Showing posts with label Greensboro-Triad-Piedmont. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greensboro-Triad-Piedmont. Show all posts

(2011) The Curious Case of Lutheran Family Services in Greensboro


Dr DeHoog’s account is about as close to the truth as will ever be published about the dismal end of the Lutheran Family Services office.

”Curiouser and curiouser”, cried Alice...
IT’S ALWAYS PLEASANT TO SEE THE TRUTH TIDILY PRESENTED IN MOVIES. But to live in Greensboro means living in a movie which never ends and where the truth is never settled. Our modus operandi has been to forget controversial events and live in a haze, hoping we can avoid future disasters through faith, heart and soul.

Dr Ruth DeHoog of UNCG has rendered a valuable service to Greensboro and to all who are involved in refugee resettlement in the US by the publication of her paper, With Heart and Soul: Closing a Faith-Based Refugee Resettlement Office (Sociation Today, Vol. 9, Number 2, Fall/Winter 2011). Her account is about as close to the truth as will ever be published about the dismal end of the once proud Lutheran Family Services office, after some 30 years of operation in Greensboro,  located in Guilford County, North Carolina.

LFS Exceptionalism
DR DEHOOG CORRECTLY concludes that the closing of the office was avoidable. Other resettlement agencies in Guilford have struggled in today's awful economy but they are not operating in the red. Long ago, LFS in Greensboro was the innovative training ground for many highly experienced, respected members of the State's refugee resettlement community. Now, as this emeritus group reaches retirement age, we must seriously wonder who will provide the wisdom, leadership and continuity to restore and repair the damage of the past several years.

It seems the condition that Dr DeHoog could write about recent events was based on granting interviewees “assurance that I would reference them only in general terms” — that is, withhold their names. This is a most curious situation, especially when we read that LFS employees yearned for opportunities to speak openly to the Greensboro community, defend themselves against reporter Lorraine Ahearn's articles, and to question corporate decisions made during the period in question, 2001-2010.  When historic events occur in our city, it's good to know who is who. Fortunately, Dr DeHoog's account gives plenty of clues for future historians.*

The opposition, apparently.
Evil Incarnate
CEO SUSAN GIBSON Wise is among the few names that come up. She's the boogie man, the one the reader easily learns to hate. I myself sat in a small meeting in which one of her innumerable VPs from Raleigh explained the LFS closing. Apparently, the executive team around Ms Wise was as cohesive and united and exuded as much esprits de corps as the Greensboro group of soon-to-be-ex-LFS staff members with whom the author sympathizes. Faith-based agencies that today work with refugees seem to generate a culture of fierce loyalty fueled by spiritual mission, often resentful of anyone asking too many questions. The paperwork is drab, semi-computerized, and inefficient. Only a few can rise in such low-paid drudgery, but it's usually not the talented or the innovative, but ultimately the party faithful who prevail, those who excel in bureaucratic detail and arcane language. In such an environment the VP presented her case, concluding she could rest assured knowing Greensboro’s refugees were in the good hands of the remaining agencies. I don't recall anyone asking questions.

He could have been an ally.
Iraqis Without Heat
BUT ALL LFS PEOPLE seem to agree the Iraqi story concerning refugees without apartment heat was overblown. All seem to think Ms Ahearn, reporter from the Greensboro News-Record, made this stuff up. This is a most curious situation. Ms Ahearn had been known for writing sympathetic articles about refugees and their struggles in Greensboro. Why wouldn't local LFS people see the reporter as their ally? Perhaps because she respected the views of refugees and the community members who intervened on their behalf rather than the bumbling efforts by the Greensboro office to cover up its mistakes — mistakes that originated here, not in Raleigh. Subsequently the reporter earned persona non grata status. This certainly reflected the view of some participants at the first Open Space meeting held at Holy Trinity church, who jostled one another out of the lunch line just to avoid her questions. On reflection, it was sad to see responsible figures buy into the industry's culture of them-versus-us.
(2013 Update: Should this 2011 story not make it clear, Lorraine Ahearn’s reportage was critical to documenting the lives of newcomers, alerting the public to the sad state of the Iraqis and the even sadder disorganization of LFS. Today, Ms Ahearn is no longer with the paper — to the loss of its readership and all those who care about refugee and immigrant matters. Many of the old hands — Sr. Gretchen, for one — are retired. Meanwhile, the drumbeat of Greensboro rhetoric, our community desire to make our city a “welcoming place”, a refuge for “strangers”, etc goes on.)
A New Hope?
NOW THAT MS WISE was gone from the scene, could Greensboro have a fresh start? Although we had one less agency in town, Church World Service was ramping up. And soon we'd see the results of the Open Space meeting.

At this point in our story the lights come up and the movie ends. As in the first Star Wars movie, we know there's more to come, but what? A rehash of the same plot? Refugee resettlement and its impact on the lives of refugees and Greensboro residents are mostly controlled by agencies answerable to Raleigh and corporate boards, not local authorities or the many volunteers and sponsors who've contributed the equivalent of millions of dollars in donations and hours over the decades to make Greensboro a welcome place for refugees and immigrants.

Those are your friends you’re shooting at.
Lessons Learned and Squandered
HIPAA REGULATIONS WERE designed in this case to protect refugees' privacy, not organization mismanagement and incompetence. LFS could not operate in a bubble if it was to survive. Yet the circle-the-wagons, siege mentality described in the report recounts self-serving statements and artificial heroics in a city replete with allies, highly experienced former LFS officers, other refugee professionals and sympathetic ears. As one commenter reminds us, in the end it was the refugees in Greensboro under the care of LFS who suffered.

The wonder of the LFS collapse was that public officials did not respond with outrage after they realized how little oversight they had and how completely reliant they were on the assurances of LFS personnel about the health and safety of Greensboro residents. Private refugee agencies contracted by the State to deliver limited services to newly arrived refugees cannot take the place of responsible community building or community-based organizations even though many in Greensboro mistakenly persist believing this. If elected officials and officers of the region's charitable foundations were reassured by the activity generated by the huge July 8, 2010 Open Space meeting attended by hundreds of stakeholders following LFS's departure, they should worry about the ability of local organizations to deliver coherent strategies to improve resettlement. Widely trumpeted ideas like a welcome center for newcomers appear to have gone nowhere.

For many interviewed in Dr DeHoog's article, Ms Wise makes a convenient scapegoat, but I agree with the author's conclusions. Until the entire refugee resettlement community operates with transparency, we cannot expect faith, heart and soul to take its place.

* The Greensboro News-Record has a peculiar policy of selectively offering past articles online, searchable by Google. If the editors choose to not make them public, then apparently Google searches won't point readers to the existence of articles which otherwise are available only through their fee-based archive service. But once there, readers should discover important coverage of the July 8, 2010 Open Space meeting by Lorraine Ahearn.


The July 10, 2010 Lutheran Family Services letter which offers no explanation for pulling out of Greensboro after more than 30 years. Although their resettlement model had clearly failed, the authors maintain it is the only model that works.
_____________________________________________

Related Links from the Montagnard Dega Association’s Website

LFS SHUTS DOWN VITAL LEGAL OFFICE
The national agency announced it was closing its 8-person team. The legal services office, headed by Heather Scavone, has contributed critical services for refugees and the reunification of their families. The LFS main office explained that its decision was strictly based on money. The loss of the office leaves a huge gap in services. There has been no word about any local attempts to retain the team or provide similar services. (see News-Record story).

LFS CLOSES
MDA is saddened to learn Lutheran Family Services will be closing its Greensboro office after decades of service to the refugee community and greater Greensboro. LFS's departure will have a negative impact on us, on the Montagnard community, and all other agencies and individuals working to create a strong, multicultural Piedmont. MDA pledges to do all it can to make sure the transition is smooth and does not add more woes and worries to the lives of new arrivals.

REFUGEES GET HELP!
A consortium of agencies and individuals came together to help Iraqi residents at Hunters Glen get help. Read the Jan 24 2010 News-Record article.

LFS REFUGEE DIRECTOR RESIGNS
Read the Jan 8 2010 News-Record article. According to LFS, the resignation was not due to community criticism about refugee conditions. Lovett resigns, Wise will spend more time in Greensboro.

ADVOCATE FOR REFUGEES IN OUR COMMUNITY
Read the Dec 5 2009 News-Record article on Iraqi refugees facing tough times in Greensboro with little support.

LFS CEO RESPONDS TO CRITICISMS
Susan G. Wise, CEO of Lutheran Family Services of the Carolinas answers some of the criticisms raised by News-Record stories about refugees' living conditions.

BURMESE REFUGEES FACE HARD LIVES HERE
As Hispanic workers leave the area, Burmese refugees living in Greensboro are recruited to work in the Perdue chicken processing plant in Rockingham.

REFUGEES IN DANGEROUS HOUSING
The story of African refugees placed into Avalon Trace. This Greensboro rental complex is home to many Burmese as well.


United Daishan Festival

FIRST TIME JOINT EFFORT by immigrant and refugee communities in the Triad to celebrate the most important holiday of the year. OUR DIRECT GOAL: Demonstrate the benefits of group cooperation. OUR INDIRECT GOAL:  Resolve conflict among members of Nepalese and Bhutanese communities. Lay the ground work for future collaborations. Build trust. OUR METHOD: Engage peoples’ minds but reinforce their senses. Over 500 participate, plan, cook, dance, sing, play, compete, talk, eat, drink  and celebrate.
GO TO OFFICIAL SITE FOR PHOTOS, HISTORY  AND DOCUMENTATION:  http://uniteddashain.blogspot.com/
COVERAGE
Locally Grown
FaithAction E-News
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COUNTDOWN TO UNITED DASHAIN SOCCER CUP
OCT 8, 2011 United Dashain Tournament
On Saturday, October 8 international soccer teams will engage in friendly competition in the spirit of community unity at Greensboro city soccer field at Naco Road (near the Armory). Starts at 10 AM.

8:00 pm, Oct 8: Moon rises, car stereo begins to boom, players from all teams hang out. The tournament is over!
7:30 pm, Oct 8: Closing ceremony and discussion about sports and community.
12:30 pm, Oct 8:  Food run. MacDonald's offers a big discount.
12:00 noon, Oct 8: High Point Division B arrives
11:00 am, Oct 8: Charlotte team arrives.
10:00 am, Oct 8: Teams arrive. Players put on their team shirts.
Oct 7:Meeting and final revisions
Oct 6: Division A (High Point) can't come; big wedding already scheduled
11:00am, Tuesday, Sept 27: Newsletter copy submitted to FaithAction
4:00 pm, Sunday, Sept 25: Distribution of soccer jerseys to coaches.
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 
COUNTDOWN TO UNITED DASHAIN FESTIVAL
SEPT 25, 2011 United Dashain Festival
On Sunday, September 25, Dashain traditional food, music and dance  will be open to everyone at Greensboro's Caldcleugh Multicultural Arts Center from 12 noon to 8 PM.
12-8:00 pm, Sunday, Sept 25: First United Dashain event with about 400 in attendance and strong representation of leaders from both communities.
9:00 am Saturday, Sept 24: Hand out Dashain flyers at the GSO Farmer's Curb Market 
4:00 pm, Friday, Sept 23: grant-writing team meeting
2:00 pm, Friday, Sept 23: Pick up printed soccer jerseys
1:00 pm, Friday, Sept 23: Reschedule soccer to Oct 8
11:00 am, Friday, Sept 23: City cancels field reservation due to wet weather
8:00 pm Thursday, Sept 22: Program meeting
9:00 pm Wednesday, Sept 21: Official TNCC support for United Dashain Festival
2:00 pm Wednesday, Sept 21: Organizational details from FaithAction
9:00 pm, Tuesday, Sept 20: Triad Nepalese Community Center board of directors supports United Dashian 
6:00 pm, Tuesday Sept 20: Sound system obtained, soccer schedule finalized, Sunday program notes discussed, goat pictures reviewed
4:00 pm, Tuesday Sept 20: Meeting with David Fraccaro, ED of FaithAction
4:00 pm, Monday, Sept 19: Budget transparency; budget and expenses publicly posted for Nepalese and Bhutanese communities to see
3:00 pm, Monday, Sept 19: Soccer balls and flags purchased at Omega, a local sports store
2:00 pm, Monday, Sept 19: Team jersey order sent in to Zoom, a local printer
5:30 pm, Saturday, Sept 17: Soccer jersey design finalized
11:00 am, Saturday, Sept 17: Bought goat, $180. Looking for second purchase
10:00 am, Saturday, Sept 17: Soccer and event designs up for review
7:00 pm Friday, Sept 16: Soccer practice 
6:30 pm, Friday, Sept 16: Soccer, Culture, and Ambassador meeting at Hunter Glen 
3:30 pm, Friday, Sept 16: Cooking preparations planned 
2:00 pm, Friday, Sept 16: Greensboro soccer field inspection 
9:00 am, Friday, Sept 16: Community Foundation releases funds for United Dashain to FaithAction International House, the fiscal sponsor for United Dashian. 
1:00 pm, Thursday, Sept 15: High Point soccer location changed to Greensboro
7:00 pm, Wednesday, Sept 14: Council of Cultures meeting
11:00 pm, Tuesday, Sept 13: United Dashain Festival Web site goes live 
9:00 am, Tuesday, Sept 13: Community Foundation approves United Dashain budget
4:00 pm, Monday, Sept 12: Bus trip to opening of Bhutanese refugee camp photography exhibit at Kenan Institute of Ethics
Sunday, Sept 11: Creation of standing committees for Dashain; explanation of potluck concept to community members
Saturday, Sept 10: Review of new budget before submission; food responsibilities; games costs
Friday, Sept 9: Tentative reschedule to Sept 24 and 25.
Thursday, Sept 8: A change of plans; Can we organize Dashain a week earlier than originally planned?
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 
CONFLICT RESOLUTION: ORIGINAL DASHAIN PROPOSAL

September: Can this project still go through?
Late Summer: Approval to modify conflict resolution strategy and narrative.
Late Summer: Discussions with TNCC about grant implementation
Summer: Grant approval by Community Foundation
Mar, 2001: Triad Nepalese Community Center organization meeting and celebration of Holi.
Feb 11, 2011: Submission of grant to Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro
Feb 3+ 2011: Meetings to discuss budget details
Feb 2, 2011: Meeting with proposed facilitators to discuss process of conflict resolution, details of bringing parties together, history and roots of communities' conflicts.
Jan 2011: Drafts of grant narrative
Jan 2011: Discussions about applying for a grant to address conflict resolution in Nepalese and Bhutanse communities.

STSB: YouTube Demo



SURGICAL TECHNOLOGY SKILLS BUILDER (STSB) was a 2009 serious game created with a team of collaborators from the Piedmont's colleges and universities. I put together the project, which was funded  through the Piedmont Triad Partnership’s Department of Labor WIRED grant, and oversaw its production.

The game is simple but effective, concentrating on key stumbling blocks student learners encounter: identifying instruments, knowing their use, setting up a Mayo Tray, and working under pressure  in a simulated surgery environment.  (more)

Census 2010


4. Census 2010
Designed to encourage a preliterate, uniquely isolated population to “Check Other Asian” and “Write ‘Montagnard’ ” on question 9, this project was funded by a grant from the Southern Coalition Justice Network. Finally, after decades, federal, state and local authorities and community members will have numbers.
     • Why does counting the Montagnard population matter?
     • Census 2010 video and text translations (Rhade, Bunong, Jarai, Koho)
     • Multilingual census brochure

THE WHAT WE DO ROAD MAP (3)

PDF printable version

CULTURAL CHALLENGE
 
Click to enlarge.

Problem: Create transformative experiences to alter the way creatives understand “community” and their commitment as artists.  Overcome perceptions of “The Other”.
Challenges: Create multiple opportunities for face-to-face meetings between students and refugees encompassing a broad topics and roles. Push both sides to reduce physical and emotional distance.

THE WHAT WE DO ROAD MAP (2)

PDF printable version
 EDUCATION COLLABORATIVE

 
Click to enlarge.

Problem: High tech business can't thrive in the 12-county Piedmont region if educators don't have enough hands-on experience in interactivity and game development. Institutional cultures prevent educators from easily working with one another. And the tech sector and education aren't talking and working with one another where it matters — on the ground level. Communication is a problem.
Challenge: Get stakeholders to work together on a really tough problem — a serious game. Challenge academics to convert their theoretical knowledge into a viable product. Go from talking about collaboration to real collaboration.

All Together Now

IN GUILFORD COUNTY, NC, THERE’S A LOT GOING ON IN THE REFUGEE WORLD. FEW KNOW ABOUT IT. 

LACK OF CONNECTEDNESS IS COSTLY — ESPECIALLY  FOR REFUGEES THEMSELVES, WHO ARE ULTIMATELY MADE TO PAY FOR OUR REGION’S INEFFICIENCIES.

WHO ARE THE long time sponsors in the area? Why do some refugees resist getting citizenship? Who owns the apartment complexes that rent to refugees? What's the latest progress from the much heralded Open Space meeting? What are the limits to services provided by refugee agencies? Which churches are sponsoring refugees? Where's the closest mosque? Do schools have translators on site? How does a refugee get an Orange Card? Who decides how many refugees settle in the area? Are refugees and immigrants disproportionately victimized by crime? Who are the leaders in the area’s refugee and immigrant communities? Where’s the closest ESOL class for an eager learner? How much does it cost to resettle a refugee? Who pays? Who's in charge?

How long would it take you to find answers to these questions?

Why is it so difficult if Greensboro and  Guilford County have been hosting refugees for decades?

Volunteers, sponsors, and charitable donors face an uphill climb trying to understand “how the system works”, who does what, and why. At Refugee Information Network of Guilford (RING) meetings and other large gatherings, a lot of time is spent explaining who does what or how and why a policy came into being.

The region needs a single information Web site that addresses regional refugee issues and can quickly bring stakeholders, policy makers, and the public up to speed. Individual refugee agencies have Web sites that reflect the scope of their missions, not the entire scope of refugees’ problems and concerns. Everyone working with refugees wants to see more success stories published and circulated. Most stakeholders recognize the need for an educated public and allies but as long as information is dispersed, hard to find, and held by a few, the public’s knowledge about refugees will be sporadic — marked by “feel-good” people stories, dramatic turnarounds like LFS's departure from Greensboro,  reports on run-down housing conditions and crime.

Whenever I've suggested the expanded use of the Internet, online apps, and collaborative media at refugee meetings, the responses split along age and profession. Older folks like email and pointedly state they can't be bothered to learn more. But older folks who are professionals in fields like health and medicine are pro technology, because they use it everyday and know its value. Younger folks use and know the value of social and collaborative media, but at these meetings they don't make the rules. Oldsters believe an email notice announcing a meeting is sufficient to attract community involvement and bring the best talent to the table. When they do come, as they did at the Open Space meeting, they see old attitudes and beliefs ascendant. It's a turn-off, a signal to business, academia and the rising generation of would-be problem solvers, entrepreneurs, community activists that change in our city will be ponderous, controlled, and limited.

When Greensboro was a small town and all the decision-makers knew one another, I'm sure this small-town approach worked. This is no longer the case, yet despite clear signals that the Old Order's way of doing things is not adequate to the difficult tasks at hand — witness the pullout of Lutheran Family Services — we continue to believe email and proven remedies of another era will solve today’s very hard, chronic problems that only promise to worsen with more cutbacks just announced by the State.

Does DATS Have A Future?

I SAY POTATO, YOU SAY TOMORROW: LESSONS LEARNED
The symposium has the potential to contribute to the Triad's recovery, but it can't as long as it's passed from city to city each year without permanent management.  Getting local governments to work together is hard; getting artists, creatives and technologists together should be easy. It's time the principals decide what DATS is for. (MORE --->)

                                                                DATS 2010: FOOD FOR THOUGHT
                                                                CENTER FOR DESIGN INNOVATION / MRCA

• DATS 2010 OFFICIAL SITE
A terrific space with excellent views of downtown Winston-Salem, lousy sound, noisy AC, good parking. This is the space’s third makeover so you have to wonder why basics are still a problem. Too bad the cafe wasn't open. The Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts? Okay, but we bet everyone will just call it what it's always been — the Sawtooth Center.


MY DATS 2010 PROGRAM EVENTS 

• Overview and working premises
Two visions about DATS. The first, about establishing it as a credible venue for important ideas in the Piedmont. The second, about expanding its audience by choosing themes that reflect larger community interests and explain economic value.

• DATS MASHUP Cooking Collaboration
Four teams each consisting of an American chef and refugee cook, working with the locally developed purple sweet potato, created dishes that combined the skills and traditions of two worlds. Through this project we demonstrate that food is a cultural medium that can overcome language and other barriers that have prevented the talents and economic value of refugees from being fully realized.

• MASHUP CONTINUES: Connecting Refugees, Breaking Isolation
The project didn't end on presentation day. It was a jump-off point for refugees to socially connect to mainstream Americans. As artists who've studied the refugee community, we see cultural isolation as a barrier equal to if not bigger than language and employment issues. At our blog, we follow the refugees and participants since the public presentation.

• PECHA KUCHA NIGHT: Where's a Good Montagnard Restaurant? 
We ask a single question and discover the complex relationship this unique refugee group has with food.

• WORLD FOOD in the Triad
Guilford County in North Carolina is the state's number one resettlement county for refugees, but residents don't see local innovations and interests in food, farmers markets, new ethnic restaurants, shops and businesses as a reflection of the region's explosive diversity or a source of economic growth.


• Food Geography

PREVIOUS DATS EVENTS
DATS 2009 High Point University
• Our Pecha-Kucha show     
20 slides, 20 seconds each, a new elevator pitch

DATS 2008 UNCG, Greensboro
• Transforming the Triad
The digital divide comes to town
• Are we bleeding talent?
Thank God for youngsters

DATS 2010


 The Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts at the Sawtooth, downtown Winston-Salem


Design, Art + Technology Symposium (DATS) is An Annual Piedmont Event About Important Ideas. Hosts include the Kenan Institute for the Arts at UNCSA, UNCG, High Point University, and the Center for Design Innovation. With the 2010 theme, Food For Thought, we’ll open at the Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts in the newly renovated Sawtooth building in bustling downtown Winston-Salem. Food For Thought will engage timely issues with an influential audience from the region’s businesses, non-profits, educators and government. Meet innovators and trend-setters involved in everything from alternative food to new crops, from agricultural heritage to environmental green, from Southern hospitality to urban sustainability. Inspired by designers Charles and Ray Eames and their film, Powers of 10, they will consider the power of food to transform the daily life of our region. 

It's getting close! DATS 2010 is coming together as a combo local-regional event, with plenty of grassroots energy and organization. (This year will be a breakout event: DATS will move out of academia and into the real world!) Food is about culture. It is one of those rare, big tent themes in which everyone in the Piedmont has an interest. Everyone can bring their experience and know-how.
     The best gardener I knew was my grandmother. The most flexible cook I knew was my mom. Both were frugal and could do a lot with a little. In my view, those are high standards for designers, artists, and technology innovators, whether in good economic times or bad.


Recreation of a UN shelter, food and water at Festival Park.

The Challenge of DATS
The symposium is an annual event seeking to build a legitimate creative movement in the Piedmont. It answers a severe problem: With Charlotte, RTP and the Triangle all within easy drives, the area has suffered from brain-drain. Both Greensboro and Winston-Salem have seen revivals of their downtowns, nightlife and cultural activities, but the economic downturn has highlighted the unfinished work necessary to permanently change the area's future. Quite simply, the Piedmont has to figure out better ways to attract smart people and businesses and keep its brightest youngsters here.

DATS hosts include High Point University (High Point), UNC School of the Arts and Center for Design Innovation (Winston-Salem) and UNCG (Greensboro). Other colleges are associated with the event. I've been a supporter of higher ed's role in promoting regional growth but a steady critic of the event's smallish concentration on events and programs intended mainly for students.

In 2010 I proposed the food theme, a big-tent approach intended to excite and gather many diverse participants. While dollars are scarce, I have also advocated ground-up, community-based and local organizations' participation. The Piedmont is doing interesting innovation in the area of food, but you have to look hard. As usual, groups are somewhat isolated, duplicative, and unaware of overlapping interests. DATS 2010 is an opportunity to pull groups together.

Above: The Edible Schoolyard at the Children's Museum, with the Greensboro skyline in view, just months after Alice Waters’ visit. Below: Refugee guests at Weatherspoon Art Gallery, UNCG.





Regionalism Still Involves Herding Cats

The following appeared as a Counterpoint in the News-Record, Wednesday, September 1, 2010.

It was refreshing to read accounts of the Piedmont Triad Partnership by Keith Debbage and Rob Bencini (Aug. 4). Both are right about PTP. They ask tough questions about the rhetoric and reality of regionalism that PTP and all leaders should answer.

For readers who don’t understand the point of regional economic development, it’s simple: Greensboro, High Point and Winston-Salem will do far better pooling resources to attract and develop growth than trying it on their own.

In 2008, I was hired by PTP to create a team of educators from the region’s colleges and universities to make an interactive training module for surgical technicians. That is, we were going to make a computer game, an otherwise expensive exercise no single institution could afford.

I knew what I was getting into. One teammate described my job as “herding cats.” A business colleague later confessed PTP would have had to pay her triple to do my job because it looked like “Mission: Impossible” through most of it. By the project’s end we had solid, notable successes and some mixed results — not enough to declare victory and start a game industry here in the Piedmont, a dubious PTP ambition, but more than enough to show what we needed to do if the region was serious about attracting and developing businesses that used high-tech skills like those found in the game industry. And more than enough to show what teachers needed to know to be more effective in the classroom.

If I’m certain we had a positive local impact, I’m less certain PTP came close to big-scale change. Even our small project gave PTP considerable leverage to maximize our results because it paid higher education’s tab for faculty training, no small gift in tough times.

With millions from its Department of Labor grant it could call the shots, bring everyone to the table, and enforce discipline and Kumbaya teamwork. That’s herding cats on a grand scale. Now that the grant’s done, we shouldn’t be surprised to see old ways return.

In baseball, everyone loves the drama of a homer, but there are other ways to score. My team hit the ball and, as we round second, we’re wondering if the new PTP management has the keen eye and experience to spot an inside-the-park home run. We blasted the ball high up, it’s just hit the wall and we’re running, running, waiting for a sign.

DATS: Urban Agriculture

PANEL DISCUSSION
Reynolds Place, MRCA
Monday, October 11, 2010
10:00—11:30 am

Children’s Museum’s Edible Garden against the Greensboro skyline.
DURING WORLD WAR II, Victory Gardens provided an estimated 40% of the nation’s fresh fruits and veggies; today, with issues of food security, both locally and globally, will urban agriculture once again provide us a simple tool for living in a rapidly changing world? Does it have the power to unite people regardless of age, race, ethnicity, religion or creed, in a movement to fight climate change? Join us as we discuss the benefits, challenges and possibilities of urban agriculture in the Piedmont, and learn about ways you can get involved in your community.

Panelists Include
Dawn Leonard was originally from Wisconsin. She found her way to the South after meeting her husband while in the Peace Corps in Jamaica. Upon returning to his home of North Carolina, Justin and Dawn moved to Greensboro in 2005. With a BFA in Graphic Design from Iowa State University, Dawn began a career in Greensboro as a graphic and web designer. But the creative spirit often leaves one searching for new ideas, and being an idealist, Dawn found that getting her hands dirty was spiritually more fulfilling. In the transition from artist and professional designer to urban farmer, Dawn has found the commonality of these kindred vocations. In 2008 she co-founded Urban Harvest, a nonprofit in Greensboro dedicated to urban food production, distribution and education. Starting a nonprofit can be an overwhelming challenge, but Dawn believes that important work is often the most challenging, and it is the challenge and passion for our future that drives her forward. She embodies the creative force, not being afraid to take risks or lead us in a new direction. Experience from the Peace Corps, to a summer-long internship at an urban farm, to teaching yoga at Guilford College has led Dawn to a new path of healing the body, the Earth, and our communities.

Justin Leonard is an experienced urban farmer who also is Garden Manager at Edible Schoolyard, part of the Children's Museum on downtown Greensboro. The Edible Schoolyard received national news coverage when Alice Waters, renowned chef, author, and Slow Food advocate came to its groundbreaking ceremony. Justin also a founding member of Urban Harvest and responsible for residential edible landscaping projects.
Kat Siladi works with the Edible Schoolyard at the Greensboro Children's Museum as the Garden Educator and Intern and Volunteer Coordinator. She has a degree in Peace and Conflict Studies and Ceramic Arts from Guilford College and she has recently finished a part-time Americorps term working to make the museum more accessible to immigrants and refugees from the area. Her interest in food education lies in teaching children and families lost knowledge of food production and connecting food production, from seed to table, with multiculturalism and other social issues.

Roland McReynolds (moderator), is executive director of the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association (CFSA). Roland grew up on a farm in central Missouri. After graduating from the University of Missouri-Columbia with BA and BS degrees in History and Political Science, he earned his law degree at the University of North Carolina School Of Law and is licensed to practice in the state. He spent almost 10 years in the legal publishing industry, and spent one year exploring local and sustainable food systems in Europe, before coming to work for CFSA. Roland serves on the North Carolina Certified Crop Advisors Board and the Advisory Committees for the North and South Carolina Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education programs.
Dunleith Gardens, Greensboro, NC
More About CFSA

The Carolina Farm Stewardship Association is a Pittsboro-based organization of 1,000 farmers, gardeners, consumers and businesses in North and South Carolina committed to sustainable agriculture and the development of locally based organic food systems. Founded in 1979 by farmers, gardeners and consumers to support one another and foster the growth of organic food, the Carolinas Farm Stewardship Association (CFSA) has grown into a non-profit with more than 1,000 members and seven regional chapters: six in North Carolina and one in Upstate South Carolina.

In December, the CFSA’s 25th annual Sustainable Agriculture Conference will be held in Winston-Salem. This year’s theme this year is, “Local & Organic Arrives: Our Opportunity is Now.” Local and organic food is at a popularity level that proponents would have only dreamed of a few years ago, and the conference will explore how the movement will seize the opportunity and take it to the next level. The keynote this year, author, attorney, economist and entrepreneur Michael Shuman, one of the nation's leading voices on "buy local" and serves as research and economic development director for the much-heralded Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE). He will offer compelling and provocative ideas about this important topic.

(photos: Children's Museum: Andrew Young; Betsy Renfrew: Dunleith Gardens)

DATS: World Food in the Triad

PANEL DISCUSSION
Reynolds Place, MRCA
Sunday, Oct.10, 2010
3:00 — 4:30 pm


YouTube: All roads lead to food (How one refugee group thinks about food)

YouTube: H Bec talking about her garden (What's growing in a refugee's backyard?)

Guilford County is the largest refugee resettlement county in the state. About 50-60,000 of the area’s 430,000 residents are immigrants or refugees. How have new populations from all over the world changed the food landscape of the Piedmont? What can we learn from our neighbors? How have their food traditions contributed to the explosion of food diversity we now see in ethnic food stores, restaurants and farmers’ markets? What is their economic and social impact?

In this panel discussion we will explore how our ideas about food
reflect our ideas about culture — ours and those of immigrants and refugees. Most discussions about immigrants and refugees are about problems. North Carolina's obese population now tops 25+%. What solutions might we find amongst immigrant and refugee diets, foods, traditions and lifestyles as we struggle with staggering health issues and their consequences?

PARTICIPANTS
Jigna Dharod, PhD is Assistant Professor, Department of Nutrition at University of North Carolina Greensboro. Her research interests include understanding the different coping mechanisms low-income families use to reduce the severity and incidence of food insecurity; determination of the relationship between food insecurity and social capital and its influence on health outcomes, such as body weight among different immigrants and refugee groups in the US; the use microbiological and other indicators, such as attitude towards food safety, to understand food safety risks in preparation and storage of weaning foods among immigrants and refugee populations settled in the US.

Sharon Morrison, PhD, is Associate Professor at UNCG Department of Health Education and currently, the Director of the Undergraduate Program. Dr. Morrison’s research interests include social aspects of HIV disparities among subcultures of women, particularly women in the African Diaspora. She is examining the role of social capital in HIV risk, transmission awareness and prevention among US African and Latina immigrant women, and young women and girls in the rural Caribbean. She is also interested in the use of media and performing arts for HIV outreach and prevention intervention in South Africa. Dr. Morrison also conducts research related to immigrant and refugee health and welfare. She is conducting research related to cultural adaptation and health outcomes of new and recent immigrants in the US. She is involved in designing and implementing culturally appropriate interventions for limited English proficient (LEP) immigrant individuals and families.

Chram Rode is Assistant Manager at Goat Lady Dairy and was a farmer in Vietnam’s Central Highlands before he came to the US in 2006. He is a Montagnard from the Bahnar tribe.
Lee Walton is an artist whose work takes many forms from drawing, performance, net art, video, public performances, social architectures and more. Walton has exhibited and created projects for museums, institutions and cities both nationally and internationally. His public art is often situational and involves collaboration with numerous participants. Walton is an Assistant Professor of Art at the University of North Carolina Greensboro. His work can be viewed at leewalton.com. With Donovan McKnight (co-director of Face to Face Greensboro and Spare Room) he orchestrated the Super G Experiential Residency Program held at Super G Mart International Food, a popular shopping destination for multicultural Greensboro.
Daniel Woodham is the CSA (community sponsored agriculture) Manager at Goat Lady Dairy in Randolph County and the former ESOL director at Montagnard Dega Association, an ethnic-based community organization based in Greensboro. After operating his own successful CSA (NIMBY Gardens), he has helped Goat Lady launch their highly successful CSA this year. Daniel is a regular vendor at the Greensboro Farmers Curb Market.

Andrew J. Young (moderator) is an artist, educator, game designer and advocate. For two years he volunteered and then worked at Montagnard Dega Association as an ESOL teacher and employment specialist in order to study and understand the community. He worked with leaders to translate the US census form, health information and US citizenship questions, established translation guidelines, and produced Web-based videos to address the lack of basic information available to this mostly preliterate population. He is currently working with his wife, Betsy Renfrew, and backstrap weavers from Southeast Asia to together preserve and promote traditional weaving through a sustainable model.



DATS 2010: Stokes Purple Sweet Potato

DATS MashUp
Oct 9, 2:30-4:00
Four cooking teams of a professional chef and refugee-immigrant will present and discuss their joint creations using the Stokes Purple sweet potato as their point of inspiration. Each team will face language, tradition and cultural barriers as they work to communicate, collaborate, and create a great new recipe. Follow the teams' progress at http://mybridges.net/
Today people from all over the world have brought new flavors, ingredients, techniques and tastes to the Piedmont. The Stokes Purple sweet potato is an exceptional product available at Whole Foods and developed by enterprising Stokes County farmers from a variety of Ipomoea batatas cultivated in Asia. As a world food, the sweet potato is a familiar ingredient to newcomers from Southeast Asia, Africa, and Central and South America.

Participating Restaurants
Chef and owner Graham Heaton says Table 16 embodies a style of food that is strong, unique, and indicative of the bold flavors of the New World coupled with the refined and elegant traditions of the Old World. The multi-ethnic cuisine of the New World is influenced by the flavors of the Caribbean, Central America, South America, Cajun, Creole Cultures. These all collide with the more sophisticated classic approach to Old World cuisines of Spain, Portugal, France, and Italy.  Never losing our foot hold on our Southern Roots, the four seasons, and locally grown produce, our concept features many staples of the New World, such as legumes, fresh seafood, healthy grains, fresh fruits and vegetables, such as mangoes, passion fruit, papaya, yucca, yams, and plantains.

Table 16
600 S. Elm Street, Greensboro NC 27406
(336) 279-8525
http://www.table16restaurant.com/
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Chefs and owners Mark Grohman and Trevor Dye operate Meridian Restaurant . Each is a classically trained chef who has chosen to make Winston Salem their home.  They have worked at some of the finest restaurants in the Triad area as executive chefs.  The cuisine at Meridian Restaurant represents the combination and culmination of classical training and passion for Mediterranean and local cuisine.

Meridian Restaurant
411 South Marshall Street, Winston-Salem, NC 27107
(336)722-8889
http://www.meridianws.com/
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Chef John Drees reopened Southern Lights Bistro at its new location in June 2010 . The award-winning four-star restaurant, and one of Greensboro’s most popular eating establishments for more than two decades, Southern Lights Bistro is delighted to welcome you back. Inside you will find many aspects you fondly remember about the original location, such as popular menu offerings like Cream of Tomato Basil Soup, Tribecca Sandwich, Reference Burger, Grilled Salmon with Cucumber Dill Sauce, Chocolate Walnut Pie, seasonal items, house-made desserts, fresh daily seafood and chalkboard specials.
Chef Adrian Harris represents Southern Lights Bistro in the community-minded collaboration project!

Southern Lights Bistro
2415-A Lawndale Dr., Greensboro, NC 27408
(336) 379-9414
http://southernlightsbistro.com/
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Chef Jeff Bacon, Director and Excecutive Chef for the program, and certified guest chefs provide  classroom and kitchen training at the Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest NC's Triad Community Kitchen. Ten-week training sessions overseen by Chef Bacon are given at no charge to unemployed, underemployed and homeless individuals to prepare them for careers in the food service industry. Training includes instruction and activities designed to help ensure students are "workplace ready" and a one-week internship with a local food service organization or restaurant to help students gain "real world" job experience. Graduates may obtain further training, professional development and scholarship assistance with transferable credits applied to continued study at Guilford Technical Community College's Culinary program.

Triad Community Kitchen students use donated and purchased food during their course time to create vacuum-sealed, ready-to-heat meals in a bag for distribution to Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest NC's partner agencies like soup kitchens, group homes and Kids Cafes.

Triad Community Kitchen
Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest NC
3655 Reed Street, Winston-Salem NC 27107
(336) 784-5770
http://www.hungernwnc.org/
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From Stokes County, NC — The Stokes Purple
The Stokes Purple sweet potato is about how innovation and economic development can be used to sustain local agriculture. It is a technology and globalization story that began five hundred years ago in America, went around the world, and came home to Stokes County, NC.

The Stokes Purple is a sweet potato cultivar (Ipomoea batatas) developed and promoted by StokesCORE, a local nonprofit economic development agency, to help Stokes County farmers diversify production and preserve rural heritage. Its striking color comes from its anthocyanin content, consumption of which is linked to reduced cardiovascular disease.

The sweet potato (not the same as the yam, Dioscorea alata) originated in Mesoamerica and was among many important world foods discovered and developed by generations of Pre-Columbian agriculturalists. Columbus brought it to Europe(1500) where it was carried to the Philippines, then China, India and Southeast Asia. In the late 1600s it was grown in Virginia. By 1700 it arrived in Japan. Today the sweet potato is an important world food. In the US, North Carolina is the largest sweet potato producer.

Contact
Andrew Young, 336-420-3768 or youngprojects@triad.rr.com
BACKGROUND STORY
• Food and economic development in the Piedmont
• Innovation sustains our rural heritage
• The sweet potato in world history
• The Purple Stokes: from local to global

The Stokes Purple sweet potato is about how innovation and economic development can be used to sustain local agriculture. It is a technology and globalization story that began five hundred years ago in America, went around the world, and came home to Stokes County, NC.

The Stokes Purple is a sweet potato cultivar (Ipomoea batatas) developed and promoted by StokesCORE, a local nonprofit economic development agency, to help Stokes County farmers diversify production and preserve rural heritage. Its striking color comes from its anthocyanin content, consumption of which is linked to reduced cardiovascular disease.

The sweet potato (not the same as the yam, Dioscorea alata) originated in Mesoamerica and was among many important world foods discovered and developed by generations of Pre-Columbian agriculturalists. Columbus brought it to Europe(1500) where it was carried to the Philippines, then China, India and Southeast Asia. In the late 1600s it was grown in Virginia. By 1700 it arrived in Japan. Today the sweet potato is an important world food. In the US, North Carolina is the largest sweet potato producer.


Montagnard urban garden in the Piedmont
Asian farmers at the Carolina Farm Stewardship conference











But here the story gets better: The Piedmont has become multicultural, with unique populations of Asians long familiar with growing the sweet potato. Here refugees and immigrants grow lush, dense backyard gardens, planting seeds and varieties of plants from their native lands. The original Purple Stokes was an odd looking potato presented to Stokes farmers by an Asian woman. At NC State University  it was definitively identified as a cousin of its American ancestor. Thus the sweet potato has been around the world, an early example of globalization and technology dispersion. Beginning with a trip that started five hundred years ago with stops all across Europe and Asia, the Purple Stokes has come home!