What would you think about challenging Columbians to trade places with others for a day and interact with people outside their usual social circles? Or creating a Chamber of the Arts to serve art professionals the way the Chamber of Commerce supports businesses?
These and other ideas will be presented at the Exploring the Vision workshop Wednesday, designed to give the community a chance to weigh in on the goals and strategies generated by the Imagine Columbia’s Future visioning process.
The workshop will be divided into two sections. At the assembly, participants will hear the ideas generated by each of the 13 citizen topic groups and rank their importance on a scale of one to five. Then, each topic group will set up its own station at the “Marketplace of Ideas” and encourage participants to visit and comment on its progress.
“It’s going to be an informal setting, so you can walk around and share your ideas,” visioning co-chairwoman Diane Drainer said of the Marketplace of Ideas. “Kind of like shopping.”
Comment cards will be available for participants to give direct feedback to the groups.
Forty-four goals will be presented at Wednesday’s workshop, each with as many as three strategies.
The draft strategies include:
Topic group participants will use the rankings and other feedback to refine their work before the Community Choices workshop, scheduled for late summer.
The workshop at the Kimball Ballroom at Stephens College is where the Imagine Columbia’s Future process began with a community meeting in May 2006. In the fall, more than 420 people attended one of two Big Idea Gathering meetings designed to brainstorm how residents want Columbia to look over the next few decades. The 13 citizen topic groups, which have been meeting once a month since January, used the ideas generated from those meetings to create the goals and strategies that will be presented Wednesday.