TradeVibes is the best way to discover, research and discuss hot (and not so hot) startup companies. Our community finds cool and interesting startups and adds them to TradeVibes. By leveraging the collective wisdom of our community, TradeVibes separates the best startups from their competitors. Come share your opinions, or just come see the ratings, opinions, and discussions about which startup will be the next star.
Web design & development by Portland Maine and Portland Oregon based freelance digital media artist/designer Matt Franklin.
Ashoka is the global association of the world’s leading social entrepreneurs—men and women with system changing solutions for the world’s most urgent social problems. Since 1981, we have elected over 2,000 leading social entrepreneurs as Ashoka Fellows, providing them with living stipends, professional support, and access to a global network of peers in more than 60 countries.
Get more done have more fun.
The Hunger Project is a global, strategic organization committed to the sustainable end of world hunger.
Bikram Yoga is a series of 26 hatha yoga postures (asanas) done in a specific order over 90 minutes in a room heated to just above body temperature. The series was brought to the US over 30 years ago by Bikram Choudhury, and is now taught globally by hundreds of certified instructors.
A fundamental principle of Landmark Education's work is that people — and the communities, organizations, and institutions with which they are engaged — have the possibility not only of success, but also of fulfillment and greatness.
 

Inspired Words

Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction. Albert Einstein.


Latest Videos

Nanosolar 1GW Coater
Healing  gardens, healing Communities
Ross Mayfield: Leveraging Social Software for Business Value
Cant Jail the Spirit
The Social Entrepreneurship Series
Ashoka: Innovators for the Public
Saul Fontenot-Amedee Technology Maven of Portland PDF Print E-mail

Step Up To The Plate

By Justin Ellis
Portland Press Herald Blog October 04, 2007

League of Young Voters billed Wednesday night's "Step Up To The Plate" awards as "not your typical awards ceremony. Which in some ways was true, but in others was only sort of true.

The League of Young Voters billed Wednesday night's "Step Up To The Plate" awards as "not your typical awards ceremony. Which in some ways was true, but in others was only sort of true.

Wednesday’s occasion, which was also co-sponsored by the Bollard, was to recognize the work of the many people around Portland who do work to change people’s lives in ways big and small, or generally just make living here generally pleasant.

In feting the city's best young social entrepreneurs, the League came up with eight unique categories:

Green Professional
Start-Up Business Person
Urban Ecologist
Artist
Service Worker
Technology Maven
Activist
City Employee
Healthy Lifestyle Educator

The nominees, and voting, were all done online, beginning with nominations in the August.

Walking away with honors - in this case a sweet engraved beer mug to drink with class and pride - Wednesday night were Forrest Keever of Green Tree Clothing and Mainely Masters Art Gallery, who won green professional.

Keever gave a nod to the League for bringing together so many community-minded people in one room, saying it takes people to talk about things like sustainable living and community action to bring about change.

"I see this award as shared. You can have a drink out of my cup any time," he said raising his mug to applause.

Kim Anderson and Anna Maria Tocci of the North Star Music Cafe won for start-up businessperson(s) of the year, start-up organic farmer Sarah Bostick won urban ecologist for her work creating community gardens around the city, and Vanessa Torres and Touching Ground took the artist award for their socially conscious music.

Saul Amedee took the technology maven award for his volunteer work educating on computer disposal and e-waste, Jill Barkley, organizer of the Dyke March (style?...just say queer and relationship violence advocacy) took activist honors and Heather Chandler, creator of the "Sunrise Guide" won healthy lifestyles educator.


Shana Paradis was recognized as the best city employee for her work as an English teacher at Deering High School. Paradis said she was flattered by the award, but told the audience she could not accept it without acknowledging the work being done by countless other teachers within the Portland schools.

"I want to say thank you to all the teachers and 'this one's for you,'" she said.


The regular fingerprints of the League were all over this event, to get in you could pay your age or on a sliding scale, there was no shortage of love for local hip-hop as SayLove! provided the evening's beats and the dress code was less than stiff.

But like I said in the beginning, saying it was "not your typical awards ceremony" was only half true.

After all, there were the obligatory cash bar and steamer trays filled with delicious finger food. There were more than a few politicians working the room, from City Council candidates such as John Anton, Jill Duson and Dan Skolnik, to candidates for Democrat Tom Allen's First District Congressional seat, including the Democratic state senator from "Handsometown" himself, Sen. Ethan Strimling of Portland.

There was also a high profile guest, in this case the made-in-Maine beefcake and Olympic gold medalist Seth Wescott. Now I don't want to knock the first guy to win a gold medal in snowboard cross, but Wescott's remarks were rather short because he took more than a few minutes to screen a video on why snowboarding is his passion, which was odd. Still, as an entrepreneur and someone socially active himself, Wescott said finding what you are passionate about and following it is important, especially if it can benefit the community.

In the end I think it means something, because in the few (ok, four) years I've been working here, the League has gone from being an almost-outlaw group with a name we weren't completely able to spell out in print, to renting out one of the largest function rooms in the city - podium and all.

They went from an upstart group desperately trying to rally the skaters, graffiti punks, hip-hop heads and other smart, motivated and socially conscious people around town who have been otherwise snubbed by traditional politics and the party system.

Parties is something they largely did without, unless of course it meant bringing in a DJ, some breakdancers and having some Geary's, which I think everyone is okay with.

Now the League is working shoulder to shoulder with lawmakers (more than a few, including Rep. Herb Adams, D-Portland, were in attendance) to create laws, such as Opportunity Maine, and bring young voters into the political mix - see last month's local candidates debate.

Justin Alfond, statewide director for the League, told the audience young people are finally being seen as an integral part of Portland's community, and rising up in business and politics. Alfond said the League, through its voter education, community events and activism is supporting the next generation of Portland's leaders.

It's not exactly going from the outsiders to the political establishment so much as it is making a whole new scenario all together.

In the end, maybe the advertisers at Virginia Slims said it best: "You've come a long way, baby."

 
< Prev
Username Password Remember me Lost Password? Register
Ben Casnocha: The Blog
The blog of a 20 year-old entrepreneur and author.
  • Quote of the Day & Recent Tweets
    Today's quote of the day is from this well-written review of a memoir about the author's mother dying:The literature on dying is rife with measured...
  • How to Evasively Answer Two Common VC Questions
    A few months ago Rick Segal and Paul Graham both offered good sample answers for entrepreneurs to use when asked the following two difficult questions...
  • Sundown for California?
    "I believe the difference between the literature of California's past and the literature to come will be the difference of expectation. There are children growing...
Slashdot
News for nerds, stuff that matters
TED Theme: Design Like You Give a Damn
  • Treating design as art
    Paola Antonelli, design curator at New York?s Museum of Modern Art, wants to spread her appreciation of design -- in all shapes and forms -- around the world.
  • Architecture, modern and romantic
    Reed Kroloff gives us a new lens for judging new architecture: is it modern, or is it romantic? Look for glorious images from two leading practices -- and a blistering critique of the 9/11 planning process.
  • Rolling along, helping students and the third world
    Inventor Dean Kamen lays out his argument for the Segway and offers a peek into his next big ideas (portable energy and water purification for developing countries).