This month's Governing Magazine has an interesting article about how Web 2.0 tools - wikis, blogs, etc. can and should change the way in which state and local government functions. Here's a quote from Mark Forman, a partner at KPMG - People who learn how to harness wikis and other new tools to the benefit of government will be hailed as the next great visionaries. You can read the entire article here.
Our friends at Purdue Extension ECD have produced their very first On Local Government podcast featuring Purdue Economist Larry DeBoer. In this month's podcast Larry explains the Indiana circuit breaker. You can download this and load it to an iPod or listen online with QuickTime or Windows Media Player. The two formats are listed below:
Here is an interesting "working paper" from the Carnegie Mellon Center for Economic Development. It takes a look at the correlation between metropolitan fragmentation (how many units of government there are in a region) and economic competitiveness (average wages). Guess what. More units of government typically means a region is less competitive. Guess what else. It looks like the Midwest has regions that are more fragmented then other parts of the U.S. There is no date on the working paper but it seems to be a bit old (uses data from 1972-2000). Nice little analytical model, though.
Here's a pretty remarkable statistic - nearly half of Indiana's well-educated population lives along a corridor that stretches across eight counties anchored by Tippecanoe County to the north and Monroe County to the south. This is the subject of a PCRD publication called Indiana's Knowledge Corridor (available here) written by Purdue Economist Brigitte Waldorf. The report has some specific recommendations for leveraging this asset:
The growth and increasing concentration of the highly educated population in the knowledge corridor provides an opportunity for unprecedented economic growth and a boost to Indiana’s ability to compete in the global knowledge economy. To facilitate further growth, the report recommends assigning special status to the knowledge corridor as a coherent regional entity, aggressive marketing of the corridor’s locational advantages, and support for improved transportation infrastructure.
OK, what now? How do leaders in Boone, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks, Johnson, Marion, Monroe, and Tippecanoe Counties come together to figure out how to leverage this asset? How can we get the "Indiana Knowledge Corridor" to become the next Research Triangle or Silicon Valley?
Many local officials recognize that their community does not exist in an small economic bubble and but rather is tied to a much larger regional economy. The challenge comes in figuring out how to work across city, county, and sometimes state lines to collaboratively address economic and quality-of-life challenges (and to take advantage of economic opportunities). The Alliance for Regional Stewardship and the National League of Cities have a very practical report called Guide to Successful Local Government Collaboration in America's Regions (download here). It has lots of examples of success stories and tools for local and regional leaders.
The guide provides sets of tools that are categorized as (1) Easier Options and (2) Harder Options. Here are examples of what you will find in each:
Easier Options
Harder Options