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Consistently tracking objective, verifiable data, then using the information to craft solutions to difficult public policy problems is the centerpiece of the Middle Cities Initiative. ’The Middle Cities’ are Massachusetts' historic industrial centers: Brockton, Chicopee, Fall River, Fitchburg, Holyoke, Lawrence, Leominster, Lowell, Lynn, New Bedford, Pittsfield, Springfield, Taunton and Worcester. Why “Middle” Cities? Massachusetts’ older industrial cities are politically and economically in limbo between the traditional power base of greater Boston and the burgeoning political force of the suburbs, and between their former industrial role and newer market function. They are without political cohesion, and the state is also without a cohesive strategy to make the cities once again self-sustaining economic engines. The Middle Cities Initiative seeks to change that. Click the video above to hear the latest news on Pioneer's Middle Cities InitiativeBack in 2007, in our report on Rehabbing Urban Redevelopment, we recommended that the state create benchmarks for city performance in education, economic development, public safety and fiscal management. That data could then inform the state’s strategic plan for revitalizing the cities. Pioneer is now committed to collecting that data and creating a system for benchmarking local performance to help the state and cities. Our goal is to help our cities improve performance in delivering key services. In this way, we believe our Middle Cities can continue to be the engines of economic growth that they have been throughout their histories. How does it work? The Middle Cities Initiative will be conducted through two primary vehicles: Throughout the initiative, we will produce fact sheets, policy briefs, and papers based on the data we collect. We will feature the benchmarks and reports here on our website.
For further information or to join our mailing list, please contact Joshua Archambault, Project Manager for Middle Cities via email or (617) 723-2277. |
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