REPORT TO THE MAYOR AND CITY COMMISSION 1995
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Owensboro Sister Cities, Inc. encourages global understanding between our
community and other world communities. The Owensboro Sister Cities Program will
assist government entities with the proper reception of foreign visitors and
dignitaries by serving as the community's office of protocol; pursue an ongoing
mission to inform and educate our community concerning our area's international
cultural and business ties and their effects on our community; initiate exchange
programs in education, business, professional groups, and the arts; assist
government and its agencies in promoting our community's cultural heritage
through our Sister City(ies) relationship; encourage development and expansion
of international trade relationships and assist with foreign trade missions;
assist community organizations in direct relationships with similar
organizations in our Sister City(ies) and elsewhere in the world, where
possible.
Summary
Owensboro Sister Cities has had an outstanding year of activity and community
promotion this past calendar year. This was a pivotal year for our program as
Owensboro and Olomouc have now received their official Sister Cities Charters.
These charters hang in the public reception areas of both City Halls for all to
see the official link between Owensboro and Olomouc. Our program has received
both statewide and international recognition for our year long efforts.
The major focus during the calendar year was to stimulate interest in
exploring mutually beneficial commercial dealings. These efforts resulted in
three related visits within the Sister Cities and the beginnings of a cautious
exploration on both sides to see if mutually beneficial trade can be built.
While commerce received a good deal of attention, our Owensboro Sister Cities
program continued our participation in the Sister Cities International Young
Artist Program and brought a visiting Fulbright Scholar to Owensboro from the
Olomouc institution of higher education, Palacky University. As a result of our
efforts and your support, Owensboro had an International Winner in the SCI Young
Artist Program and Owensboro Sister Cities was given recognition at the Kentucky
League of Cities Conference as having the most outstanding new program in the
state by Kentucky Sister Cities.
Actions taken on behalf of our Sister Cities Program during 1995:
1. Several local organizations were addressed concerning our program and our
Sister Cities visits to Owensboro. Our visitors addressed both the Breakfast and
Noon Rotary Clubs during the visits. News media articles were generated in the
Messenger-Inquirer, on local and Evansville radio and television stations and
the Czech regional press in Moravia. The Czech press articles were written both
to report on our business visit to Olomouc and articles written as a result of
the visits to Owensboro by our Czech friends.
2. We researched to locate a Fulbright Scholar from Palacky University
studying in the United States. During March, Dr. Milada Hirschova, Director of
the Department of Slavonic Studies, as a visiting scholar to Ohio State
University, was contacted and agreed to come to Owensboro to encourage student
and professor exchanges between the three Owensboro institutions of higher
education and Palacky University in Olomouc. She was the guest in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Rice. Palacky already has had ongoing relationships with
Hofsra and Georgetown Universities and Northwestern ran a semester long Honors
Program this past semester at Palacky. We have an agreement, in principal, with
Palacky as a result of our past visits. Two Owensboro professors have expressed
interest in participating in a teaching exchange. What is still needed is an
umbrella agreement between the Owensboro colleges to work together under the
Sister Cities arranged exchanges. Dr. Hirschova wrote to the Moravian regional
newspapers after her visit with us and her articles about Owensboro were
published and were reported to us by Olomouc City Hall. Her visit was jointly
sponsored by Brescia College, Kentucky Wesleyan College, Owensboro Community
College and Owensboro Sister Cities.
3. As a result of (then) Mayor Pro Tem Morris' visit to Olomouc in 1994,
during the month of May, we were able to have Mr. George Kvidera come to
Owensboro to consult with us on potential trade between the two Sister Cities.
As part of Mayor Pro Tem Morris' delegation we were fortunate in having both
Hugh Hayden from Industry, Inc. and Ondra Edds from the Chamber of Commerce be
able to address business concerns with Mr. Kvidera. Mr. Kvidera has been in
Olomouc several times with the purpose of helping Olomouc City Hall in the
transformation of their economy. As a Czech-American businessman he was in a
position of being knowledgeable of both countries economies, languages and
cultures. In order to seek out potential business collaboration, Mr. Kvidera was
invited to Owensboro under joint sponsorship of the City of Owensboro, the
Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Inc., and our Sister City program. Mr. Kvidera
spoke to several of our targeted businesses, addressed business groups and
submitted his recommendations as to where he saw real commercial potential. His
recommendations were the basis for a business focus group from Owensboro to
visit Olomouc during June.
4. Following up on our correspondence with Olomouc City Hall and the visit by
Mr. Kvidera, four representatives from Owensboro visited Olomouc during June.
Olomouc City Hall arranged a schedule to visit not only many of the businesses
suggested by Mr. Kvidera as having trade potential but also with some smaller
companies who wished to make contact and explore potentials. In all candor, our
efforts were met by cautious curiosity on both sides. There is much similar in
both communities, each curious about possibilities but hesitant to trade in
unknown areas. More time is needed to build and broaden our familiarity. As a
result of the Owensboro groups trip, it was decided to encourage three or four
potentials. The Owensboro group included two members of the Chamber of Commerce
Board of Directors and the Director of the Green River Area Development
District, as well as, the Sister Cities Executive Director. Invitations to the
Olomouc businesses were made to visit their Owensboro counterparts. Another
purpose of this trip was to present Olomouc with their Sister Cities
International Charter and reaffirm our relationship with their new Mayor and
city administration.
5. During the month of October four businessmen from Olomouc traveled to
Owensboro to meet with targeted business leaders. These talks were productive
but left many unanswered questions. All parties agreed to seek answers to each
others questions and establish an ongoing dialogue. It was also decided that
perhaps the easiest route to begin demonstrating the potential for trade in the
Czech market would be capital investment. There are now four independent
initiatives being pursued or being discussed in Owensboro directly as a result
of our initiatives. Any resultant business will, of course, be between the
principals but both City Hall programs are eager to help aid in promoting
contact and hopefully mutually beneficial trade.
6. Owensboro again participated in the Sister Cities International Young
Artist Program under the direction of local artist, Ms. Rhonda McEnroe. While it
is most unusual, Owensboro again had its submission chosen as one of the
international winners for a second year in a row. The winning artist was Kevin
Koller from Daviess County High School. Kevin's entry and Owensboro's name were
displayed during the Eisenhower Invitational Golf Tournament in Tyler, Texas and
at the Sister Cities International Conference the year in Indianapolis. The
winner's name and sponsoring Sister City is prominently shown in the following
year's Young Artist Program announcement booklets. As a result, the name of
Owensboro will be promoted in the program booklets now being sent to the over
2,000 Sister Cities worldwide. Unfortunately, we lost Ms. McEnroe to marriage
and Evansville this year. The good news is that The Museum of Fine Arts has
agreed to oversee and promote this local art competition in our secondary
schools and colleges. Students eligible to participate are aged 13 - 18.
7. We were contacted too late to be able to sponsor a student exchange with
Olomouc during the summer of 1995 but the groundwork was laid for the program to
run during the summer of 1996. Dr. Ivana Mrozcova in Olomouc and Mr. Nick Brake
in Owensboro will coordinate our Student Leadership Development Program. This
program is co-sponsored by of Prague Embassy U.S.I.A. office. The students (from
both Owensboro and Olomouc) will be at Palacky University for two weeks at the
end of July and will have opportunity to travel during the third and final week
of the program. The program is will draw on all the area high schools and
colleges. Owensboro Community College was the first higher education institution
in our community to receive a student from the area of Owensboro's Czech
Republic Sister City. That student has now continued his studies in New Mexico.
We are hopeful that we will have increasing numbers of exchange students between
the Sister Cities in the years to come. The Owensboro Community College TV
station is advertising our summer exchange program and showing pictures of
Olomouc during the Western Kentucky University basketball rebroadcasts here.
8. Owensboro hosted the visit by Dr. Roman Nogol, City Manager of Karvina,
Czech Republic during August. This visit was arranged by U.S. Agency for
International Development directly with our City Manager Mr. Ted Smith. Dr.
Nogol spent a week at City Hall learning about the responsibilities of the City
Manager and make comparisons to his experience. Owensboro was one of three U.S.
cities that Dr. Nogol was to visit. The Owensboro Sister Cities program was able
to lend assistance during the visit. Dr. Nogol told us that he chose to ask to
visit Owensboro due to our having Olomouc as a Sister City, he sings in a chorus
in Olomouc. Karvina is to the northeast of our Sister City. We look forward, as
a result of promoting Owensboro internationally, to having an increased number
of foreign government sponsored visitors come to Owensboro. Dr Nogol has invited
us to visit Karvina on our next trip to Olomouc.
9. For all our ongoing efforts during the year 1995, Owensboro Sister Cities
was presented an award for having the most outstanding new program in Kentucky.
The presentation was made at the Kentucky League of Cities Conference with city
mayors and government officials from across the state in attendance. The award
was accepted on behalf of the city by Mayor Morris and the Sister City Executive
Director.
10. The Owensboro Sister Cities Listserv which was begun last year to serve
the needs of Sister Cities around the world came to an end in 1995. Housed at
Owensboro Community College this Internet Listserv had attracted subscribers
from thirty eight states and over a dozen foreign countries from Australia to
Russia. Our Listserv lost much of its purpose when Sister Cities International
began an effort at their headquarters to establish and fund a Sister Cities
Listserv and Wide World Web page. With the cutback in funding and personal at
OCC we were also limited on what we could achieve for the future.
11. We have been in contact with Palacky University in Olomouc. They are
building a Wide World Web Page for the City of Olomouc and we have arranged to
have a Sister City link from their Web Page to the Owensboro Wide Web Page being
built at OCC. We will arrange to have a Sister Cities International Web link
which will also attract online visits from those around the globe to learn more
about our community.
PLANS NOW IN PROCESS:
We have worked with Olomouc City Hall to have a packet of materials provided
to each of our four major travel agencies concerning Olomouc and the Czech
Republic. These materials will be presented during a reception for the travel
agencies to report to them on the purpose and progress of our Sister City
relationship and its potential for them and our community. On a later return
visit we will take materials concerning our area and Kentucky to promote travel
in our area. Olomouc has approached us to produce a joint travel booklet which
they have already produced with their Dutch Twinned City. We are open to the
idea but the cost would take our budget entirely. Olomouc is budgeting to send a
Tourism Representative to Owensboro and Kentucky during their next fiscal year.
Put together materials emphasizing our areas' international connections to be
used to introduce our area to potential Sister Cities and for tourism and
industrial development projects. (Video, magazine, brochure,etc.)
An invitation to attend the International Bluegrass Festival in September has
been extended and accepted by the Olomouc Bluegrass band, Hermanek. If the Brno
band, "Second Grass" returns we will have two Czech Bluegrass bands in
attendance this year. Brno is only forty miles from Olomouc and Dallas, Texas is
its American Sister City.
Our first Owensboro Sister Cities Newsletter is ready for publication. It
will be sent to many community organizations and individuals who have expressed
an interest in or have a potential link to our program. We will continue to
promote connections between any similar community organizations that we can.
We hope to begin the exchange of video tapes between our Middle Schools with
student classes with the same age students in Olomouc. The Czech students have
already begun by sending us a tape of their city, classrooms, downtown area,
etc. We will ask our students to do the same and send it to Olomouc.
Aid in the exchange of foreign language teachers in our community with
teachers of English in our Sister City. Organize materials to be used in our
local schools to introduce our Sister Citys' culture to our students (enhancing
the teaching of cross cultural perspectives).
We need to have a successful student program this summer. Once this first
group comes home our continued student exchanges should be assured. Along this
line, we still need an umbrella agreement between our colleges to participate in
building an ongoing exchange program with Palacky University. During the summer
exchange we would be in a good position to begin arranging a summer job exchange
for a local college students - not only would they have their summer job, but
through Sister City arrangements we could allow these youths from our respective
communities to be exposed to another culture in the process.
The timing is good to begin our Young Professional Exchange sometime this
year. The way this has been approached in other Sister Cities is to bring a fire
or police department officer, a bank employee or perhaps someone in tourism into
the Sister City to be exposed to the other culture's approach to the same
problem faced by both Sister Cities employees. This would necessitate
cooperation with a local business and logistical help from the Sister Cities
program. The sending institution continues the salary of their exchanged
employee.