Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Sun Jan 28th 2007 at 12:50pm UTC

New Texico Rises

El_paso
I’ve spent much of the past week embroiled in intellectual debates with my colleagues in urban sociology and related fields.  So this story in today’s El Paso Times couldn’t have come at a better time. It reminds me that what’s really important is what’s happening on the ground  in real communities.  A much smarter thinker that me once said (and I paraphrase):  The point is not to interpret the world, the point is to change it. I want to send a personal note of gratitude to Joyce Wilson, Angela Mora (pictured here), and our energetic team of change-agents in El Paso,  and especially to my own incredible RFCG team:  Rod Frantz, Amanda
Styron, David Miller and Lou Musante, who are the force behind our contribution to this effort.   As we expand these efforts at community transformation, Veronica Escobar, one of  the young visionary leaders we met in El Paso, will  be helping us in future initiatives around the country as well as continuing to make change happen in New Texico.

"Economic
development isn’t just about attracting companies; it’s also about
attracting and keeping talented people, and that takes a creative city…. A group of 31 El Pasoans has taken Florida’s
theories to heart, and with the help of the Richard Florida Creativity
Group, based in Washington D.C., are trying to find ways to tap into
this area’s creativity to improve the quality of life here and to
stimulate economic growth. The El Paso group is part of the New
Texico Creative Cities Leadership Project…
El Paso and Tacoma, Wash., are the first
cities to be part of Florida’s Creative Cities Leadership Project. Last
week, Florida’s company announced the start of similar projects in
Tallahassee, Fla., Charlotte, N.C., and Duluth-Superior, Minn.

For more information on the New Texico project, click here.

"The El Paso-Juárez region is
poised to attract many companies from the northern U.S. and southern
Mexico. To make the most of this potential, the region needs to think
about how it will support the people who do and will live (here)."  The
project is aimed at giving El Paso the "tools and knowledge it needs to
build a stronger economy that is authentic to this region and
sustainable," he said….

El Paso City Manager Joyce Wilson said the New Texico project is "an economic development and quality-of-life project." "I
hope it develops an awareness in the community of the creative assets
we have here. … We have a lot of creativity in this community that if
we harness and release, can empower the citizens to do great things for
our city." Mora, the Texico project coordinator, said the project
is like a lab to test Florida’s theories. The plan is to make the
project long-term, with some participants leaving and some new ones
entering each year, she said. The project’s 31-member class came
up with six initiatives during a brainstorming session with Florida to
focus on his "3 T’s of economic development," Mora said.

The
initiatives: a soon-to-begin El Paso-Juárez Binational Arts &
Culture District design competition; a Border Canvas project to bring
an attention-grabbing public art project here by Christo and
Jeanne-Claude, who most recently did "The Gates" in Central Park in New
York, or by area artists; ecotourism development and promotion; a
Binational Technology Alliance; a mentoring program for all ages of
people; and an idea-support network to provide resources for people
with innovative project ideas….

During a two-day workshop with Florida last September,
the Texico project participants were told this area "should capitalize
on being one of the largest binational borders in the world," Wong
said. That’s why she’s heading the committee organizing the El
Paso-Juárez Binational Arts & Cultural District design competition. "We
are taking about a 30-block area from the El Paso Museum of Art to the
Museo Historico in Juárez and giving" teams of university students and
other nonprofessionals the "challenge of developing this area" into an
arts and cultural district, Wong said. The competition is scheduled to
open Thursday, and entries are due May 14. The winning team will get
$7,500, and two finalists will get $2,500 each.

The teams could
come up with a number of concepts — from urban design schemes to
proposals for a festival — Wong said. The winning concept will be
presented at a public forum and then, along with other ideas that "look
doable," will be given to government officials in El Paso and Juárez,
she said.

Stephen Ingle, 33, co-founder and art director for
Creative Kids, an El Paso art education organization, and a project
participant, said, "We have a lot of creative juices flowing (here),
but we haven’t focused on a lot of initiatives" to showcase El Paso and
Juárez. "Austin didn’t become Austin until it took advantage of what it
had." Ingle is overseeing the Border Canvas initiative, which, he
said, is aimed at using art to "show the tolerance between El Paso and
Juárez" and bring an economic boost to the area. Ingle’s
committee has sent a proposal to Christo and Jeanne-Claude, who have
gained international attention with their environmental art projects,
to do a project here, he said. But if that doesn’t materialize, the
committee wants to get area artists to do some large public art
project, perhaps using the international bridges, the Rio Grande or the
mountains, Ingle said.

El Paso County Commissioner Veronica Escobar, 37, another project participant, is overseeing its ecotourism initiative. "My
pitch to the group was El Paso has such a great geography and unique
environment. Instead of figuring out ways to make this a tourism center
through a roller coaster" or other things, "we should build on the
assets we have." That includes rock climbing, mountain and street
biking, and river and arroyo walks, she said. Escobar’s committee
plans to work with organizations already staging recreational and
outdoor activities to develop and promote outdoor events and build an
ecotourism structure, Escobar said.

Peter Cooper, chief
technology officer for the El Paso County government, is heading the
project’s Binational Technology Alliance. It’s focused on identifying
and assisting efforts to attract high-tech companies to El Paso, he
said….

Elizabeth
Dahl, executive director of the Children’s Miracle Network in El Paso,
is heading the project’s T3 (T cubed) Mentoring Program initiative,
which, she said, is aimed at setting up a mentoring program to help
people on both sides of the border with education and personal and
professional development. It’s a way to "increase the talent base and retain people in our community," she said.

West-Central
city Rep. Susie Byrd is overseeing the project’s New Texico network
initiative, which, she said in a written statement, may be a "loose
association of people in the area" that would connect people with great
ideas to the resources needed to carry them out. "This region
breeds great ideas. But a great idea often needs talent and money and
time and resources to really make it grow and have an impact," Byrd
wrote. Byrd said she doesn’t know whether Florida’s theories
answer all the questions about how to grow a city’s economy, "but I
certainly think he is onto something," she wrote. "I think there is a
role for the traditional economic development activities, but if we
really want to get it done as a city, we need a great Downtown, we need
great parks," and other quality of life things, she wrote.

But
Florida in his book also notes that attracting creative class workers
to a city isn’t simply done with "bike trails, music scenes and other
amenities. "Building broad creative ecosystems that mobilize the
creative talents of many is a complex, multifaceted activity. We are
only beginning to understand how do do it. It will take a long time and
many local experiments."

New Texico Creative Cities Leadership Project Initiatives

El Paso-Juárez Binational Arts & Cultural District Design Competition:
Open to teams of university students and other nonprofessionals
worldwide to come up with concepts for an arts and cultural district
stretching along a 30-block area from the El Paso Museum of Art to the
Museo Historico in Juárez. The competition is to open Thursday, with
entries due May 14. The winning team will get $7,500 and two finalists
will get $2,500 each.

Border Canvas: Bring public art
project here by Christo and Jeanne-Claude, who have drawn international
attention with public environmental art projects, or do a big public
art project with area artists, possibly using the international
bridges, Rio Grande, or mountains.

T3 (T cubed) Mentoring
Program:
Getting mentors to help people of all ages on both sides of
the border with education and personal and professional development.


Ecotourism
:
To further develop and promote outdoor activities tied to El"Paso’s
mountains, river and other natural features and build an ecotourism
structure.


Binational Technology Alliance:
Provide enabling
tools, training and infrastructure to support the growth of
technology-based populations and industries in the region.

New
Texico network:
Association of people who would provide resources to
help people with ideas for innovative businesses or projects to carry
them out.

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