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Technique: Connecting Students with Service

October 2, 2013 by Mackenzie Madden

 Connecting students with service

By The Technique Editorial Board on September 19, 2013 Leave a reply
Photo Courtesy of Westside Communities AlliancePhoto Courtesy of Westside Communities Alliance

 
 
 

The Westside Communities Alliance (WCA), a communications network that connects volunteers with service projects in Atlanta, shows great promise. Started by two west-side neighborhoods and Tech’s Westside Task Force in 2011, the WCA offers students an option to get involved in ongoing, long-term projects that directly improve several aspects of life in west Atlanta. Though the WCA has a wide range of projects, it still needs more funding to be sustainable and has yet to gain a foothold in the general Tech community. By improving its campus presence, the WCA could greatly develop as a program.

WCA helps organize the Semester-in-the-City courses, which offer Tech honors students a chance to explore urban neighborhoods and the unique challenges in each locale. These programs, though rewarding, would be more effective if they were extended and publicized to a wider set of students. Involving more students in the Semester-in-the-City program would give the participants first-hand experience with the issues in urban communities and directly increase membership with WCA.

Taking active measures to ensure a strong campus presence is also necessary. Setting up a showcase with community service projects or holding student workshops would increase student awareness. Additionally, forming a group of student representatives would enable WCA to directly communicate with Tech students. By pushing their name and creating a reputation on campus, WCA can accomplish many of its short-term and long-term goals.

Since one of their objectives is to match passionate students with service projects, WCA can further increase their campus presence by taking suggestions for community project ideas. Not only would this gain student approval, but it would also improve the quality of the organization as a whole.

 http://nique.net/opinions/consensus-opinion/2013/09/19/connecting-students-with-service/

Filed Under: Education and Student Engagement, Environment, News, Stories, Student Engagement

Technique: WCA Works to Establish Community Connections

October 2, 2013 by Mackenzie Madden

 WCA works to establish community connections

By Joshua Garrick on September 19, 2013 Leave a reply
Photo by Ben KeyserlingPhoto by Ben Keyserling

The Westside Community Alliance (WCA) is a communications network developed in 2011 by Tech’s Ivan Allen College of the Liberal Arts (IAC), the College of Architecture (COA) and the Office of Government and Community Relations (GCR) with other partners throughout the community.

“Georgia Tech has such a reputation nationally and internationally for problem solving, for engagement and for public works and service…so my question was: we do all of this stuff around the world; what do we do across the street?” said Dean Jacqueline Royster of the Ivan Allen College, who was the driving force behind the creation of this community organization.

In its two years of existence, the WCA has facilitated quarterly meetings, a listserv and a website to serve as a basis for an ongoing communication network for connections between Tech, other universities in the area, neighborhood associations, businesses, the City of Atlanta, Atlanta Fire Rescue, Atlanta Public Schools, direct service organizations, non-profits and other organizations.

As a response to Tech’s Strategic Vision and Plan, the WCA encompasses what it means to establish strategic partnerships, especially with those in the immediate area of Tech. Working through various schools and departments, they have established the Westside GT Taskforce, which is an internal network of Tech faculty who are teaching relevant courses, researchers, student organizations and campus volunteers, doing engaged research or planning projects on the Westside of Atlanta.

Some of the neighborhoods that WCA works in are Bankhead, where the average unemployment for the 16 and older population is 31 percent, English Avenue, where vancant residential structures make up 52 percent of those in the neighborhood, Washington Park, where 65 percent of average households have an income under $35,000 annually, and Vine City where there are about 3,232 food stamp recipients per square mile, according to Neighborhood Nexus.

“Often times people are working within blocks of each other and don’t know each other or they’re working at the same site,” said Sheri Davis-Faulkner, Community Liaison for the Westside Community Alliance. “They just come on a different day and they work with a different person, so they don’t know that there are ways that they could simply be working together on a lot of these projects.”

The Westside GT Taskforce includes programs like the Honors Program’s Semester-In-The-City course which invites students to explore how urban neighborhoods and schools work and provide opportunities to work in those communities. It also includes the College of Architecture, Project Studio: Northside Drive Corridor, which involved graduate students developing four extensive proposals to advance Northside Drive as a prominent transit corridor. A final example is the CEISMC Mentoring Program, in which all programs operate under similar goals to improve performance and proficiency by providing tutors and mentors with schools in the Atlanta area.

Along with many other initiatives, these focus in on four areas that the WCA has targeted as key issue areas that many partners are actively engaged in. As Davis-Faulkner explained, these include food and health, education and student engagement, water and the environment as well as development and transit. This was a way that they were able to fill in gaps and continue to do something other umbrella organizations like it weren’t necessarily a part of yet.

http://nique.net/news/2013/09/19/wca-works-to-establish-community-connections/

Filed Under: Development, Education and Student Engagement, Food and Health, Health, News, Stories, Student Engagement

WCA Receives Award for “Excellence in Leadership”

September 24, 2013 by Mackenzie Madden

The WCA was honored to receive the first annual award of “Excellence in Leadership” from The Conservancy at Historic Washington Park. Other honorees were The Humane Society of the United States Pets for Life Program and Washington Park Resident – Mrs. Patricia Gartrell.

 

From left: Christi Jackson, Makeda Johnson, Sheri Davis-Faulkner, Mackenzie Madden, Qiana Martin, Spelman Student

Excellence in Leadership Award to WCA from The Conservancy at Historic Washington Park

 

 

On Saturday September 14th, The Conservancy at Historic Washington Park, Atlanta City Council Member Ivory Young, and the Department of Parks and Recreation hosted the Jody Brooks Memorial Movie in the Park. The WCA worked with Eat Soccer and international athlete Qiana Martin to plan the first series of Pop Up + Play in the park beforehand. See the full album here.

IMG_3411

The park had music, free snowcones, and popcorn before the 8 pm showing of “42” – the story of Jackie Robinson.

 

Filed Under: Building an Alliance, News, Stories, Westside Stories

WCA Staff at Proctor Creek HIA Workshop

June 12, 2013 by Mackenzie Madden

Source: WAWA

WCA staff members Sheri Davis-Faulkner and Mackenzie Madden attended the Health Impact Assessment Workshop on May 23rd at the U.S. EPA Region 4 Headquarters downtown that focused on green infrastructure in the Proctor Creek communities. An HIA is a tool used to objectively evaluate potential positive and negative health impacts of a policy or project before it is implemented and provide recommendations to minimize adverse health impacts and maximize beneficial impacts. The goal of conducting such an assessment is to ensure that health and equity are considered in the decision-making process and that impacted communities are engaged. Please see the Health Pathways link below for more information.

The workshop was facilitated by representatives from Georgia Health Policy Center, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Environmental Protection Agency. We were joined by community members Yvonne Jones, Tony Torrence, and Shaheed Dubois among others. In addition to learning about the Health Impact Assessment process, we learned about the Boone Boulevard Street Project. This project has been chosen by the City of Atlanta’s Department of Watershed Management to address some of the community’s flooding concerns and will be implemented in collaboration with planned road diet improvements. The proposal includes a combination of planter boxes, permeable pavements, bioretention areas, and planting strips. Please see the HIA Proctor Creek link below for more information.

The Advisory Committee (37 members) will hold their next meeting will be held on July 23, 2013 from 9:30 am – 12:00 pm. The next Community Engagement meeting will be held at a date TBD.

For more information, please contact Tami Thomas-Burton at (404) 562-8027 or at Thomas-burton.tami@epa.gov.

 

HIA Proctor Creek Health Pathways

HIA Proctor Creek

Filed Under: Building an Alliance, Development, Environment, Events, Health, News, Stories, Water

GT Professor talks about Stadium Deal

May 29, 2013 by Mackenzie Madden

Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at Georgia Tech, Benjamin Flowers, sits down with WABE’s Denis O’Hayer. With his expertise in major projects such as skyscrapers and stadiums, he provides insight on things such as revenue, retractable roofs, and traffic issues that could affect the new Falcons stadium.

http://wabe.org/post/some-stadium-deal-questions-remain-talk-georgia-tech-assoc-prof-benjamin-flowers

Credit: Georgia Tech

Filed Under: Development, Stories Tagged With: Falcons, Georgia Tech, Stadium

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