time on the obviously insoluble and won’t fuss with over the annoying. To them, the outcome will matter more than the method, money or rhetoric used to get there.”

Gen X, empowered by the election of the first Gen X President, wants results, resilience, a shift in American values and the return to sanity in our politics and leadership ethic. This is exactly the sort of pragmatism and energy we should empower to overcome the stagnant leadership and self-serving turf wars that inhibit many small towns. If we can connect the Gen X desire for democracy, diversity and shared leadership maybe we can finally start making some progress.

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