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Minnesota Ag News Headlines
Humphrey School Recognizes Local Innovation, Collaboration Projects
Minnesota Ag Connection - 11/28/2018

From streamlined dispatch of emergency responders and childcare licensing services, to breakthrough conversations about race and county-tribal collaborations, local governments in Minnesota are finding creative ways to deliver services to their residents with greater impact and at lower cost.

The Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota named 19 such projects as recipients of its 12th annual Local Government Innovation Awards (LGIA).

The awards program is organized in partnership with the Bush Foundation and its Native Nation Building Initiative; and co-sponsored by the League of Minnesota Cities, the Association of Minnesota Counties, the Minnesota Association of Townships and the Minnesota School Boards Association. The awards recognize projects in up to five different categories, and name up to one Leading Innovator in each: cities, counties, schools, townships and Native nations, which recognizes collaborations between tribes and a local government entity. This year, no awards were presented in the township category.

"This year, like every other, we're struck by the innovation that's happening in Minnesota. It's always evolving, which is inspiring for the judges to see," said Jay Kiedrowski, senior fellow at the Humphrey School's Public and Nonprofit Leadership Center and LGIA program lead. "The exciting part is sharing all of this innovation with the broader community in hopes that they see opportunities in these innovative models to apply to their own communities."

A panel of judges considered submissions for their creativity, sustainability and collaboration. The four Leading Innovators for 2018 will receive a grant from the Bush Foundation to continue their work, and a professionally produced video to use for marketing and awareness. The winners in the city, county and school categories will receive a $5,000 grant. The Local Government and Native Nations Collaboration Award winner will receive a $10,000 grant.

Leading Innovators of the 2018 Local Government Innovation Awards

City Category: Ramsey County Fire Chiefs Association -- Closest Unit Dispatching for Cities in Ramsey County

Fire Chiefs Association Closest Unit Dispatching (CUD) for Cities in Ramsey County brings 10 fire departments within a 170-square-mile area together to dispatch the closest agency for response within the county's different combinations of highly trained full-time, part-time, volunteer and/or paid on-call firefighters. Ramsey County's 12 cities entered into this CUD joint powers agreement in 2016 and have improved response times for critical calls, resulting in a higher survivability rate and less property loss.

County Category: Morrison County -- Region V+ Family Child Care Licensing Collaboration

The Region V+ Family Child Care Licensing Collaboration created an innovative solution for family childcare licensing by combining the licensing roles of seven counties into three regional licensors. This collaborative effort addressed a workforce shortage, created consistency in the application of regulations across the counties, and eliminated the duplication of efforts within its counties at a crucial time when the availability of family childcare is hitting a crisis point.

School Category: Hopkins Race and Equity Initiative -- Hopkins Public Schools, City of Hopkins, and Gethsemane Church

The Hopkins Race and Equity Initiative is a collaborative effort creating opportunities to increase awareness and understanding of race, equity and diversity while promoting a sense of community that welcomes and values all residents. The initiative, which was formed in 2015, has offered five community conversations on race and equity topics to address and unravel social constructs specifically designed to promote and exclude particular racial groups.

Native Nations Category: Cass County and Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe -- Memorandum of Understanding

The Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe and Cass County provides a framework for multi-level communication and cooperation between the county and the band for natural resource management, community development, economic development and maintenance of Ojibwe cultural life-ways. The MOU, in its sixth year, has returned humanity to this demographically diverse community, and serves as a model that can be replicated in other Native nations across the country for widespread impact.


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