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OneCommunity Provides Reach
The grand symbiotic relationship ideastream has embarked upon, which
has drawn national attention—including a Harvard Business
School study—and opened vast opportunities for Cleveland,
is with OneCommunity.
OneCommunity—formerly OneCleveland—was
the vision of Lev Gonick, who became CIO and Vice President, Information
Services at Case Western Reserve University in 2001, just as ideastream
came into being and the Cleveland community was coming to know about
the Quiet Crisis. Essentially, what Gonick sought was to build a
regional broadband network at relatively little cost to serve the
educational, health and nonprofit communities of northeast Ohio.
What he didn’t have in mind, until he was approached by Wareham,
was someone to provide content to that network and, perhaps more
importantly, someone with the community connections to bring together
the nonprofit community in Cleveland in support of Gonick’s
vision.
Toward the end of the 20th century, an estimated
$3 trillion-plus was sunk into the streets of the U.S. in the form
of fiber optic cable in anticipation of the explosion in broadband
digital service, which halted abruptly when the e-commerce bubble
burst. Gonick understood that this fortune in so-called “dark
fiber” (unused cable), was everywhere in the country. In 2003,
Gonick convinced City Signal Corp. to donate several strands of
dark fiber to his nonprofit organization, for which the corporation
got a substantial tax write-off. In September of that year, OneCleveland
was incorporated and Scot Rourke, a former venture capitalist and
Cleveland native, became its first executive.
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Television Control Room
at ideastream |
If Gonick is the visionary, Rourke is the
master builder. Rourke’s plan for the nonprofit was to expand
the broadband connection well beyond the city of Cleveland. What
he proposed was that the corporations donating some portion of their
dark fiber would not only get a healthy tax write-off, but also,
said Rourke, “We are going to build the market for you. We
will expose the community to the value of [broadband], we’ll
do the missionary work and build a market demand for the rest of
your fiber.”
“Scot has a wonderful concept,”
says Wareham. “He refers to ‘Liberating content held
captive by various community institutions, universities, foundations,
and nonprofit organizations.’” Adds Rourke: “It’s
not that they are trying to imprison it, it’s that they don’t
know how to let it out.”
Some of the programs enabled by the ideastream-OneCommunity
partnership:
Distance Learning enables schools, which pay an
annual fee, to have interactive access to live shows and instructional
classes presented at the Idea Center.
Voices and Choices enables
anyone interested in the economic issues of the region to log into
a dedicated web site, study the issues, make choices and contribute
to an ongoing dialogue, including community town meetings.
One Classroom is the outgrowth
of a $2 million grant from the Cleveland Clinic connecting 1,500
area schools to the OneCommunity network, making rich media content
created by ideastream, including lesson plans and other educational
content, available on-demand. In time, this is expected to include
digitized content from the many museums and cultural institutions
in the region.
Wireless Mesh Network is
a work in progress, building on ideastream’s FCC licenses
to develop a citywide wi-fi network with OneCommunity, Case Western
Reserve University, the city of Cleveland and area schools.
Rural Health Network, when
completed, would create a broadband network for participating medical
institutions in Northeastern Ohio to exchange medical data ranging
from paper records and MRIs to televised medical exams.
Somerset-Ward says of ideastream and its
partnerships: “They are becoming much more than just community
broadcasters, they are becoming community enablers. And they are
doing that by forming partnerships with community institutions.
Jerry and ideastream are in a class of their own...But it’s
a model of what communities can do when institutions like schools,
universities, and health authorities create partnerships.”
Harsh Realities
Perhaps the toughest part of using ideastream as a model is broadband
access. Rourke, however, insists that should not be a problem. Dark
fiber exists throughout the nation and large telecommunication companies
are anxious to build a market for broadband by getting the attention
of consumers—and one way to do that is to donate a couple
of strands of fiber to a local nonprofit, with the added benefit
of a tax break. “We know we can repeat this pretty much anywhere
in the United States by promising that we are going to create the
market and we aren’t going to touch the residential customer,”
says Rourke.
Some observers say that an equally tough
challenge is finding people willing to cede control, both in terms
of the traditional gatekeeper role played by broadcasters/journalists
and a willingness to enter into partnerships in which the traditional
objectivity of the broadcaster/journalist might be questioned. Other
skeptics have challenged ideastream’s partnerships with regional
institutions that are sometimes subjects of media scrutiny, such
as the Cleveland Clinic, the second-largest employer in the state,
which has provided grants to OneCommunity and ideastream.
Unquestionably, partnerships can create the
appearance of conflicts of interest for journalists whose stock
in trade is perceived objectivity. But the same can be said with
respect to advertisers: does The New York Times, for example, have
a problem covering a scandal at General Motors because it accepts
ads from GM?
David Molpus, a veteran reporter with NPR
and Executive Editor at ideastream since March 2006, says that there
are some legitimate issues to be addressed when working with another
organization on content creation. “What are the rules of the
game? We’ve started to work that out and codify it,”
he explains. “We obviously see that there is one level of
cooperation with another news organization like the Plain Dealer.
But then there are degrees of variation: What could you do with
the university? What could you do with the city library? What could
you do with other nonprofits? What could you do with a government
agency?”
There was an early dust-up over a perceived
conflict of interest, concerning a grant provided to ideastream
to do stories about affordable housing by an organization that also
provided affordable housing. “There was concern in the newsroom,
at that time, that this organization was setting some agenda,”
says Mark Smukler, ideastream’s Senior Director of Content.
“But they never did get involved, there was no direct conversation,
no proposals, no story ideas. At one point they did place a call
to the reporter that was working on it and I told them not do that
and they said fine and that was the end of it.”
And, as with any merger or change in corporate
identity, there were myriad management issues, including heightened
staff distress and brain drain. “I have a great deal of admiration
for the model and for the people who put it in place,” says
Mark Fuerst of the Integrated Media Association. “Merging
any two organizations is a particularly hard undertaking. There
are fears, anxieties and big concessions that have to be made. Kit
and Jerry deserve great credit for what they’ve done.”
Neither Wareham nor Jensen is recommending
others follow ideastream’s lead. “I don’t know
if our model can be or should be replicated elsewhere,” says
Jensen. “But the key has to be to work within the resources
that the communities provide and with full recognition of the communities’
needs.”
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