AZ Week Notebook – May 2011
posted by Michael Chihak
Arizona Week explores civic leadership in the state for Friday's program, looking at a new initiative kicked off this spring in Phoenix.
The Flinn-Brown Leadership Academy held its first class with 25 people from around the state wanting to improve their skills and get up to speed on a wide range of state political and civic issues. The group completes the program Friday, and its founders and two members of the class sat for interviews today in Phoenix.
That's where the complexity comes in. Normally, our on-location interviews are one-on-one -- me speaking with one person. In this instance, we had two interviews back to back, and both were one-on-two -- me speaking with two people at a time.
Steve Riggs, Bob Lindberg and Dominick de Leon were undaunted in their setup and approach to the shoot, accommodating my request to do it this way without pause.
First interview was with Jack Jewett, president and CEO of the Flinn Foundation and founder of the leadership academy, and Nancy Welch, vice president at Flinn overseeing the Arizona Center for Civic Leadership.
Second interview was with Flinn-Brown Academy Fellows Lisa Urias, of Urias Communications in Scottsdale, and Paul Brierley, director of organization for the Arizona Farm Bureau in Gilbert.
May 19th 2011 at 15:07 —
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posted by Michael Chihak
Are good leaders made or born?
In Arizona, if it’s the former, there’s now a way they can be made. If it’s the latter, that same way purports to make them better.
It’s called the Arizona Center for Civic Leadership. Its centerpiece program, a civic leadership academy, holds its first graduation on Friday, when it will turn two dozen Arizonans back to their communities with fresh perspective on the state’s top political and civic issues.
They also take with them what they learned from public policy experts and others -- the traits and tools of leadership.
Participants spent ten two-day sessions together in Phoenix, hearing from experts on the state’s fiscal system and budget, the economy, education, water, immigration and border issues and a half-dozen other key topics.
It was all focused on fulfilling the leadership center’s mission to ensure that Arizona’s future leaders “have the commitment, knowledge and skills to work together to carry out creative, long-term solutions to pressing problems."
The key phrase in that statement may well be “to work together.” For in this day of political divisiveness when politicians don’t bother even paying lip service to the notion of bipartisanship, getting people to work together on the issues will clearly be the heaviest lift.
Graduates of the academy were admitted on, among other things, the condition that they step up and seek a position of leadership in the community, in civic and/or political life.
The key measure of the program's success could well be how well its graduates do at bringing together disparate political and civic factions for focus on Arizona's crucial issues.
May 18th 2011 at 15:11 —
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posted by Michael Chihak
Jack Jewett is a former Arizona legislator, businessman, health-care industry executive and higher education executive. In it all, he has seen great leaders, good leaders and the need for strong leadership.
Now as CEO of the Flinn Foundation in Phoenix, Jewett is helping focus on development of strong leadership for Arizona. He has helped create the Arizona Center for Civic Leadership and in partnership with Tucson's Brown Foundations created the Flinn-Brown Leadership Academy.
The academy will graduate its first class of new and ongoing civic leaders for Arizona in ceremonies on Friday, with each of the two dozen class members pledged to take on a bigger role in civic life, through an organization or even running for public office.
On Friday's Arizona Week, we will speak with Jewett for the story behind the founding of the academy, his leadership philosophy and what needs he sees it fulfilling in the state.
May 17th 2011 at 15:41 —
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posted by Michael Chihak
Friday's Arizona Week will explore the new Arizona Center for Civic Leadership and its affiliated Flinn-Brown Leadership Academy.
The academy, based in Phoenix, will graduate its first group of civic leadership trainees on Friday. They will have completed a dozen seminars on a wide array of public issues and topics,
The goal of the program, according to the civic leadership Website: "As Arizona looks toward its second 100 years of statehood, its challenges are increasingly complex. Arizona must ensure its future leaders have the commitment, knowledge, and skills to work together to carry out creative, long-term solutions to pressing problems."
We will interview the founders and leaders of the center and the academy and speak with two of the graduating academy fellows for Friday's program.
May 16th 2011 at 8:30 —
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posted by Michael Chihak
The typical three-segment Arizona Week is never shot in one sitting, yet tonight's program is a marvel of technical planning and execution and the art of TV direction.
Typical is that the lead interview is shot on location and edited for the program. We did that for this week's program on Arizona water and the drought.
Then, a second segment is shot, either on location or in what is called "live-to-tape" in our studio.
Live-to-tape means that while it is taped, the shoot is captured as is from beginning to end, as if it were live. In other words, no "Take 2" or beyond.
Finally, the journalists' panel segment is shot in the studio, again "live-to-tape."
For this week's program, the second segment was shot after the third, because the interviewee couldn't make it at the usual time. So the journalists went before the interview, and then in post-production editing, the order of presentation was reversed.
It all worked seamlessly, and viewers will see the seamlessness when it airs at 8:30 p.m. MST on PBS-HD 6.
Only you blog readers will know how the stitches were sewn to create the seamless appearance.
May 13th 2011 at 16:00 —
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posted by Michael Chihak
Water harvesting, water rationing, a cultural shift in urban water use and even more dire steps should be expected in Arizona as water managers and politicians seek to stretch the limited water supply.
That's the picture painted by University of Arizona climatologist Gregg Garfin, who has studied drought and water flows and who consults with water officials in the state.
"We've reached actually a crossing point between supply and demand in the Colorado River, so that we're actually drawing more water off the Colorado on a year-to-year basis, Garfin said in an interview for Friday's Arizona Week broadcast.
He said that for city dwellers in Phoenix and Tucson, that will mean water rationing at times, imposition of more conservation measures, including greater limits on outdoor water use, and water harvesting, or capture of rain runoff and reuse of water.
Garfin said his research and that of others shows that Arizona is prone to droughts of 10 to 30 years over the centuries. The current dry spell started in 2000, reached its wordst in 2002 and has had only three above-average water years, Garfin said.
One of those years was this past winter, when Upper Colorado River Basin snow pack and subsequent melt off has been big enough to allow a five-year pushback of any drastic rationing measures in the state.
Most water in Arizona is still taken by agriculture, Garfin said. But he said the priority for water use when the Colorado runs low are Native American tribes first, then urban users and finally agriculture. That means agriculture would be the first to lose supply when flow is low.
Garfin's full interview and an interview with David Modeer, general manager of the Central Arizona Project, will be featured on Friday's Arizona Week, 8:30 p.m. MST on PBS-HD Channel 6.
May 12th 2011 at 15:32 —
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