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Welcome to My Neighborhood

On March 6, 2010, in 28 Day Challenge, Who am I?, by Yuri Artibise

The other day, I wrote a ‘Call to Action’ exhorting readers to get more involved in their community and city.

Those of you who know me, may know that I am involved in many activities related to downtown Phoenix.  What many people don’t know, however, is that my civic participation begins closer to home. Actually right outside my front door.

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This past winter I became president of the Grandview Neighborhood Association.  Formed in 1991, the association represents about 1,200 residents living in our diverse central Phoenix neighborhood. The homes in Grandview are of mid-century vintage, with most being but in the early 1950s. We also have a few apartment complexes (including one designed by Al Beadle) and condominiums. Our neighbors come from all walks of life, and age groups and include some of the original residents! The neighborhood boundaries are from 7th Avenue west to 15th Avenue and  from Camelback Road south to Campbell Avenue, bordering the Grand Canal (map).

The stated goal of the Grandview Neighborhood Association is “to improve quality of life, safety and security, communicate with city, business and institutions in the neighborhood, and preserve the diversity of lifestyles.” We are NOT a homeowners association; we do not “hold power” over an individual’s home. (In other words residents can paint their homes any color they want.)  Rather we act as in information conduit between our residents and the neighboring business and organizations as well as city officials and the Phoenix Police Department.

In my brief time as president, not only have I met many more of my neighbors, but I have also got to know the city officials responsible for various aspects of our quality of life. I have deepened my understanding of my neighborhood and the issues our residents face.  I have also gained insights into how the City of Phoenix functions.

To anybody interested in getting more involved in their community, I suggest you start by seeing if you have an active neighborhood association (Phoenicians can search here). It is a great way to build an understanding of not only your community but also your city.  If nothing else, it will introduce you to more of your neighbors, which is never a bad thing.

As an aside, if you’re heading to the Seventh Avenue Street Fair today, be sure to stop by our table and say hi. I’ll be there between 1 pm and 3 pm at the least, but there will be residents around all day.  To learn more about my neighborhood, join our our Facebook Group or follow us on Twitter.

 Welcome to My Neighborhood

Thanks for being a regular reader of my site!

What I’ve been up to

On February 9, 2010, in 28 Day Challenge, Who am I?, by Yuri Artibise

So my brief break from posting has turned into an almost two month hiatus. While certainly not an excuse for not posting, during this time, I’ve been keeping extremely busy with a variety of different activities and events.

Over the past 7 weeks, I:

  1. Took a 2,600 mile (return) road trip to Brownsville, Texas to visit my dad and step-mom, who recently moved there.
  2. photo1 225x300 What I’ve been up toWas elected president of my local neighborhood association
  3. Helped organize CenPhoCamp with Tyler Hurst
  4. Joined Ken Clark for District 15 campaign team
  5. Applied for a PhD in (Urban) Geography at ASU
  6. Volunteered at the 2010 Arts Congress with Arizona Citizens for the Arts
  7. Became part of ONEPhoenix, a central Phoenix community building initiative
  8. Remodeled my 1951 laundry room, including restoring a set of vintage metal cabinets.
  9. Hosted a house party, featuring a home made traditional Ukrainian Christmas Eve dinner (well, at least part of it!)
  10. Attended my first yoga class

Stay tuned for future posts on some of these topics, as well as a few new ones.

This is day 1 in my 28 Day Blogging Challenge.  27 more to go.

 What I’ve been up to

Passion and Community

On November 16, 2009, in events, by Yuri Artibise

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” —Margaret Mead

In the past week, I’ve attended three incredible events. They were all completely different, but what made them all amazing was a common theme: PASSION. Each event was fueled by people who were passionate about not only what they did or where they lived, but more importantly what they shared with others.

The first event was last weeks Greenbuild 2009 at the Phoenix Convention Center. It was a huge conference, with almost 30,000 attendees from over 75 different counties and featuring Al Gore as the keynote speaker.  While there were doubtless people in attendance simply for a trip to the warmth of Arizona, or for calculated business reason, most people were there because not only were they passionate about the environment and sustainability, but also sharing their great ideas and experiences with others.

The second event was on Saturday night. It was the annual fundraiser for the Grandview Neighborhood Association, the neighborhood where I live. Grandview is a uptown Phoenix neighborhood built in the 1950s. It is a diverse neighborhood, composed of residents from diverse backgrounds, ages, incomes, ethnicities and sexual orientations. Yet we share a common passion for our neighborhood and want to help improve it. This event showed how not only the residents of a neighborhood, but also its local businesses, can come together to help a community.

Finally, on Sunday I attended the second day of PodCamp AZ, a ‘relevant media unconference.’ Basically it is a two-day gathering of a few hundred social media enthusiasts. Participants come from not only across Arizona, but also states like California, Connecticut and Colorado. While the was a diversity in terms of professions, experience and expectations, there was a shared passion for social media and its power, not only to make money, but to build community.

In reflecting on these events, I realized that the common element in all three was community. Each event was able to tap into peoples passion for a topic or place and use it to strengthen a community. Moreover, these events served as a reminder of the interdependence of community and passion. Without a community, a passionate individual is little more than an eccentric; without passion, a community is nothing more than a crowd of people. However, when passion and community come together, the combination is extremely potent; potent enough to change the world.

 Passion and Community

Career Development

On September 6, 2009, in , by Yuri Artibise
COMMUNITY BUILDER

Self-directed Sabbatical, Phoenix AZ, SEP 09-PRESENT

Responsible for building a community of people interested in creating and sustaining an authentic urbanism in central Phoenix. Key roles:

  • President of the Grandview Neighborhood Association a diverse central Phoenix neighborhood of about 1,200 residences.
  • Coordinator of Jane’s Walk Phoenix, an urban walking tour honoring the legacy and ideas of urban activist and writer Jane Jacobs that combines the act of walking with personal observations, urban history and local lore.
  • Writer for Downtown Phoenix Journal and Phxated.com, two online journals online journal that offer an insider’s view of local culture politics and events.
  • Member of the Canalscape Advisory Board, an initiative exploring the possibility of an authentic and sustainable desert urbanism for the region, composed of urban cores and corridors distributed along the canal banks.
  • Participate in a variety of other meetings and events focusing on place making, community building and creating livable neighborhoods.

For more details on these roles, refer to the Community Involvement section of my resume.


SENIOR RESEARCH ANALYST

Morrison Institute For Public Policy, Arizona State University, Phoenix AZ, FEB 07 – SEP 09

Responsible for conducting research on contemporary public policy issues. Key activities:

  • Collecting original data through interviews, and consultation with experts.
  • Analyzing existing information through review of published research reports, current legislation, and statistical data.
  • Identifying emerging public policy issues though media monitoring, data gathering and analysis, and networking.
  • Producing practical, applied research reports, op-ed articles and briefing papers.

Contributed to the following Morrison Institute publications:

Other publication contributions:

  • DATOS: Focus on Arizona’s Hispanic Market 2007 & 2008. Contributed to data selection and wrote introduction and section overviews for this annual Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce publication.

POLICY ADVISOR

Assembly of First Nations, Strategic Planning & Policy Coordination, Ottawa ON, MAR 04 – FEB 07

Responsible for the horizontal integration of policy development and strategic planning for the Assembly. Key activities:

  • Providing strategic research and environmental scans to enhance the Assembly’s influence of the federal policy agenda.
  • Coordinating the Assembly’s position paper and background materials for the November 2005 First Minister Meeting on Aboriginal Issues. This led to the Kelowna Accord, a five-year, $5 billion dollar agreement between the Government of Canada and the First Nation, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada. My area of focus was coordinating the First Nations housing part of the agreement, which comprised $1.6 billion of the total amounts of the Accord.
  • Producing major reports and studies. I prepared the Pre-Budget Submissions presented to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance in 2005, 2006 and 2007 to influence the Government of Canada budget process. I also drafted the First Nations section of the Canadian Center for Policy Alternatives annual Alternative Federal Budget in 2005, 2006 and 2007. Partly as a result of these submissions, First Nations across Canada received budget commitments of $6.4 million in 2005, $1.2 billion in 2006 and $425 million in 2007.
  • Building relationships with government representatives to advance the Assembly’s priorities and represent the interest of First Nations in proposed programming and legislation, including the annual budget submission and the First Minister’s Meeting.
  • Developing and implementing a financial and policy planning framework to position key events and to anticipate pivotal meetings and other major activities. This enabled the National Chief and the Executive Committee to effectively advocate for First Nations in key areas, such as the federal budget, the First Minister Meeting and the historic Indian Residential School apology and settlement.

TRADE POLICY OFFICER

Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Policy Secretariat, Ottawa ON, JUL 02 – FEB 04

Responsible for international trade issues on fish and sea products. Key activities:

  • Conducting in-depth economic analysis on fisheries trade policy issues, including trade balance analysis and priority commodity identification to make sure that the Minister and senior executive of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans were kept up to date on key developments.
  • Representing Canada at negotiations on the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) and the Canada-Singapore Free Trade Agreement and participating in talks with the Caribbean Community, Dominican Republic and Andean Community. The Canadian fisheries sector exported approximately $4.4 billion dollars of fish and fish products in 2004. The FTAA negotaiation covered $37.5 million of this amount.
  • Reviewing World Trade Organization (WTO) Accessions and Trade Policy Reviews to make sure that potential and existing members of the WTO complied with rules on fish and fish products in their trade relationships with Canada.

ACCELERATED ECONOMIST TRAINING PROGRAM (AETP)

The following positions were part of the Accelerated Economist Training Program (AETP), a select two-year program of diverse work experience divided into four six-month assignments that provided the opportunity to work with top decision makers in the Government of Canada on a number of social, economic and international policy agendas.


ASSISTANT TO THE CHIEF NEGOTIATOR

Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, Regional Trade Policy, Ottawa ON, JAN 02 – JUN 02

Responsible for assisting negotiations towards a Canada-Singapore Free Trade Agreement. Key Activities:

  • Organizing the logistics of two Canada-Singapore Free Trade negotiating sessions (one in Canada and one in Singapore).
  • Participating in negotiation sessions at Chief Negotiators table; coordinated interdepartmental strategy meetings and consultations.
  • Canada-Singapore bilateral trade is worth approximately $2.2 billion in goods and services annually, and another $3.7 billion in foreign direct investment exchanged generating trade relationships.

POLICY ANALYST

Privy Council Office, Social Development Policy Secretariat, Ottawa ON, JUL 01 – DEC 01

Responsible for working with federal government departments and the Prime Minister’s Office in providing policy advice to the Cabinet Committee on the Social Union. Key activities:

  • Ensuring policy objectives were operationally and fiscally sustainable.
  • Providing advice to the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
  • Coordinating aspects of the Cabinet’s decision-making system including departmental policy proposals and policy analysis.
  • Analyzing legislation and made recommendations on the funding and organization of the Canadian Firearms Registry; and assisted the Canadian Custom and Revenues Agency’s early response to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

POLICY ANALYST

Finance Canada, Financial Sector Policy, Ottawa ON, JAN 01 – JUN 01

Responsible for developing and analyzing financial sector policy as it related to electronic banking and new technologies. Key activities:

  • Monitoring, researching and analyzing issues about new financial services technologies in order to prepare briefs for the Minister of Finance and key government officials.
  • Assisting in the developing of regulations to successfully implement the 2001 federal Financial Services Legislation (Bill C-8).

POLICY ANALYST

Treasury Board Secretariat of Canada, Government Operations, Ottawa ON, JUL 00 – DEC 00

Responsible for managing and coordinating Treasury Board (like the Office of Management and Budget) business for the Supreme, Federal and Tax Courts of Canada. Key activities:

  • Providing recommendations and advice to the Treasury Board on policies, directives, regulations and program expenditure proposals with respect to managing the government’s resources.
  • Drafting the 2001-2002 Main Estimates document for the various courts, an annual document outlining the courts expenditure plans for each government agency in detail.
  • Translating policies and programs approved by Cabinet into operational reality and provided with resources.
  • Notable files included a review of a report on federal judicial compensation and early proposals for  a new court buildings.

UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA (UVic) MPA CO-OP PROGRAM

The UVic MPA Co-op Program consists of three, four-month work terms alternating with on-campus academic terms. Students in the MPA Co-op Program are well positioned to make an immediate contribution to the workplace. Their coursework (including team projects and case studies) contribute to their strong understanding of the culture, the processes and the issues in the public and non-profit sectors.


POLICY ANALYST

Human Resource Development Canada, Labour Market Policy Branch, Ottawa ON, SEP 99 – DEC 99

  • Assisting in providing policy advice towards promoting a highly skilled and mobile labor force and an efficient and inclusive labor market, including developing proposals for labor market issues for the January 2001 Speech from the Throne (i.e. State of the Union) that outlined the government priorities for the 2001-02 parliamentary session.

ECONOMIST

BC STATS (Government of British Columbia), Victoria BC, JAN 99 – AUG 99


INFORMATION & PRIVACY ANALYST

British Columbia Information, Science and Technology Agency, Victoria BC, MAY 98 – AUG 98

  • Helping to maintain cross-government policy and procedures, standards and guidelines on access to public information and protection of privacy, including tracking of the status and outcome of all information requests and Information and Privacy Commissioner Orders Investigations and Decisions.

Click here to download my full resume.

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