All-America City: The 10 winners, and Tampa doesn’t get the brass ring

It is a little bit like the Academy Awards, the drama, the acceptance speeches, the rowdy fun, you get the idea.

So, live, from the Marriott Waterside in Tampa, here are the winners of the 2009 All-America City Awards, posted as they are announced:

  1. Fort Wayne, Ind.
  2. Statesville, N.C.
  3. Inglewood, Calif.
  4. Somerville, Mass.
  5. Phoenix, Ariz.
  6. Wichita, Kansas
  7. Albany, N.Y.
  8. Kinston, N.C.
  9. Caroline County, Va.
  10. Richmond, Ind.

All-America City projects: Opening government up with statistics, in Somerville, Mass.


Photo: City of Somerville/Jonas A. Kahn

The National Civic League ’s 2009 All-America City Awards gets in full swing tomorrow morning in Tampa. We’re highlighting one nominated project from each of the 30 competing cities (10 will be named AAC’s). Here is Somerville, Mass., a Boston suburb:

Somerville, Massachusetts
Improved Communication

Over the past several years, the City of Somerville has increased its focus on creating a transparent, inclusive form of municipal government for all community members and through a variety of media, to create a more inclusive and responsive community. This idea includes the creation of a government management model that not only tracks administrative trends and constituent requests to increase accountability, but also provides the City’s residents with the opportunity to respond to and provide feedback on City initiatives and the annual budget process, to create an inclusive, transparent form of government. To that end, in 2004, Somerville adopted the CitiStat model of management, dubbed “SomerStat,” which institutes a series of regular forums with all City departments and key decision-makers to identify problems, assess success of service delivery and track constituent concerns, determine opportunities for improvement and, along with the City’s 311 Customer Service Center, provide data on departments’ service demand and delivery, as partially determined by residents. Somerville’s goal is to build and sustain a continuous, positive relationship and ongoing conversation between City government and community members, and all of these tools have increasingly made that goal a reality.

Thirty cities, towns, neighborhoods and communities are vying for recognition as an All-America City at the June 16-19 conference at the Tampa Marriott Waterside Hotel. Each will give a short presentation on three public-private civic projects they undertook before a panel of judges names the best. Tampa is one of the finalists.

Former Tampa Mayor Sandy Freedman is the president of the National Civic League this year and a big proponent of these kinds of partnership projects. During her tenure, in 1990, Tampa was named an All-America City. Creative Loafing CEO Ben Eason is also involved, as a member of the Host Committee.

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