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Quick Blogger Comment: (1) Wearing sneakers-and-shorts is the City of Mesa's Director of Downtown Transformation Jeff MacVay. (2) In the right foreground are The Strothers, husband-and-wife owners of a sandwich shop downtown, who were named in January 2019 as the private operators of the Mesa Farmers Market & Flea . . .scratch your head about that!
"The City made the public’s ask for a farmer’s market downtown a reality, offering use of a city park, selecting a market operator and providing marketing assistance."

THE OTHER REALITY >
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What the Double-Talk Is Jivin' John Giles talking here >
real estate trends and hot housing markets across the country
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The City of Mesa City Council, led by @MayorGiles, asked residents how to improve their city – now they're investing $300 million together.
Here's a case study on how they did it.
- Twitter post by Dan Parham, CEO of Neighborlands 14 March 2019
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Imagine Mesa
CEO, Neighborland
HOLD ON! What the hell happened after this third-party paid contractor jiggered all the data collected and made outrageous claims?
"Over the course of 2017 and 2018, the City of Mesa engaged over 67,000 participants on their strategic planning and capital improvement budgeting process. Imagine Mesa was led by Mayor John Giles, the Mesa City Council, and an Advisory Committee of local leaders. In November of 2018, voters approved $300 million in municipal bonds to bring these ideas to reality. . . Forums were organized by areas where the City had enough local control to make ideas a reality,
> The campaign resulted in over 250,000 minutes (5,000 hours) of participation, generating 465 ideas and 6,000 votes
> The targeted online campaign involved 137 social media posts which appeared in 238,000 social media feeds.
All of this engagement cost the city less than $1 per resident. HOW MUCH????

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This is the way smart people work better |
From Property Lines* (see below)
Tech is fostering civic engagement—by letting citizens suggest their own development policies
The various strains of reactive infrastructure and efficient transportation that make up these new ideas for smart cities suggest a cleaner, less crowded, and more clever version of urban life is right around the corner.
How civic tech can steer development and create smarter cities
Civic-minded techies are finding ways to digitize, demystify, and improve local government