Supporting the Extraordinary: Open Society in New Orleans

August 27, 2010 | by

This weekend will mark five years since Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast and the levees broke in New Orleans.  As the date approaches, we remember and mourn the many lives and homes that were lost.  We also honor the inspiring work of so many in New Orleans to rebuild and transform this remarkable American city.

New Orleans represents the best and worst of America.  Its rich tapestry of African-American, Cajun, Creole, and European traditions gave birth to a unique and vibrant culture of music, food, and pageantry known around the world.  New Orleanians have an indomitable spirit—drawn directly from a deep love of their heritage—that has fueled a remarkable resiliency in the face of disasters from Hurricane Katrina to the BP oil spill.  While the city suffers from the legacy of slavery, a punitive criminal justice system, a weak infrastructure, and pervasive corruption, its residents are developing homegrown solutions that offer models for advocates around the nation and the world.

Before, during, and after the storm, the Open Society Foundations’ U.S. Programs has been privileged to support people and organizations determined to tackle the city’s challenges.  Starting at the neighborhood level and going all the way up to City Hall and beyond, advocates are reforming the criminal justice system in order to shed the dubious distinction of jailing its residents at a higher rate than any other U.S. city. Community-based organizations and good government groups are working together to insist on greater transparency, expand public participation, and ensure open government at the municipal level.  And the city’s culture bearers are engaging young people to use proud traditions like brass bands and second line parades to put an end to street violence.

Today, we launched an online fundraising campaign with MoveOn and ColorOfChange.org to raise funds for Open Society Foundations grantees who are working to transform New Orleans. MoveOn and ColorOfChange.org are appealing to their members to donate $500,000 to mark the anniversary of Katrina and the floods, and the Open Society Foundations will match those donations dollar-for-dollar. You can learn more about the campaign here: http://civ.moveon.org/donatec4/katrina.html or http://colorofchange.org/transform/message.html.

I hope you’ll take a few minutes to watch the short film above that profiles three of these extraordinary organizations working for change in New Orleans. You can learn more about our work in New Orleans here: www.soros.org/us/nola.

We are deeply grateful to our many partners who have committed time and resources to New Orleans.  As we work together to strengthen democracy and open society in America, we all have much to learn from New Orleans.

Orthodontist designed ski goggles, sunglasses

Chicago Sun-Times April 29, 2012 KETCHUM, Idaho ?ˆ” Robert Earl ?ˆ?Bob?ˆ? Smith, an orthodontist whose passion for skiing deep-powder snow helped turn him into a goggle and sunglasses pioneer, has died of complications related to heart surgery. here smith goggles

Mr. Smith?ˆ™s family confirmed his death on April 18 in California. He was 78.

He was born in San Carlos, Calif., and graduated from Stanford University and the San Francisco College of Dentistry.

He served as a dentist in the U.S. Army in Germany in the late 1950s. While there, he traveled to Kitzbuehel ski area every weekend, stoking his passion for the sport.

After enduring frustrating goggle-fogging experiences while skiing in Utah, in the 1960s he began developing prototypes for an advanced pair of goggles to solve the problem. He sat at the kitchen table with his wife, Jean, using dental tools and foam to create a double-lensed, vented ski goggle with an inner lens that was protected from the cold.

The goggle really just came out of his need to see while skiing deep powder,?ˆ? his son Drew Smith told the Idaho Mountain Express. ?ˆ?Everyone else just got to benefit from it.?ˆ? here smith goggles

He patented his invention, now considered the industry standard.

Mr. Smith founded Smith Sport Optics in 1965 and established its headquarters in Ketchum, Idaho, in the early 1970s. Before he struck a deal to manufacture Smith goggles, he often would trade his goggles for lift tickets.

He sold the company in 1991.

Smith Optics Inc. sells its products in 50 countries and reports a 45 percent share of the ski and snowboard goggle market in North America, making it the top manufacturer.

AP

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The Open Society Foundations work to improve the lives of the world's most vulnerable people and to promote human rights, justice, and accountability. This blog aims to bring that work a little closer by giving our experts and grantees a platform to reflect on their issues, sharpen their thinking, and engage in a conversation on how to advance open society values around the globe.

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