Hello,

As part of The Electric City Bike Rescue in Schenectady NY it seems like a win win situation.
If the research for community enhancement is done . Community bike rescues could use tools to further their mission and also could be a tool to locate programs or people who could use the bikes .

The key in my eyes is to connect to the local bike community to see how collaboration can occur working through preexisting community networks or help build them.
 This way the bikes are wanted and most appropriate for that community .

We (ECBR) are the recipient of corporate generosity for our home at the moment  and the relationship is helping us both as we grow.

Thanks
Clarence " Rennie" Fountain   


On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 11:21 AM, Adonia Lugo <adonia.lugo@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear collectivistas,
I'm looking for advice from folks who use bike repair as a community building tool. What do you think about building bikes as a corporate team building exercise? I work for the League of American Bicyclists, and someone pitched a project to us called Bikes for Goodness Sake that does this; they have teams build kids' bikes and then give them away at the end of the day. The dude doing this, Mark Smith, wants to partner with the League in some capacity to help hire a staff person who could coordinate these activities around the country, including hiring local mechanics to do quality control and connecting with local kids' groups.
Does this seem weird to you? I told my boss I'd ask around about this model because something about it raises my hackles a little. I like the idea of paying local mechanics to participate, and it seems like there could be a more formal relationship with co-ops or community bike shops as partners. Then maybe participating in an activity like this could be an avenue for the corporate types to get involved with the bike community. At the same time, I'm wary of a model that frames needy kids as some tool for corporate team building.
Let me know if you have any questions or thoughts.

Thanks!
--
Adonia E. Lugo, Ph.D.
Bicycle Anthropologist
www.urbanadonia.com

____________________________________

The ThinkTank mailing List
<a href="http://lists.bikecollectives.org/options.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.org/cf.tree%40gmail.com?unsub=1&unsubconfirm=1">Unsubscribe from this list</a>