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  • On Thursday, March 23rd 2017, ideastream held a panel discussion and forum on the disproportionate impact of court fines, fee and bail have on the poor with students of Cleveland State University's Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. It was held in the Moor Courtroom at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law's Moot Court Room, and was moderated by Mike Shafarenko, ideastream's Manager of Civic Engagement, Web and Social Media.

    This forum was part of ideastream's Justice for All series as well as its Courting Justice Ohio initiative, a year long initiative to engage criminal justice stakeholders and residents on the reforms needed and already underway to address the disproportionate impact of fines, fees and bail on the poor. 


    The panelists were:

    Judge John J. Russo
    Administrative and Presiding Judge, Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court

    Mike Brickner
    Senior Policy Director, ACLU of Ohio

    Sara Dorn
    Public interest and advocacy reporter, cleveland.com

    Find more Courting Justice Ohio discussions and join the conversation at http://courtingjusticeohio.org

  • Use these driving directions, parking and passenger drop-off instructions for visits to the Idea Center.
  • Ohio released its annual school report cards Thursday morning, offering parents a look at how the state grades the performance of their kids’ schools. The report cards for the 2016-2017 school year are based on 11 graded measures, including student progress from year to year, 3rd grade literacy, and graduation rates.

    The current report card measures have been phased in over a number of years after changes to both state and federal educations standards.

    Search for grades by school district, city or county below:

    What’s notable about this year’s report cards, according to Chris Woolard with the Ohio Department of Education, is that parents now have two years of data they can compare to get a more true sense of how schools are doing.

    “We’re now in the second year of data based on the same tests so it really makes for a strong comparison of where you were at last year compared to where you are this year,” Woolard said.

  • On Wednesday, August 30th, ideastream gathered leaders from 12 different non-profit and social service agencies from throughout Northeast Ohio for a discussion on poverty. 

    The discussion was part of ideastream’s Listening Project effort to identify “the things that matter most” to residents of Northeast Ohio.

    The report on ideastream’s Winter 2017 Listening Project survey on poverty in Northeast Ohio was a jumping off point for the discussion.

    The participants were (l-r):
    Brian Davis, Northeast Ohio Coalition for Homelessness
    Jennifer Scofield, Hunger Network of Greater Cleveland 
    Melissa Winfield, Lake Metropolitan Housing Authority
    Jeffery Patterson, Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority 
    Kate Carden, Cleveland Housing Network 
    John Habat, Cleveland Habitat for Humanity 
    Jackie Boehnlein, Lorain County Community Action Agency
    Juliana Chase-Morefield, Second Harvest Food Bank of North Central Ohio
    Kristin Warzocha, Greater Cleveland Food Bank
    Elizabeth Newman, Centers for Families and Children 
    Jacqueline Chisholm, The Council for Economic Opportunities in Greater Cleveland
    Mary McNamara, Cleveland Department of Aging 

    The moderator was Mike Shafarenko, Manager of Civic Engagement, Web & Social Media for ideastream.

    Read the report on ideastream’s Listening Project survey on poverty online at ideastream.org/lp

  • Courting Justice Ohio is a year long initiative to engage criminal justice stakeholders and residents on the reforms needed and already underway to address the disproportionate impact of fines, fees and bail on the poor. The initiative includes self-organized community discussions across Ohio using the Courting Justice Ohio Discussion Guide, private discussion groups organized by ideastream in Northeast Ohio, and City Club of Cleveland forums.

    The foundation for this initiative is a televised forum hosted on December 8, 2016 by Tavis Smiley and the National Center for State Courts, in partnership with ideastream and The City Club of Cleveland, which put judges in direct dialogue with the communities they serve. The focus of the forum was on how various forms of payment required by the courts (e.g. fines, fees, bail) to either punish offenders, support operating court costs or incentivize defendants’ release before trial affect people who cannot pay those costs at a far greater rate than those who can.

    The goals of this initiative include:

    • raising awareness of the disproportionate impact of fines, fees and bail on the poor
    • encouraging statewide, self-organized dialogues on the issue
    • collecting responses and reform ideas from discussion participants across the state and identifying key themes in these discussions for policy consideration

    The initiative is led by ideastream, in partnership with The City Club of Cleveland and with support from the Cleveland Foundation.

  • ideastream’s Public Square is a moderated Facebook* group for people who want to delve deeper into what they hear, read or watch on WCPN, WVIZ, or our website, ideastream.org. It's a place where people share a common interest in what’s going on in the world, unpacking it and distilling it and just having real good conversations online, no matter their political or other ideologies.

    It’s also a place to revel in other content beyond news that we’re listening to, watching and reading. Is there a podcast you’ve been obsessed with? An article that changed your thinking? A TV show you’ve been binging on, but have no one to talk about it with?

    Let’s talk about it here!

     

    *A Facebook account is required to join.

    Please e-mail Mike Shafarenko if you have specific questions about the Civic Commons.

  • On Tuesday, October 24th 2017 ideastream held a forum on the disproportionate impact court fines, fees and bail have on the poor with members of the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association, and a panel of guests. 

    This forum was part of ideastream's ongoing Courting Justice Ohio initiative, and took place at the offices of the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association, in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. 

    Our panelists were:

    Judge K.J. Montgomery
    Shaker Heights Municipal Court

    Mike Brickner
    Senior Policy Director, ACLU Ohio

    Chris Quinn
    Editor and President, Advance Ohio

    Jimmy Gates
    Faith Community Organizer, Lutheran Metropolitan Ministries 

    Our moderator was Maxie C. Jackson III, Station Manager of 90.3 WCPN ideastream

    Find more Courting Justice Ohio discussions and join the conversation at courtingjusticeohio.org

  • I’m a Cleveland teacher (my students are majority African American) and I feel that many of our kids get little exposure to anything outside of their neighborhood. I feel like this leads them to fear/feel uncomfortable in any other environment thereby leading them to live their adult lives in the same neighborhood they grew up in. This can limit opportunities.”

    “Segregation lowers the quality of life for everyone. It perpetuates stereotypes because our children are growing up in homogeneous bubbles.”

    “Discrimination. Disparity. Unhappiness. Violence.”

     “Integrated neighborhoods sounds good, and more options are need to help people live in better neighborhoods, but let’s also look at the costs to the neighborhoods as they do become integrated.”

    “History is being neglected or erased.”

    In the run-up to ideastream’s special series about neighborhood segregation called Divided by Design, we asked community members to weigh in through the Listening Project about their beliefs and attitudes about segregation in greater Cleveland. Many of the over 200 respondents spoke eloquently about why neighborhood segregation matters to them and how they think their community compares to others around it. 

    The majority of those surveyed felt it was important to have diverse, integrated neighborhoods (60% strongly agreed; 28% agreed; 9% were neutral). Here’s a map of the responses, based on location, about the impacts of segregation (some of which are excerpted at the top of this article).

    When asked whose role it was to work toward greater integration in greater Cleveland, the top two responses were individual citizens and city governments. Some people got more specific with write-in responses, saying it was the responsibility of homeowners associations, block clubs, large local institutions, realtors, school districts, community development corporations, and banks. 

    The survey also drilled down into questions about the respondents’ own neighborhoods. Responses were split equally, with about a third saying their neighborhood had received less investment than others, a third saying it had received equal investment to others, and a third saying their community received more investment than others. It was more of a bell curve response when it came to the question of whether a respondent’s neighborhood had improved, stayed the same, or declined over the past decade. Here are responses to this question based on location (blue = greatly improved, yellow = stayed the same, red = greatly declined).

    When it comes to beliefs about why neighborhoods in greater Cleveland are segregated now, the majority of survey takers (55%) said it was a combination of the following: basic economics, comfort and personal choice, and decades of discriminatory policies that have limited where minorities could live and provided more opportunities for whites to choose where they live. One respondent noted that “perceptions drive segregation,” citing that the “narrative of blacks lowering property values continues to prevail in Cleveland.”

    You can find all of the reporting from the Divided by Design series here. Join the discussion on social media by following the hashtag #dividedbydesign.


  • What does it mean to be an American?

    What holds us together in turbulent times?


    In our fractured society, the ideals, values and ethos that bind us as Americans enable us to overcome the challenges we face in our communities, our nation and our world.

    On Thursday, April 5, 2018 over 100 high school students and community members gathered at the Idea Center to join a nationwide conversation, exploring the underlying diversity that drives our ever-developing culture in our quest to develop an American Creed.  These students and community members were joined by American Creed cast members Terrence Davenport and Tegan Griffith to discuss what it means to be an American in 2018.

    To view the documentary American Creed in its entirety, click here.


     

    Terrence Davenport was raised in the economically struggling Arkansas Delta. He did well in school, attending the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, where he studied web design and started a web development business. He moved back to his hometown of Dumas (pop. 2,500) in 2010 to help his family after his mother was diagnosed with cancer and his grandmother was evicted from the sharecropper’s shack she had lived in most of her life. Davenport stayed in Dumas and became a social entrepreneur, coaching low-income people and connecting them to work. “There’s ingenuity, determination and grit in our community,” Davenport says, “and if we can get even a small toehold on the economic ladder, we have a fighting chance.”

     

    Sergeant Tegan Griffith, from the rural town of Wittenberg, Wisconsin, joined the Marine Corps at 21 in search of economic and educational opportunity, and a meaningful, patriotic life. Her service offered Griffith a valuable new perspective on what values are worth defending – those embedded in her vision of the American creed. After serving in Iraq, she returned to Wisconsin’s capital, where she works tirelessly to help fellow vets build a support network to advocate for themselves and others. As a resident of Madison, she regularly encounters loud and passionate protesters, understanding that defending their right to free speech is “part of the fabric of my uniform.” Now a leader of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, Griffith continues to fight for freedom and community.


    This community conversation was produced in partnership:

     


    American Creed

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David M. Kennedy come together from remarkably different backgrounds, life experiences and points of view to explore the idea of a unifying American creed. Their spirited inquiry frames the stories of a range of citizen-activists striving to realize their own visions of America’s promise across deep divides. 

    American Creed launched as a nationally televised PBS Special, and as a feature documentary on PBS.org, on February 27, 2018. The date marked the beginning of a robust public engagement campaign including community conversations, classroom activities and local storytelling in cities and towns across the country—all designed to foster a bold national conversation about American ideals and identity.


     

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