By Keith Twitchell | President
It's Mardi Gras time in New Orleans, but before we slip into our costumes and head out to the parades, we are pleased to report continued progress on many civic engagement fronts in New Orleans!
As our supporters and followers know, the City Planning Commission Neighborhood Participation Plan (NPP) is the first formal mandate for civic engagement in New Orleans. Based on one section of CBNO's more comprehensive Community Participation Plan proposal, it has clearly been successful since its 2013 adoption. However, there is definitely room for improvement, and we made numerous recommendations to the Planning Commission for improvements last fall. The Commission held a public hearing on this subject in December, and about 25 residents spoke -- and every single one of them supported the recommendations we made. After the hearing, we spoke with a couple of the Commissioners, and they appear prepared to adopt everything we proposed -- even one particular item we thought was going to be too controversial. The vote on the NPP amendments will take place later this month, so we will be monitoring the situation closely. Clearly, the result will be turning a good and useful piece of legislation into something even stronger and better.
Also on the NPP front, the city's Historic District Landmarks Commission (HDLC) has agreed to have the NPP expanded to include them as well; the City Attorney's office is presently drafting language to enact this. Predictably, the administration initially opposed this step, but has since backed down.
On another civic engagement front, our work to engage more people in the city's annual budgeting process continues to move forward. Our "Big Easy Budget Breakdown" website is completed; this provides the city's budget to actual spending information on an annual basis going back to 2007, in a format that is both detailed and fairly easy to understand (as compared to the city's 800 page budget books!). The second website, the "Big Easy Budget Game" went through very successful beta testing in December, with a group of about twenty community members, and we are making final refinements based on their input. This site will enable any New Orleans resident to create his/her own version of the city budget, with parameters to keep people real so that we get realistic budgets. The community members had fun during the beta testing, and learned a lot about the budget in the process. There will be a citywide vote in early April to consider a new property millage; our plan is to do a formal launch of both websites about two weeks before the election, with city officials and the media present. This timing should maximize media coverage and general attention.
After the sites are launched, we will begin a large-scale effort to bring the Budget Game to the community -- neighborhood and community meetings, libraries, churches, etc. -- so that we include the full diversity of New Orleanians in the Game, including the many people here who do not have internet access. We will then aggregate the data and present it to the city budget staff, the mayor and the City Council as "The People's Budget". After the city adopts its actual budget, we will then do a comparitive analysis to see how the input from The People's Budget was used. As a final note, the Budget Game has been designed in such away that it can be adapted for literally any city in the world; after we launch it in New Orleans, we will begin making it available for other interested jurisdictions. Please feel free to contact us (info@cbno.org) if you would like more information on this.
With these two major projects in their very final stages, we have begun working with colleagues in New Orleans' Lower 9th Ward -- ground zero for the Hurricane Katrina damage -- on a true Participatory Budgeting (PB) process to be conducted this year. We began the seed work on this last summer, but now we have formally launched the project. This will be the first-ever PB process in the United States conducted independently of local government (our mayor has said -- direct quote -- "New Orleans is not ready for Participatory Budgeting"), and we are incredibly excited about empowering residents in this still badly damaged neighborhood to spend funds on improving their lives the way they think is most appropriate.
Finally, our Residents Guide to City Government, a comprehensive user's manual that has taken over a year to compile, is at the printer! While we won't get them back in time to hand them out from Mardi Gras parade floats, they will be widely distributed once the Carnival season is over, and will be a great tool for people to better access city programs and services.
While there is still a lot more work to be done before we can truly say that there are meaningful civic engagement opportunities available to all New Orleans residents, we are really pleased with the progress that is being made. Momentum is building, and we are seeing more and more references in the media, from community and business groups, and from residents in general to the need to really have strong community input into government decision-making. For those of you who have been following our work over the years, we hope you are as excited as we are to see these ever-larger steps forward taking place. For those who may be learning about us for the first time, thanks for checking it out. We could not do it without the support of all of you -- these successes are every bit us much yours as they are successes of CBNO, our partners and the people of New Orleans.
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