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In
late 1998, The Commercial Club of Chicago published a report titled, Chicago
Metropolis 2020: Preparing Metropolitan Chicago for the 21st Century.
The report argued that the Chicago region has the economic and social
potential to become a global metropolis, but that a new era of regional
collaboration is needed to address these challenges:
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Reverse policies that encourage sprawl. Land-use and transportation
policies are fostering a dispersed and auto-dependent development pattern
that harms the economy and detracts from the quality of life in the
region.
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Promote better education and skills training. Wide performance disparities
within the regions educational systems undercut the regions
economic future.
- Improve
the social conditions of communities. Segregation by race, economics
and age divides the region and prevents many of its residents from full
participation in the economic mainstream.
The report triggered a sustained public discussion about how best to shape
the regions future. It also spurred creation of a new organization
by the same name. Chicago Metropolis 2020 is charged with fostering changes
at a regional level, a commitment to collaborate with existing organizations,
and a bias for action. Chicago Metropolis 2020 has its origins in Chicagos
business community, but includes representatives of labor, government,
faith-based groups and other civic activists. We are all at the same table,
and we are thinking and acting regionally.
For the past year, Chicago Metropolis 2020 has sponsored numerous meetings,
public forums and other activities to develop and test a set of goals
for the region to share. Our first regional progress report, Regional
Realities, is a result of that process. The report was designed to
serve three purposes:
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Measure progress toward meeting shared goals. There are a dozen shared
goals for the region in the report and 40 measures of progress indicating
how the region is doing in reaching those goals. The goals were developed
through a collaborative process that involved more than 500 local residents
and leaders and were confirmed by a public opinion survey of the regions
residents. In future reports, Chicago Metropolis 2020 will continue
to chart our regions progress in reaching these goals.
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Encourage regional thinking. The regional progress report
presents information about public policy issues from a regional perspective,
not just how issues affect any single neighborhood, city or county.
The report offers a picture of current conditions in the Chicago region.
It does not explain why those conditions exist, nor does it prescribe
what can be done to address conditions. We want people to begin thinking
and talking about these issues from a regional viewpoint.
The broad-gauged progress indicators in this report do not tell everything
about our diverse region. The richness of the various issues cannot
be captured in a few numbers. However, we hope you will be inspired
to think about the complex issues we face as a region and offer additional
indicators of progress.
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Inspire action to achieve shared goals. We hope that the reports
release will generate debate, discussion and action. We hope it inspires
you to think about what we can do together to help create the future
that we will share.
Regional Realities is the first in a series that will continue periodically.
The pages that follow contain fascinating reading about where we stand
as a region. We invite your frank appraisal of the information, your suggestions
for new ways to measure progress and your participation in preparing future
editions.
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Andrew
J. McKenna
ChairMAN and CEO,
Schwarz Paper Company
Chairman, Chicago Metropolis 2020
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George
A. Ranney, Jr.
partner, mayer, brown & platt
President and CEO,
Chicago Metropolis 2020
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David
R. Mosena
President and CEO,
Museum of Science & Industry
Chair, Regional Learning Working Group, Chicago Metropolis
2020
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Comments?
Questions? Need more information about Chicago Metropolis 2020?
Send an email to: info@cm2020.org
Chicago
Metropolis 2020 30 West Monroe Street, 18th Floor
Chicago, Illinois 60603
312.332.2020 (main) 312.332.2626 (fax)
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