Nuts and Bolts

I have no clue what frequency I’ll be writing, but my hope is to dedicate a couple hours each week to writing. Whether these will be fruitful hours or not is and will remain for some time an open question. So, expect a post a week, maybe two. The next post will come out on Monday. 

My plan is to keep posts between 500-800 words. Long enough to delve below the surface of a particular question or problem, but not so long as to make every post an exposition. Putting a cap on word count will help me keep posts focused. One of the biggest challenges I have faced in trying to think and write about CA is that it can become an expansive conversation, with many intersecting threads that go back decades. Rather than one long manifesto, this will make writing, reading, and discussing more manageable. 

 

It will also allow me to reflect on feedback I receive. While I’ve done a fair amount of research in the last few months—reading old newspaper reports, legal documents, and other archived materials—I know there is much I have missed, nuance and context that have been lost in time. 

 

So I encourage conversations about the posts or about this effort more broadly. For that reason, I have opened comments on the blog, but you can also comment to me on twitter (@iankennedy7), on the Columbia Flyer facebook page, or you can send me an email (handle is the same as twitter, but put a “.” between my first and last name and address @gmail). 

 

Finally, because I have to say it, everything I write here reflects my personal beliefs and opinions, and not those of any other person or entity. Obviously, I have inherent biases that anyone is welcome to question.

 

But this blog and my writing is a good faith exercise in community dialogue and an attempt to add perspective, context, and information to a matter—the governance and future of the Columbia Association—that has not been subject to sufficient consideration and conversation. During the first few decades of CA’s existence, its actions and deliberations were exhaustively covered by multiple regional and local newspapers. These days, you will generally only see the Columbia Association in the newspapers as an advertiser.


I am not suggesting that I can fill that information void, but I hope to close it at least a little. 

A New Direction

I have a potentially unhealthy obsession with something no one else seems to care about: the Columbia Association. 

 

It is not entirely fair to say that no one else seems to care much about the Columbia Association. The truth is that most people don’t care, but a small number of people really, really care. And I am one of them.


This dichotomous dynamic—community-wide complacency combined with narrow, intense interest from a select few—has characterized the Columbia Association’s governance and politics for almost its entire existence. How and why it got this way and what to do about it are the questions I hope to confront on this blog over the next few weeks, months, years, whatever.

 

Despite some high-profile disagreements with CA and members of its leadership over the years, however, I’m not embarking on this work out of spite, professional obligation, or personal animosity. (At least I don’t think I am, but we’re all selfish beings with fine-tuned engines for motivated reasoning so who really knows what underlies any of our actions?) 

 

I am writing because of a long-held conviction that CA can be so much better than it is. 

 

That’s a pretty vague statement and it could mean all sorts of things. Anyone who’s followed CA over the years also knows that making it “better” has been the rallying cry of the most significant—and, more or less, only—community advocacy organization focused on CA, the Alliance for a Better Columbia. 

 

So, I should clarify what I mean by “better.” Columbia is a special city founded on a set of lofty, aspirational ideals and CA is the only organization that exists expressly to promote the social welfare of this city. While Columbia continues to be a great place to live and work, it has evolved from its early days and faces challenges—both local and global in scale—that call into question the foundational values upon which it was built. 

 

A better CA, therefore, is one that recognizes its unique role as a steward of the ethos, values, and aspirations of Columbia’s founding; it is one that examines its place within the cultural, social, and political currents of the day and asks whether its actions embody the core values of the organization and the community it serves; and it is one that questions its institutional structures, biases, and blindspots to ensure its practices and programs are not undermining its own mission; and it is one that proactively seeks to include voices and viewpoints that are or have been underrepresented among its leadership.

 

In short, a “better” CA is one that pursues the aspirations of Columbia’s founding and holds itself accountable to those values and ideals.

 

It is the only institution that is truly dedicated to this “garden for growing people” and my contention is that it is currently failing to live up to this critical role. 

 

Amidst the howling social, cultural, economic, and political winds of our time, CA is unmoored and adrift, uncertain about what it is or what it should be. This predicament became even more precarious in the last six months as the pandemic brought on dire, existential questions. In answering these questions, CA’s leaders choose to prioritize re-starting its fitness businesses, which serve “members” and “customers,” while abandoning most of the community programs and services that are available to all residents. 

 

During the greatest disruption in social and community life in CA’s existence, it chose business over community, and this, in my mind, the most glaring example of why Columbia needs CA to be better. 

 

However, before CA can be the better organization that I know it can be, there needs to be a shared literacy about what it is, how it got here, what it does, and what it can be. 

 

Consider this a spotlight, dim as it is, to help illuminate and understand the path we took to get here, the intersection where we now stand, and the divergent paths that lie ahead. 

My Speakout

As much as I don't like the term "Resident Speakout" that's what it is. What follows are the remarks I delivered at last n...