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Minneapolis (NRP) Neighborhood Revitalization Program (NRP)

For nearly two decades, the City of Minneapolis Neighborhood Revitalization Program has been one of the most successful citizen participation programs in the country. In it's flourishing eighteen year history, NRP has involved thousands of volunteers city-wide, leveraged multi-million dollars of home and business improvements, crime and safety, school, park, and environmental improvements, and so much more across the entire city.

 

The NRP program has had multiple studies done over its successful eighteen-year history. It is one of only three programs to win a United Nations award and put it on it’s elite Global 100 Best Practices List in 2000. In addition, NRP is also currently used by Harvard as a model of participatory democracy. Yet despite these successes, and the program only costing the City less than 7/10ths of 1% of the City's 1.6 Billion dollar budget, Mayor Rybak and City Council are setting the stage to end the independent and multijurisdictional globally unique program.

 

This website was established by grateful Minneapolis residents who have participated and believe the Minneapolis NRP program is too valuable to lose. It is also intended to give an overview of this unique program, its history, successes, the challenges currently facing NRP and the critical actions residents can take to support NRP to see it continues long after 2009.

 

Thank you for visiting this site today and for taking action to let your Council Member and Legislators know that you want them to fully fund NRP and continue it long after 2009 for the benefit of your neighborhood and community!

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
Minneapolis (NRP) Neighborhood Revitalization Program (NRP)

On Thursday July 24th, the NRP Work Group presented its Final Report (“Framework for the Future: Options for the focus, funding and governance of NRP Program and Action Plan activities after 2009”) to the City Council Committee of the Whole.  The Committee of the Whole then set a date for a public hearing on the report for August 20th, at 5p.m., in City Council chambers.  In less than 10 days, the City Council wants residents to come downtown and give testimony at a public hearing, not on a resolution but on the above document intended to improve community engagement.

The Problem: This City document essentially gives up on the award winning NRP that thousands of residents have used and benefited from for over 18 years. Minneapolis was the birthplace of NRP and it’s unique in the country. Other cities across the nation have only been brave enough to half emulate it. 

This Final Report still hasn’t addressed resident’s initial concerns from December 2007, yet it establishes a new system that’s unclear and untested, and has no financial options identified to sustain the award-winning Neighborhood Revitalization Program model that the City Council has stated they “have the capacity for” and that is a “basic City service”.

 

We believe there is an alternative approach that can protect and enhance the current NRP program.

Click here for more information and actions you can take!

Neighborhood Coverletter

Executive Summary

Residents Response to the Framework

 

Background Legislation

Legislative Update 5-20-08 StarTribune Steve Brandt 

Neighborhood funds survive with new name, same money
STEVE BRANDT, Star Tribune

A new way to pay off Target Center debt and finance Minneapolis neighborhood revitalization efforts has cleared the Legislature.

However, unlike the previous funding scheme, the money is dedicated to Target Center and neighborhood revitalization, but not the popular Neighborhood Revitalization Program (NRP)....

 

See Original HF 3821

See Original SF 3643

Find your Legislator?

 

 

Sold Out!

Many thanks to all those who bought these serene green tshirts and who are helping in everyway to get out the message--Save NRP!

 

Future Framework

 

Join the growing city-wide Coalition of Neighbors4NRP today! 

Sign the petition!


 

 

 We have support from the following

 Neighborhoods Organizations

that Support NRP

 Letter of

Support 

1 Nokomis East Neighborhood Association  1/31/08
2 Powderhorn Park Neighborhood Association 12/11
3 Minneapolis Park Board  12/5
4 Audubon Neighborhood Association 12/5 
5 Corcoran Neighborhood  11/27 
6 Whittier Neighborhood 11/27
7 Jordan Area Community Council 11/27
8 Southeast Como Improvement Association 11/23
9 West Phillips 11/20
10 McKinley Community 11/19
11 Northeast Park 11/13 
12 St. Anthony East 11/13
13 Loring Park Community CLPC 11/13
14 Shingle Creek Neighborhood Association 11/13
15 East Phillips Improvement Coalition 11/9
16 Midtown Phillips Neighborhood Association 11/9
17 East Isles Residents Association 11/9
18 Harrison Neighborhood Association 11/9
19 Hawthorne Area Community Council 11/9
20 Holland Neighborhood Improvement Association 11/9
21 St. Anthony West Neighborhood Organization 11/9
22 Waite Park Community Council 11/7
23 Beltrami Neighborhood Council 11/5
24 Lind-Bohanon Neighborhood Association 11/1
25 Sheridan Neighborhood Organization 10/22

26,

27,

28,

29

Longfellow Community Council

(Longfellow, Cooper, Howe & Hiawathia)

10/22
30 Marshall Terrace 10/18
31 Field Regina Northrop 10/17
32 Lowry Hill East 10/17
33 Bottineau 10/17
34 Windom Park 10/16
35 Columbia Park 10/15
36 Ventura Village 10/10

 

Please make sure that your Council Member knows that you support NRP