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Create the Village

28 Episodes

43 minutes | Apr 5, 2021
After Years of Neglect and Procrastination
A year ago, we published an episode of Create the Village entitled, “Has ‘Infrastructure Week’ Finally Arrived?” There was plenty of conversation, rolling into a national election, that supported the idea that the time had finally come…that after years of neglect and procrastinating, Washington was ready to enact a massive program to address crumbling highways, a patchwork of high-speed internet access, and inadequate public transit systems. Twelve months later, we’re still waiting for the federal government to adopt and fund a massively overdue investment in our national infrastructure. This week’s episode is a conversation with David Leininger and Jack Wierzenski, executives with the Dallas Area Rapid Transit. David is DART’s Interim President and Chief Executive Officer Dallas Area Rapid Transit, and Jack is DART’s Director of Economic Development & Planning.
40 minutes | Mar 29, 2021
The Future Requires "All of the Above"
In the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, Dr. Calvin Mackie was appointed to the 33-member board of the Louisiana Recovery Authority. In 2009, he was appointed to the Louisiana Council on the Social Status of Black Boys and Black Men. Recently, Mackie was appointed to the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority Board. In 2014, Dr. Mackie founded STEM NOLA, a non-profit organization created to expose, inspire, and engage communities in the opportunities in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). To date, the non-profit has engaged more than 50,000 K-12 students in hands-on project-based STEM activities.
38 minutes | Mar 22, 2021
Rural Social Justice and Economic Development
Sherri Powell founded the Rural America Chamber of Commerce in 2021. She's working to empower rural entrepreneurs and to advocate for their economies and communities, and she's not stopping there. Not afraid to dig into the real issues, she's helping them talk about things like racism in America.
24 minutes | Mar 15, 2021
"Breaking Point" Coming for Back Rent Bubble
Deidre Woollard, an Editor at Million Acres, a division of Motley Fool, returns to Create The Village to discuss the ongoing market confusion and looming problems facing the real estate and banking industries and local and state governments.
44 minutes | Mar 8, 2021
Something Shifted for Me
President and chief executive officer of the YMCA of Metro Atlanta, Lauren Koontz, discusses her leadership in the midst of a worldwide pandemic and period of national racial awareness.
31 minutes | Feb 22, 2021
Race Is Not a Risk Factor, But Racisms Is
This week’s episode of Create the Village is a potent conversation about some of the issues of inequality facing the U.S. and some of the policy initiatives designed to raise awareness. Linda Goler Blount is President and CEO of the Black Women’s Health Imperative, the only national organization focused on Black women’s emotional, physical and financial health and wellness. After one year of pandemic, the conversation between Blount and host Egbert Perry includes a review of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on the Black community.
31 minutes | Feb 8, 2021
When Downtown Moves to the Suburbs
Mary Means is an award-winning community planner and innovator who has led the movement in Main Street Revitalization for more than four decades. She has been dubbed the Queen of Main Street by her colleagues and industry leaders. Today, Mary is a popular conference speaker and continues to help public interest clients envision and build consensus to make their communities better places to live and work. When discussing Mary Means, The American Planning Association identified her as a “Planning Pioneer” and described her this way: “An award-winning community planner and innovator, Mary Means sparked and has led the movement in main street revitalization for nearly four decades. While working at the National Trust for Historic Preservation in the 1970s as shopping centers were emptying downtowns, Means could see small towns needed tools to bring life back to historic town centers. She conceived of a three-town pilot project, then led the team that took it to scale nationally. Now known as Main Street America, the program provides an integrated framework to help communities transform their economies, leverage local leadership, and improve residents' quality of life.” Through Means's efforts over nearly four decades, the Main Street movement has proved that downtowns are the heart of communities, and communities are only as strong as their core. The program she spearheaded laid the foundation for improving and revitalizing small towns and older town centers for many years to come.”
37 minutes | Feb 1, 2021
When the Homes Are No Longer Locally Owned
Guest: John O’Callaghan, President and CEO of Atlanta Neighborhood Development Partnership (ANDP). Atlanta is famous for the ebb and flow of its real estate market. And, while some parts of the metro area are certainly doing well, some parts of the market are still feeling the impact of the 2008 foreclosure crisis. Atlanta is famous for the ebb and flow of its real estate market. And, while some parts of the metro area are certainly doing well, some parts of the market are still feeling the impact of the 2008 foreclosure crisis. @ANDPINC #2KBY25  
27 minutes | Jan 25, 2021
Where Are Our Children (during the pandemic)?
This week's episode of Create the Village asks the question, “Are we living through a temporary bubble where low-income children stop attending school or underperform, or are we seeing a trend that will live with us for decades?” Jill Barshay and Egbert Perry discuss the barriers to educational attainment for children from modest-income households during the pandemic and the lasting impact of a lost generation of students. Barshay is a staff writer and editor who writes the weekly “Proof Points” column about education research and data for Hechinger Report. Topic: During a worldwide pandemic, educational contrast between wealthy and modest-income families and between the races. Select readings include: https://hechingerreport.org/white-and-female-teachers-show-racial-bias-in-evaluating-second-grade-writing/ https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-black-college-enrollment-sharply-down-during-covid-summer-of-2020/ https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-how-deep-coronavirus-school-budget-cuts-are-expected-to-harm-student-achievement/ https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-survey-reveals-stark-rich-poor-divide-in-how-u-s-children-were-taught-remotely-during-the-spring-school-closures/ https://hechingerreport.org/a-decade-of-research-on-the-rich-poor-divide-in-education/ https://hechingerreport.org/another-way-to-quantify-inequality-inside-colleges/
40 minutes | Jan 18, 2021
Images of Our National Anxiety
Egbert Perry, CEO of Integral, and Hollis Towns, VP of local news at Gannett, discuss the recent Georgia special election, the assault on the US Capitol, and what the public can expect from media companies during this era.
30 minutes | Jan 11, 2021
It's Time to Tell the Truth
Susan K. Thomas, president of the Melville Charitable Trust, where she oversees the Trust’s grantmaking strategy, philanthropic partnerships and administration.
29 minutes | Oct 30, 2020
If You Can Read This...
We’re living in the midst of a technological revolution and the Digital Divide is leaving millions behind. Autumn Glover, an urban planner passionate about “The Intersection of Race, Place and Health” joined Egbert Perry on this week’s episode of Create the Village. Also joining the conversation was Eric Pinckney, the Project Executive responsible for the implementation of Assembly in Doraville, GA, which is a 145 acre, 10 million square foot redevelopment of the former General Motors plant in metro Atlanta.
33 minutes | Oct 22, 2020
In the Room When Decisions are Made
Edward Golding, Executive Director of the MIT Golub Center for Finance and Policy, discusses "The Unequal Costs of Black Homeownership" with Egbert Perry.
34 minutes | Oct 15, 2020
When Outrage Becomes Contagious
Egbert Perry discusses the lasting effects of structural decisions made by political governance, governance that is emerging in the wake of decades of policies that intentionally advantaged some over others.
36 minutes | Oct 8, 2020
Through the Eyes of the People
In this episode of Create the Village, Egbert Perry explores how market forces can be leveraged to diminish systemic inequities that are rooted in existing social dynamics and public policies.
32 minutes | Oct 1, 2020
It Happened One Afternoon
In this episode, Egbert Perry and Rick White discuss the origins of Integral and the philosophy that undergirds the company’s approach toward Community Development. The discussion revisits an afternoon conversation in Harlem, New York in the early 1990’s when two friends made a commitment to build healthy communities that did not discriminate along racial or economic lines and where families could be nurtured.
27 minutes | Sep 24, 2020
Without Embarrassment or Shame
The podcast’s second season launches with what is summed up best by host Egbert Perry, “There is no question that a lot of people have been awakened to the disparities (in the US), the inequities that are drawn along racial lines. Now, the question is are we prepared to change enough in our system, you know economic system, to deal with the reality that we just discovered.”
11 minutes | Jun 4, 2020
Lessons Learned During COVID-19
Egbert Perry’s thoughts about where we are roughly 120 days into this new era.
32 minutes | May 29, 2020
Will COVID Kill the City?
How the COVID-19 pandemic will impact architecture, public spaces, and real estate. Guests:  Eugénie “Genie” Birch FAICP, FAcSS, RTPI (hon), the Nussdorf Professor of Urban Research, Department of City and Regional Planning, Weitzman School of Design, University of Pennsylvania and co-director of Penn Institute for Urban Research Susan M. Wachter, the Albert Sussman Professor of Real Estate and Professor of Finance at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and co-director of Penn Institute for Urban Research  
42 minutes | May 7, 2020
Will We Pay the Price of Returning to Work?
How COVID-19 is impacting our educational system. Guests: Dr. Harris Cooper, The Hugo L. Blomquist Distinguished Professor of Psychology & Neuroscience at Duke University; Dr. Raymond Hart, Director of Research for the Council of the Great City Schools.
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