Posts

Why Libraries Are Perfect Partners for Neighboring

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  Libraries have always been about more than books. They are places where people gather, learn, discover, and connect. Long before the phrase “community hub” became popular, libraries were quietly serving that role in towns and cities across the country. For that reason, libraries are uniquely positioned to strengthen something every community needs more of today: strong neighbor relationships. Neighboring—the simple act of knowing, caring for, and helping the people who live near us—has powerful effects. Research consistently shows that neighborhoods with strong social connections experience greater safety, improved health outcomes, stronger local economies, and higher levels of civic participation. Yet many Americans today report that they know fewer of their neighbors than previous generations did. Rebuilding those connections requires places where people naturally come together. Libraries are one of the best places for that to happen. One reason libraries are ideal partners for...

Celebrating Mister Rogers on March 20: Lessons from America’s Favorite Neighbor

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March 20 marks the birthday of one of the most influential neighbors America has ever known:   Fred Rogers , the creator and host of   Mister Rogers' Neighborhood . For more than three decades, Rogers welcomed children into a gentle, thoughtful television neighborhood where feelings mattered, kindness was normal, and neighbors looked out for each other. The show aired from 1968 to 2001 and became a cultural touchstone for generations of Americans. In many ways, Mister Rogers was the original champion of the idea that neighboring matters. That’s why several posts on this blog explore the relevant lessons we can learn from him. If you’re looking for a meaningful way to celebrate his birthday this year, here are a few Mister Rogers–inspired ideas worth revisiting. Three Ways to Celebrate Mister Rogers’ Birthday If you want to honor Fred Rogers this March 20, consider doing one of these simple things: 1. Learn the name of a neighbor you don’t know yet.  Mister Rogers bel...

Rental Inspections are a Step Toward Stronger Homes and Stronger Neighborhoods

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  City of Springfield, Missouri, is taking an important and encouraging step toward strengthening one of the most fundamental building blocks of community: safe and well-maintained housing. Beginning March 23, 2026, the City of Springfield will launch a rental inspection pilot program in the West Central neighborhood. The goal is simple but powerful—help ensure that rental homes are safe, sanitary, and fit for the families who live in them, while also supporting landlords who want to maintain their properties well. At first glance, a rental inspection program might sound like a bureaucratic change. In reality, it is something much deeper. It is an investment in neighbors. Homes Shape Neighborhoods Every neighborhood is built one home at a time. When homes are well cared for—whether owned or rented—something important happens. Streets feel safer. Property values stabilize. People take pride in where they live. Families feel more comfortable putting down roots. But when housing condi...

Neighboring Is the Hidden Gear in Community and Economic Development

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Every community talks about economic development. Cities pursue new businesses. Chambers promote job growth. Local leaders work to attract investment. But what if one of the most important drivers of a thriving local economy isn’t a tax incentive, a marketing campaign, or a new industrial park? What if it’s something much closer to home?  What if it’s neighbors knowing neighbors ? A framework called the Gearbox Framework offers a helpful way to understand how local economies grow—and it also reveals something important about the role of neighboring. You Can’t Start in Fourth Gear The Gearbox Framework compares economic development to driving a car with manual transmission. Communities move through four gears: People Place Local Business Cultivation Smart Recruitment Each gear builds on the previous one. The framework emphasizes that communities often make a mistake: they try to jump directly into fourth gear—business recruitment—before the earlier gears are working well. The frame...

A New Idea for Republic: The RepMo Neighbor Network

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  Communities are often built in three layers. First, there is infrastructure — the roads, utilities, parks, and buildings that shape the physical city. Second, there are institutions — schools, churches, businesses, and civic organizations that provide services and opportunities. But there is a third layer that often receives the least attention even though it may matter the most. That layer is relationships . When neighbors know each other and trust each other, cities function differently. Public safety improves because people notice problems early. Local businesses thrive because residents support them. Civic participation grows because people feel known and connected. Public health improves because isolation decreases. The RepMo Neighbor Network is built around strengthening this third layer — the relational infrastructure of the city.  The idea is simple but powerful: invest in the habits and leadership that help neighbors connect block by block. Over time, those conne...