Tim McCarthy and the Business of Good

December Case Study: World Becoming Less Violent Summary, by Seth Borenstein

Dec 1, 2011 10:25:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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December Article of Interest: How Inequality Hurts the Economy, by David Lynch

Dec 1, 2011 10:19:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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Editor's Note:  There is an emerging argument for overcoming our ever-expanding polarization of wealth in the USA.  It goes well beyond pleas for compassion from "bleeding hearts" like mine.  That is, that income disparity is actually bad for our economy.  David J. Lynch captures this theory and its principal promoter succinctly for Bloomberg Business Week below.

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November Article of Interest:

Nov 1, 2011 8:29:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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(Link To Article)

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November Case Study: Distance Learning and the Changing Face of Business Development Services

Nov 1, 2011 7:59:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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Editor’s Note: As part of foundation’s work to establish a CDFI (Community Development Financial Institute,) we have been researching best practices to (someday) achieve scale beyond Ashtabula County.  This paper looks at early practice in the area of distance-based business development services. Through a survey of practitioners and more in-depth conversations with early pioneers of this work, the paper provides lessons for those looking to embark or expand efforts in this area.
 

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October Case Study: Foundations as Catalysts for Collaboration

Oct 1, 2011 1:08:00 PM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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October Article of Interest: Turning the Jobless into Entrepreneurs; Letting Talent Cross the Border

Oct 1, 2011 2:00:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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Editor's Note: As a person who was forced into entrepreneurship by losing his job, this Bloomberg point of view really caught my eye. And it gives impetus to my work with the foundation to find and finance more people just like I was in the late '80s........a hard worker with good ideas and no capital.
[more]

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Case Studies: Mom dies, and troubled daughter grows up

Aug 31, 2011 2:00:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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My sister Gina received her first cellphone as a birthday gift a few days ago.

Until recently, Gina had insisted that a cellphone was too complicated for her, a plausible statement given how many things she finds hard.

For years, she found bathing complicated, so she rarely stepped into a tub or shower. Brushing her teeth felt complicated, so her teeth went bad. Cleaning her room felt like climbing a mountain, so her room devolved into a jungle of junk with a skinny path to the unmade bed. In the final weeks of her old cat's life, she found it too complicated to pick up the cat feces on the carpet, so she neatly laid a paper towel over each set of droppings. [more]

When Gina was little, doctors said she had an IQ of 34, and though they were far wrong, the right diagnosis has never been clear. Mild autism. Borderline personality disorder. The verdict seems to have changed almost as often as her medications.

What is clear is that Gina is different, so she always lived with our mother and our mother lived with the question: What will happen to Gina when I die?

Gina worried too. As Mama grew frail, Gina often climbed in her bed in the middle of the night to weep.

"Honey," my mother would soothe her, "you'll be OK," and my siblings and I, unconvinced, told our mother we'd make sure she was.

In the months leading up to my mother's death, Gina began to change. She calmed down, some. She took pride in making Mother's morning coffee. When one of my brothers or I bathed our mother, Gina held the towels. When we'd lift Mother off the portable commode next to the sofa where she slept, Gina was quick to say, "I'll empty it."

But after Mama died, we braced for Gina's familiar rages. We talked about how to handle her when she burst into shrieks at the memorial.

On the morning of the service, she found me while I washed my face.

"Do you think," she began. "Do you think it would be OK if I don't go? I just. I just think the best way for me to honor Mom today is to take a shower and brush my teeth and go out on the bus."

And that's what she did.

With clean hair, in new brown capris and shin-high socks from Target, she rode the bus from store to store that day, along a route she rides for hours almost every day just for fun. She visited with clerks and pharmacists she considers her best friends, telling them her mom was gone.

"Mom would be proud of me for being independent," she said when she got back.

In the year since, Gina has lived alone, next to one of our brothers. She has given up soft drinks, after years of a dozen a day. She has gone to the dentist, and her teeth, minus several that had to be pulled, are white again.

She showers.

And now, thanks to two brothers, she is a modern woman with a cellphone. I called her on it last week.

"I'm doing a lot of things I never thought I'd be doing," she said with a big laugh. "Living alone! And a cellphone!"

I try to understand my sister's transformation, to trust that it will last. It's one of the most mysterious and beautiful things I've ever witnessed, though maybe it's no more complex than this:

When your greatest fear comes to pass and you survive, you discover who you really are.

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Article: Want Impact? Networks Trump Organizations

Aug 31, 2011 2:00:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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By David Haskell, Dreams Indeed International

Our weakness proved to be our greatest asset.

In an Egyptian village roasted by the merciless sun, civil engineer Yousry and I sat
down on shaded bamboo chairs in April 1999. A sniffing and wagging session ensued
to find out if we could work together.

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Case Study: Time to Ax Public Programs That Don't Yield Results

Aug 1, 2011 2:00:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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Editor's note:  Since this was difficult for me to read and understand, I'll guess it may be the same for you.  I've been directly involved with Head Start through the work of our partners and it's a hard program not to love.  But there lies the rub which is worth our minds wrangling with.  I also love Klein's equal disdain for rich and for poor government programs when it is becomes obvious they have outlived their usefulness.  I wish we had statesmen, instead of politicians, who were will to take similarly fearless looks at our government investments. [more]

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Article: The Elusive Fruits of Inclusive Growth

Aug 1, 2011 2:00:00 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Learning and Knowledge

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