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Genius at Change

By: Anni Layne
Social entrepreneur Bill Strickland offers advice from the front lines of change -- San Francisco's nonprofit Bayview-Hunters Point Center for Arts and Technology.

Bill Strickland sparks revolution from the inside out. He is a change agent with more than 30 years of experience, but he resembles no other change agent in any industry, any company, or any government agency -- because Strickland's "inside" is not IBM, Ford, or the U.S. Mint. His transformations and insurrections affect whole families, communities, and cities. He is a change agent for society.

In September 1998, Fast Company documented Strickland's social initiatives in a story titled Genius at Work. That article introduced Strickland's brand of social change and his work with the Bidwell Training Center and with the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild, two Pittsburgh-based programs he founded that teach marketable skills and trades to 400 underprivileged youths and to nearly 500 adults each year. For the past seven years, 75% to 80% of the high-risk high-school kids in his after-school arts program have gone on to college. 78% of the adults who graduate from his vocational program find jobs. And he's only just begun.

Since Fast Company last spoke with him, Strickland -- a MacArthur Foundation "genius" -- has expanded his operation. Last year, Strickland officially became a change agent for the city of San Francisco. On May 20, 1999, he -- along with Mayor Willie Brown and jazz legend Herbie Hancock -- disclosed plans for the nonprofit Bayview-Hunters Point Center for Arts and Technology (BAYCAT) in a southwest neighborhood of San Francisco.

The proposed center will be modeled after Strickland's headquarters in Pittsburgh -- a 62,000-square-foot, honey-colored brick building designed by a pupil of Frank Lloyd Wright that houses a staff of more than 110 trainers, teachers, and mentors. BAYCAT's 80,000-square-foot campus will stand on five acres of previously contaminated shipyard land leased by the city, and it will cost about $30 million to build. In short, it is a huge project with one driving goal: to drastically change the economic and social landscape of one of the Bay Area's most underserved neighborhoods.

"Environment is the cornerstone of community," Strickland says. "If an environment is violent, destructive, destabilized, and discouraging, the citizens will feel and act exactly the same way. If the environment is hopeful, nourishing, and positive -- if it generates the capacity for income and wealth accumulation -- then the population will reflect that. In my view, there can't be any change unless the fundamentals of the environment are in place to encourage that growth and creativity."

So far, Strickland and the city of San Francisco have recruited an all-star board of directors, containing Cisco Systems, Hewlett-Packard, and Arthur Anderson, among others. With BAYCAT's groundbreaking tentatively scheduled for next fall, Strickland says they will begin a formal capital campaign in early 2001. In the meantime, he will continue to make powerful connections within the Bay Area, to initiate strong local partnerships, and to push forward a change initiative that Mayor Brown's office calls "groundbreaking -- a key catalyst project."

Fast Company spoke with Strickland at the magazine's Community@Work event in Denver, and asked him to describe the challenges and rewards of effecting change throughout a community and, eventually, throughout the world. Following is his change mantra and his advice for revolutionaries with heart.

From Issue | September 2000

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