Murray & Agnes Seasongood Good Government Foundation

Murray & Agnes Seasongood Good Government Foundation

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Devotion to the causes of good local government, the merit system in selecting public employees, and citizen participation in public affairs. Education
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The purposes of the Murray & Agnes Seasongood Good Government Foundation are as follows:

The Foundation is an instrumentality of the Citizens Forum on Self Government/National Municipal League. The Foundation was founded by the Seasongoods "for the furtherance of good government, with specific emphasis on good local government." They gave broad direction to the Board of Trustees in the uses of th

Philanthropies set to launch a nonprofit newsroom in Ohio 11/13/2021

A thought for area foundations -- join this Ohio-based effort

Philanthropies set to launch a nonprofit newsroom in Ohio A coalition of philanthropies has announced plans to launch a nonprofit newsroom that will provide coverage of Cleveland, kicking off an effort to help fill a void left by the shrinking of news organizations in Ohio.

Baltimore City Council OKs step to adding administrator 07/21/2020

A strong mayor city is moving toward hiring a professional administrator to run the day to day operations ...sort of a city manager

Baltimore City Council OKs step to adding administrator The Baltimore City Council gave final approval Monday to a charter amendment that would create a high-profile administrator position to oversee the city’s day-to-day operations alongside the mayor.

06/10/2020

This is the ICMA's powerful statement on systemic racism



ICMA Executive Board Statement
Regarding Systemic Racism

Dear Colleague,

We, like many in our communities, share in the heartbreak and anger over the murder of George Floyd, the spate of racist events and excessive force against protesters across the country, and the systemic racism that continues to exist in the United States. The murder of George Floyd has put the issue of systemic racism front and center on the world stage.

The weight of these recent tragedies falls especially heavy on us because we are in positions of leadership in cities, counties, and towns throughout the world. The local government management profession and ICMA were founded on a Code of Ethics and a Declaration of Ideals which demand that we serve the best interests of all, achieve equity and social justice, and act with integrity so that we may earn the trust of all those we serve. Addressing systemic racism is our ethical obligation.

As leaders, we must work to achieve fundamental change to break the system of inequality and oppression that has tarnished nations for generations and now, more than ever, in America by our history of racism. This inequality has been brought into sharp relief by the disproportionate economic losses and deaths of African Americans and people of color in the pandemic and horrifyingly so in the unjust murders of Black men and women.

We must stand in solidarity with the Black community, with those who protest in peace, and with those taking a stand for change. We must see racism as a public health crisis and a stain upon our humanity.

“The fierce urgency of now,” as Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. stated, is long overdue.

We are the ones who can forge real change in our own communities. As our cities, towns, and counties rebuild from the pandemic, we can create a new foundation that replaces white supremacy and racism with an aggressive respect for human rights.

Systemic racism is far reaching in society and goes beyond policing. We are committed to be the agents of change within our organizations to lead to a new future. As part of that change, we recognize the immediate concern is policing. We affirm our commitment to support for the professional officers and staff that serve our communities and will work with them to develop new ways to reflect ideals that value all people.

We are the ones who stand in the public square. As leaders in our own communities, it is up to each of us to make our voices heard, but more importantly, to listen, to learn, and to use our voices to amplify the voices of others.

Doing this successfully means that we will need to embrace new ideas, methods, and skills, and above all, courage to step into roles that we may have been uncomfortable with in the past. As leaders and managers, we must recommit to the highest ideals of just and effective local government and commit to take these initial action steps.

Great social changes often come from turmoil and we as local government leaders can lead that transformation. We can create the kinds of communities we envision, where everyone can flourish. And we begin now by acknowledging Black lives matter.




ICMA - International City/County Management Association
777 North Capitol Street, NE Suite 500 Washington, DC 20002-4201
(202) 962-3680

Anti-panhandling law likely violates First Amendment, 8th Circuit says 11/08/2019

This is interesting and may hold useful information about the City's ban pending before Cincinnati's federal court ....

Anti-panhandling law likely violates First Amendment, 8th Circuit says A ban on harassing panhandling in Arkansas is likely unconstitutional, and enforcement of the law may be banned statewide, a federal appeals court has ruled.

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308 E 8th Street, 4th Floor
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45202

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Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm