Minneapolis »

By neighborhood:

St. Paul »

By neighborhood:

Future of neighborhood funding still uncertain

July 24, 2008

The City of Minneapolis’ Neighborhood Revitalization Program work group presented a report Thursday to the city council’s Committee of the Whole that will affect future allocation of dollars to neighborhood groups across the metro.

Bob Cooper, Senior NRP/Citizen Participation Specialist, presented the report, titled Framework for the Future. The report recommended the creation of two new funds for neighborhood groups, the Neighborhood Investment Fund and the Community Innovation Fund.

“The capacity to organize at the neighborhood level is a basic city service,” Cooper said. “These allocations provide base support for neighborhoods.”

According to the report, 90 percent of all administrative funding would go to the Neighborhood Investment Fund, to be controlled by neighborhoods. The remaining 10 percent would go to the Community Innovation Fund, to be controlled by the city.

Neighborhoods would be able to allocate money for more localized issues, and the city would set priorities and award micro-grants to neighborhood groups who agreed to address them.

Council Member Cam Gordon, Ward 2, expressed concern about the allocation process, saying the formula should be simple and clear.

The administrative cost of the new funds had been mentioned in previous reports as being between $2 and $3 million. The final report had no language regarding cost.

Council member Betsy Hodges, Ward 13, expressed dismay that a specific dollar amount wasn’t included in the NRP’s work.

Bob Miller, the director of the NRP, also objected to the proposal.

“I object very strongly to the document produced,” Miller said. “It’s vague [and] it’s arbitrary.”

Miller and the rest of the work group had researched spending history over the last six years and came up with a prospective amount of $2.9 million needed for funding. According to Cooper, $2.9 million would cover the base administrative costs of neighborhood organizations, but not special concerns and expenditures.

Mayor Rybak was less concerned with the missing dollar amount.

“A dollar figure is one thing, an outcome is another,” Rybak said. “First and foremost I think we really want an outcome.”

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
13 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

All active 300x250 inside group ads

Things People Say

Readers sound off on disco, the Unabomber, and Santa Christ

“If there was any deep division in the music scene in 1977, it wasn’t people scratching their heads at less than stellar releases from Kansas, Foreigner, Styx, or Steely Dan and Neil Young, it was the demise of live music as disco came to prominence. I could make the argument that Kansas, Nugent and other arena acts GAINED fans because people who hated disco REALLY hated disco (myself included).”
-comment on “Sucking in ’77”

“John Jansen’s comments made me think of some of the bad things white people have done. Timothy McVeigh! Terry Nichols! The Unabomber! Not to mention almost all the serial killers in the U.S.! And all those Arab terrorists — they’re Caucasian! I just don’t think we can afford to have white people running this country. They are way too dangerous.”
-comment on “The Battle for Pine County”

“I really used to be amazed how these individuals could be so blatant about who they really are, and yet have their assemblies still pour money into their pockets so they can live like movie stars…and then you have those who are of the new faith: CASHIANS and followers of Santa Christ.”
-comment on “Mac Hammond’s Living Word facing IRS investigation” MORE »