15 episodes

The Better Communities Podcast creates a space for industry professionals, thought leaders and underrepresented communities to share their stories and create a dialogue to foster better more functional communities across the Pacific Northwest.

The Better Communities Podcast Hubbell

    • Business
    • 5.0 • 6 Ratings

The Better Communities Podcast creates a space for industry professionals, thought leaders and underrepresented communities to share their stories and create a dialogue to foster better more functional communities across the Pacific Northwest.

    Do Downtowns Still Matter?

    Do Downtowns Still Matter?

    America’s downtowns are at a crossroads.
    Many urban economic centers are struggling to get back to pre-pandemic norms. In addition to an increasingly hybrid workforce, many downtowns are confronting a lack of affordable housing, rising crime, and recent policy reforms that have made it difficult to combat a deepening drug crisis on their streets.
    Seattle is not alone in this struggle. But it has a history of overcoming the odds of previous boom-and-bust economic cycles.
    But how are we measuring success with downtown Seattle’s recovery? What does the future of downtown look like? And what solutions are business and policy leaders focused on as Seattle wrestles with the role of downtown in our daily lives?
    Listen in as the Seattle team at Hubbell explores the evolution of downtown Seattle’s economic, social and cultural recovery. 
    In this episode, we talk with some of Seattle’s most influential business and policy leaders about the road ahead, including Jon Scholes, President & CEO of the Downtown Seattle Association, Pat Callahan, CEO of Urban Renaissance Group, Richard Florida, urban studies expert and author of The New Urban Crisis, City Councilor Sara Nelson, and Markham McIntyre, Director of Economic Development at the City of Seattle.
    Join us as we dive into the challenges reshaping the economic trajectory of Seattle – and the potential for yet another comeback.

    • 35 min
    Bridging the Divide

    Bridging the Divide

    It often feels like the Portland-Vancouver metro region has become bogged down in a culture of political stagnation. We have big ideas. We seek to solve big problems like climate change and social justice.
    But we have lost our ability to work across our divisions to make big things happen.
    The I-5 bridge between Oregon and Washington was built more than a century ago. Today, it stands as a symbol of our inability to bridge our own political disagreements to get something done that is vital to the regional economy.
    After failing to garner support in 2013, there is a new team of community and political leaders working to try again. And it’s possible this time it will actually happen.
    In this episode, we talk with:
    DEMI LAWRENCE, reporter, Portland Business Journal LYNN PETERSON, president, Metro GREG JOHNSON, program administrator, Interstate Bridge Replacement Program Vancouver Mayor ANNE MCENERY-OGLE JOHNELL BELL, principal equity officer, Interstate Bridge Replacement Program  
    Listen to learn what failed in previous attempts, how they are rethinking the steps needed to get back to fixing big problems, and how they hope to deliver the kind of progress our regional economy needs to keep working for everyone.

    • 34 min
    Rethinking Free Speech in the Era of Cancel Culture

    Rethinking Free Speech in the Era of Cancel Culture

    The term “cancel culture” is a buzzword these days. Nevertheless, it deserves thoughtful analysis.
    Nowhere is cancel culture more apparent than on college and university campuses. According to a 2021 survey, more than 80% of American college students reported censoring themselves at least some of the time.
    This should raise a red flag for everyone.
    In this episode, we explore the evolving role of colleges and universities in facilitating productive conversation on campus. How do they define the line between harmful speech and free speech? And once the line is defined, how are they holding it?
    Listen as we explore the challenges of free speech, equity and inclusion, and education with ROBIN HOLMES-SULLIVAN, president of Lewis & Clark College; LA ROND BAKER, legal director for the ACLU of Washington; LISA LANDREMAN, vice president of student affairs at Willamette University; MANU MEEL, CEO of BridgeUSA; and several students from PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY.

    • 26 min
    The Roots of Oregon's Housing Crisis

    The Roots of Oregon's Housing Crisis

    Change is hard.
    In 1973, Oregon Governor Tom McCall created a pioneering land use policy focused on preserving farmland, reducing pollution and preventing urban sprawl. At the time, it was a visionary move that took bold political leadership.
    But what seemed visionary 50 years ago has played a pivotal role in creating Oregon’s modern day housing crisis. Today, our rural towns are struggling to address population growth as people seek a new hybrid work, lifestyle in these idyllic communities.
    Increasingly, rural areas of Oregon once thought to be affordable are now out of reach for most home buyers as housing supply has lagged behind demand for decades. And just building more housing isn’t as easy as it sounds.
    In this episode, we explore the challenges at the heart of Oregon’s housing crisis, what “affordable housing” really means, and why a new era of bold political leadership is required to solve this problem.
    Listen as JESSICA SEIDEL, Senior Director of Marketing and Customer experience at Pahlisch Homes, JOHN ROBERTS Deputy City Manager with the City of Redmond, KATY BROOKS, CEO and President of the Bend Chamber of Commerce, REBECCA LEWIS Associate Professor School of Planning, Public Policy and Management University of Oregon, and JAMES ADKINS, Manager of Public Policy at Hubbell talk about McCall’s legacy, the housing crisis, and the prospect of modernizing Oregon’s land use policies.

    • 22 min
    Activism Beyond the #Hashtag

    Activism Beyond the #Hashtag

    Advocacy and political activism have become part of the social media ecosystem. Pew Research data shows roughly 76% of Americans say that social media makes people think they are making a difference when they really aren’t. 
    Yet more of us are turning to social media as a primary way to engage with social and political movements. The rise in “hashtag activism” may feel empowering. It also may be preventing us from more effectively pushing for needed policy changes across the racial justice, women’s rights, LGTBQ+, and climate change movements.
    In this episode, we take you beyond the hashtag to explore the impacts of social media activism – and examine the limitations of so-called “slacktivism” online.
    Listen in as we talk with Jeremy Holden of the ALS Association,  Monica Anderson from the  Pew Research Center, Ben Finzel with RenewPR, Co-Founder of the Black Resilience Fund Cameron Whitten, and Morgan Rider from the Climate Trust.

    • 23 min
    Is the Polling Industry Broken?

    Is the Polling Industry Broken?

    2020 was a tough year. And a global pandemic, a shuttered economy, and the social justice movement made it a uniquely tough election year for opinion pollsters.
    Election night seemed like a repeat of 2016. The polls simply got it wrong. Again.
    The predictions of a “blue wave” never materialized. Pollsters had to admit there was something wrong with the models their industry has relied on for decades.
    So why do the polls keep getting it wrong?

    The $19 billion opinion research business is now searching for answers. In this episode, we explore how the polling industry is rethinking how behavioral and demographic shifts are disrupting long-standing opinion research methods.
    Listen as John Horvick of DHM Research, Dave Metz of FM3 Research, and Stefan Hankin of Trendency Research share their perspectives on the forces changing the polling business – and how research firms are adapting to a real-time information world.

    • 18 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
6 Ratings

6 Ratings

Podcasting RN ,

An insightful and innovative approach to storytelling

The Better Communities Podcast brings the listener into the room. It’s so cool getting to hear about different local issues in an authentic and compelling way. I’ll certainly be back for more and look forward to seeing what the Hubbell team does next.

Dominics PDX ,

Part of the Solution

The Better Communities podcast is filling an important void in media. Exploring misunderstood concepts through thoughtful dialogue with others is an important component to increased understanding and building community instead of dividing it. Unfortunately, this sort of approach is all too rare. I look forward to hearing the next episode.

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