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From Governings
November 2001 issue About the awards | 2001 awards introduction GOVERNING'S PUBLIC OFFICIALS OF THE YEAR
Culture and Whimsy Promoting fun on city streets
Anybody who thinks government is all work and no play has never met Lois Weisberg. As Chicagos commissioner of cultural affairs for the past decade, the 76-year-old Weisberg has had the time of her life while giving her city a reputation for playfulness and good humor that has won friends all over the country and much of the world.
To Weisberg, the merriment has a serious purpose. Her goal is to knit a huge and diverse city together and to celebrate the things its residents have in common. People are so isolated by television and computers, says Weisberg. They need a chance to come together and to share the same experiences.
Chicago gives Weisberg a staff of close to 500 people and a budget of $14 million to work her magic. It believes the investment has more than paid off. The city reaped millions of dollars in tourist trade from Cows on Parade alone and raised $3.5 million for charity when the cows were sold.
But the intangible results have been even more significant. Weisberg has played an important role in revitalizing downtown Chicago. With characteristic creativity, she arranged for Chicagos famous elevated train system to offer free weekend rides, with docents in each car to point out the citys many architectural treasures. She converted an abandoned public library building into a cultural center that features hundreds of arts and cultural events annually. And her Downtown Thursday Nights program, built on extended shopping hours at major department stores, has provided a crucial boost to the older Loop commercial area that was sagging a decade ago. Every city has to have a downtown if it is going to survive, Weisberg explains. Every city, whether small or large, has to have a place that people see as their gathering place.
Weisberg hasnt neglected Chicagos neighborhoods, either. There are bus tours of the citys ethnic enclaves, with residents themselves serving as tour guides. When we started, we thought the majority of people on the buses would be tourists, but we found that 50 percent of them were people from outlying neighborhoods of Chicago. Thats the best kind of tourism, she insists. Once people come into the neighborhoods from the suburbs, they keep coming back.
While cows and Ping-Pong and more recently, displays of old furniture on downtown streets have brought Weisberg and her office national attention, she is proudest of Gallery 37, Chicagos answer to the federal summer-jobs program. Under the 10-year-old program, local teens work with mentors in the visual, literary and performing arts. Rather than while away time in make-work jobs, they get a chance to learn and contribute meaningfully to the city. Weisberg, always eager to break down social barriers, raises private money to make sure that the program serves young people from different backgrounds, not just the low-income youth who qualify for federal aid. If you talk to kids, she says, theyll tell you the best part of the program is that it enables them to meet other kids from across the city and be friends with them.
By Christopher Conte
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