Vision

Vision is imperative

Vision is imperative

Over the past few weeks, I have been meeting with a friend who is hard at work on a book about mayors.

The book is focused on mayoral leadership and the author’s premise is that successful mayors articulate or champion a vision, involve the public, put a team in place to implement the vision and exercise political will to ensure that the vision is accomplished when the inevitable opposition to change arises.

It’s all good stuff. But what intrigues me is the author’s premise that cities need to create a new vision every 25 years or they will run into trouble.

I agree with that. And doing the math, I’d say that Delray is due a new or renewed vision.

The best visions are community building exercises in which all major stakeholders are engaged and asked to participate.

Delray’s revitalization began in the late 80s, when a group of committed citizens working alongside city staff developed Visions 2000.

Visions 2000 served as a blueprint for the next decade of policymaking and informed spending for the next ten years. It also enabled the passing of the landmark $21.5 million Decade of Excellence Bond, in which citizens voted to go into debt in order to improve the community.

Why? Because they not only believed in the vision, they helped to craft it. They also had faith in local government to deliver.

The Decade of Excellence helped to usher in a lot of private investment; business owners, homeowners, restauranteurs and developers began to risk capital because they believed in Delray and were excited by the vision. I can think of no more valuable economic development tool than to have an exciting vision.

But you can’t stop at a vision, you have to implement and Delray did so–remarkably well.

When the Decade of Excellence wrapped up and the projects were completed, a new vision for the downtown was formed –again with an inclusive process. While Visions 2000 brought a representative sample of citizens together, the Downtown Master Plan invited everybody willing to show up to the table.

In all, over 500 people participated in the charrette, plus several hundred who visited temporary design studios set up on Swinton Avenue.

Immediately upon completion, a steering committee in charge of the plan, morphed into an implementation committee which prioritized projects and worked with staff and related agencies to get projects designed, funded and under way. The process worked and unlike other cities that let plans sit on a shelf, Delray delivered.

But like everything else in a fast-changing world, visions need to change to meet current needs and aspirations.

As a result of past good work, Delray has a ton of options and possibilities that it didn’t have when the journey started 30 years ago.

We dreamt of creating a place attractive to the creative class and now they are here.

We dreamt of creating a vibrant food and beverage scene and it happened. Now the challenge is to move beyond food and beverage.

We dreamt of creating a walkable community with downtown residential options and mixed use projects and saw it happen.

We dreamt of becoming a cultural beacon for the region and it happened with the redevelopment of Delray Center for the Arts,  The Arts Garage and now Artist’s Alley and other efforts.

Parts of the vision are incomplete and or didn’t quite happen, but a great deal of it did. And it should be a source of enormous civic pride.

But complacency is a killer and cities should never rest on their laurels. Downtown is never done, we used to say. Success is never permanent and hopefully failure is never fatal.

Cities are not a zero sum game, you can concentrate on downtown and the neighborhoods. You can promote West Atlantic Avenue and Congress Avenue.

And you should.

 

Happy Birthday Martin

In Delray, MLK has remained a highly relevant figure not an historical abstraction.

In Delray, MLK has remained a highly relevant figure not an historical abstraction.

For many, MLK Day is a just another Monday.
For me, it isn’t a typical day.
I have always admired Martin Luther King. I find his writing to be astonishing.
I’ve never heard a better orator.
He was an idealist and a dreamer. And it’s the idealists and the dreamers who matter, they are the ones who move the needle in our society.
He envisioned a world where color didn’t matter, where children of all races, creeds and religions would be judged on the content of their characters not the color of their skin.
In his time, this was a brave stance. Ultimately, it cost him his life. He seemed to know that it would.
But his example, his vision, his ideals and his dream continue to inspire and resonate today.
Have we made strides in America?
For sure.
Have we achieved the dream?
Not yet.
Race is still an issue in our country and in our community.
Which is why for me and many, many others MLK remains a relevant figure, 46 years after his tragic assassination.
I can’t really speak without any insight about racial issues in Boca Raton, but I have a little bit of experience with race relations in Delray Beach.
Improving race relations  was a priority of mine throughout my seven years in office.
I believed and still do, that’s Delray’s diversity was a strength.
We are America in 16 square miles. We have all the wealth, poverty, ethnic diversity, promise, challenges and opportunities imaginable.
As such, I believed–some said naively–that we could make a difference by bringing people together.
So while we did formal initiatives and issued reports and studies, we also did the little things and the big things because we thought we could bridge the divide.
And so we began study circles and we hosted neighborhood dinners designed to bring neighbors who ordinarily might not mingle together.
We did a Downtown Master Plan that announced–for the first time–that our downtown stretched from I-95 to the beach, symbolically erasing the Swinton Avenue dividing line. We invited residents from our northwest and southwest neighborhoods to the table and listened to their dreams and aspirations and we tried to do our best to work on those dreams together.
Some people feared displacement, so we formed and funded a Community Land Trust. Other residents were concerned about education, youth  and neighborhood livability so we supported The Village Academy, adopted the Southwest Plan, relocated the library, built the first ever park in the southwest and invested millions in streets and infrastructure. We supported the Spady Museum and restored 5th Avenue. It was a team effort.
We worked together.

We laughed together.

We argued, we debated. We got frustrated by the pace of progress and we cried together when a young man named Jerrod Miller was shot and killed.
We did not get it all right. We missed some opportunities. We were tone deaf on some issues, but we made an effort. We got some things done, but we all know there is more to do.
We brought our children back home when we relocated and expanded Atlantic High School. but too many kids are still not achieving. Too many are still being lost to crime, drugs, neglect and gangs.
There is more work to do.
But we proved–at least I believe we did–that progress and dialogue are possible. That there is more in common than there are differences.
We took up MLK’s challenge.
And so–on this special day marking his birth, not his tragic death, we celebrate those efforts and renew our commitment to a dream that belongs to many.
Sure it is elusive, many good things in life are.
Our race relations consultant Sam Mathis–who passed last year–used to say that the sweetest fruit lies on the top branches of the tree. Keep climbing, he would tell me and others. And so we did.
And so we should….