Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Thriving’ initiative picks Fort Oglethorpe

- BY ALLISON SHIRK

Fort Oglethorpe city leaders and volunteers have begun brainstorm­ing how they can best preserve and promote the city’s natural charm with the help of $20,000 and forward-thinking design profession­als.

With big ideas and goals for the future, a group gathered at city hall earlier this month for the Thriving Communitie­s Initiative project launch to discuss what would make the city a better place to visit and live.

Fort Oglethorpe is one of four cities chosen this year by the Thrive Regional Partnershi­p to receive strategic assistance for the next 10 months from Bridge Innovate design profession­als and other community members. The initiative is part of Thrive 2055, a project focused on engaging people in the tri-state region to make the most of the area’s economic opportunit­ies while preserving what locals love about their communitie­s.

“It’s about mobilizing residents and celebratin­g the uniqueness of the community,” Bridgett Massengill, president and CEO of the Thrive Regional Partnershi­p, said at the launch. “It’s preserving and protecting natural treasures.”

Upon completion of the training, each community will receive $20,000 from the Lyndhurst Foundation to carry out a culture and arts project that will benefit both residents and visitors. The initiative comes at no cost to the city, except for transporta­tion to and from meetings in Chattanoog­a.

The other “Thriving Communitie­s” chosen this year are Whitwell, Decatur and Athens, Tenn.

Ideas at the local project launch ranged from adding more public art and a sculpture garden to building a dog park or welcoming more local breweries and distilleri­es. Volunteers and residents at the meeting also took inventory of some of Fort Oglethorpe’s unique treasures, such as the Chickamaug­a Battlefiel­d, West Chickamaug­a Creek, local libraries, museums and more.

Chris McKeever, director of the 6th Calvary Museum in Fort Oglethorpe, is one of five volunteers from the community to help carry out the initiative. She said she saw how the initiative benefited nearby Rossville in the first round of Thriving Communitie­s in 2016 and knew it was something Fort Oglethorpe needed to take advantage of once local officials had hired a new city manager.

“There’s a groundswel­l of folks wanting to see this happen,” McKeever said. “We have great people, but we don’t have the profession­al help to figure this out on our own.”

City Manager Jennifer Payne-Simpkins said it was a no-brainer when McKeever came to her wanting a letter of support from the city for the applicatio­n. The finished project will be a great asset to the community, Payne-Simpkins said, but she is most excited for the relationsh­ips the city will create with other communitie­s and local organizati­ons in the coming months.

“I’m hoping to get good relationsh­ips as well as define assets and where we want to go as a city,” she said. “I think that any community could benefit greatly from working with a team of consultant­s.”

The project has created a ripple effect in the communitie­s served so far.

For its first round of Thriving Communitie­s in 2016, the Thrive Regional Partnershi­p chose eight communitie­s. That first effort has sparked more than $1.6 million in direct and in-kind community investment­s and engaged over 1,800 donors and volunteers, a news release states. Some of the finished projects include a new public art project in Cleveland, Tenn., and a permanent outdoor performing arts space in Dalton, Ga.

Rossville used the training and $20,000 in funding to improve the city park in the area where the historic John Ross House sits.

“Our Thriving Communitie­s project has sparked a surge of community will and financial investment that previously felt unachievab­le,” Elizabeth Wells, co-founder of the Rossville Redevelopm­ent Workshop, said in a statement.

About $80,000 in investment­s have been made for the park so far.

Thrive officials said there will be several ways for Fort Oglethorpe residents to get involved in the next 10 months and citizens should try to be as active in the process as they can, even if their knowledge of the arts is limited.

Stephanie Dorris, one of the volunteers on the team, owns Battlefiel­d Bed and Breakfast on Barnhardt Circle. Being in the tourism business and a mother of two, Dorris said she has a personal investment in seeing the project succeed as well as wanting to make the community a better place to work and live.

Other volunteers on the team include Bob Dial, a retired businessma­n from the food service industry; Nicole Hill, a clinical data analytics consultant at BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee; and Brent Templeton, who owns a graphic design company. Fort Oglethorpe also will have access to community members in different fields depending on what project the group decides to carry forward, such as the Chattanoog­a Symphony & Opera or state agencies such as the Georgia Council of the Arts.

“It’s very important to me that this community meets the needs of the people living here as well as people coming to visit,” Dorris said. “I thought this would be a great opportunit­y to figure out how we can do that.”

Email Allison Shirk at allisonshi­rk92@gmail.com.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ALLISON SHIRK ?? Volunteers Brent Templeton, Nicole Hill and Bob Dial listen to Bridgett Massengill, president and CEO of the Thrive Regional Partnershi­p, at Fort Oglethorpe’s Thriving Communitie­s project launch. The volunteers will take part in a 10-month training and...
STAFF PHOTO BY ALLISON SHIRK Volunteers Brent Templeton, Nicole Hill and Bob Dial listen to Bridgett Massengill, president and CEO of the Thrive Regional Partnershi­p, at Fort Oglethorpe’s Thriving Communitie­s project launch. The volunteers will take part in a 10-month training and...

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