Bologna launches a consultation on school meals services

Bologna launches a consultation on school meals services

 

The City of Bologna launched a participative process for the definition of the guidelines on school meals services. For the first time all the aspects concerning the school meals program, such as quality of meals, priority on investments, monitoring system and customer needs, will be defined through a participatory process. In fact, the opinions and comments expressed by citizens during the online consultation will be integrated in the Guidelines for the development of the school canteen service.

The City School Meals Commission, established in 2013 thanks to the alliance between families, the City, the Health Local Service and SE.Ri.BO (the mixed-capital local school meals food service company), drafted a document titled “Guidelines for the development of the school meals service”. The document announces that “school age is the time when the child sets up and consolidates the eating habits. It is in this stage of life that collaboration between institutions, family and school can contribute to the development of a healthy eating style which continues and persists into adulthood. Proper nutrition combined with regular physical activity can prevent excess weight and reduce the risk of developing adult chronic diseases”.

Therefore, there is full awareness that the Municipality of Bologna has an important role in the determination of quality food and educating the younger generation and their families to proper nutrition, preventing the risks of chronic diseases. Now, the process is open to all citizens who can express their ideas and introduce any additions to the document.

To participate:

  1. Join the community “Comunità” of Rete Civica > Access to “Comunità”
  2. Express your preferences in each section of the document.

Particularly, it is possible to send contributions about six main topics:

  1. Quality of alimentation
  2. Staff employed
  3. Investments
  4. Environmental Sustainability
  5. Customer services
  6. Monitoring and evaluation

For more information: openscuola@comune.bologna.it

Link to consultation: Linee di indirizzo per lo sviluppo del servizio di refezione scolastica

 

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Servizio di mensa scolastica: è online la consultazione per definire le linee guida

Il Comune di Bologna ha avviato un percorso partecipato per la definizione delle linee guida del servizio di refezione nelle scuole bolognesi.

Grazie al lavoro realizzato dalla Commissione Mensa Cittadina (CMC), istituita dal Comune a marzo 2013, che riunisce formalmente Comune, genitori, AUSL, SE.Ri.BO (società mista attualmente incaricata del servizio), per la prima volta vengono definite alcune specifiche indicazioni sul servizio di refezione dei prossimi anni, in particolare sulla qualità dei pasti, sugli investimenti necessari, sul sistema di monitoraggio e controllo e sulla partecipazione degli utenti

La Commissione Mensa, composta da Comune, genitori e Se.Ri.Bo, ha realizzato il documento “Linee d’indirizzo per lo sviluppo del servizio di refezione scolastica“, articolato in 6 punti, in base al quale verrà poi elaborato il capitolato di gara per la selezione del nuovo gestore del servizio. Il documento specifica che “L’età scolare rappresenta il periodo in cui s’impostano e si consolidano le abitudini alimentari del bambino ed è proprio in questa fase della vita che una migliore collaborazione tra istituzioni, famiglia e scuola può contribuire allo sviluppo di uno stile alimentare salutare, che si protragga e permanga anche nell’età adulta. Attraverso una corretta alimentazione associata a un’attività fisica regolare si può prevenire il sovrappeso e ridurre il rischio di sviluppare in età adulta malattie cronico-degenerative (malattie cardiovascolari, diabete, ipertensione, ecc…). Vi è la piena consapevolezza, quindi, che il Comune di Bologna quando eroga il servizio di ristorazione ha un ruolo importante nella determinazione di un’alimentazione di qualità e nell’educare le giovani generazioni e le loro famiglie a una corretta alimentazione, volta a prevenire l’insorgenza di malattie croniche.

Ora il processo è aperto a tutti i cittadini, che potranno esprimere le proprie idee ed introdurre eventuali integrazioni al documento.

Come fare per partecipare?

Per esprimere le proprie osservazioni è sufficiente:

  1. iscriversi alla sezione “Comunità” della Rete Civica
  2. esprimere la propria preferenza sotto ad ogni singola sezione del documento (tramite “VOTA” o “FAI UNA PROPOSTA”).

In particolare, è possibile inviare i contributi in merito ai 6 argomenti principali:

  1. qualità dell’alimentazione (derrate alimentari, qualità nutrizionale, sicurezza alimentare, gradibilità)
  2. personale impiegato
  3. investimenti
  4. sostenibilità ambientale
  5. rapporto con l’utenza e gli stakeholder del servizio
  6. controlli (misurazioni)

Tutti i contributi e le domande che arriveranno saranno analizzati dal Settore Istruzione e, in base alla pertinenza degli stessi, eventualmente recepiti nelle “Linee di indirizzo”.

La consultazione è a questo link > Linee di indirizzo

Collaborative cities: Gorenflo launches the first Sharing School

Collaborative cities: Gorenflo launches the first Sharing School

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The sharing economy is growing faster than ever and becoming a hot policy issue these days. Casa NeturalCollaboriamoRENA and LabGov have for this reason decided to launch the “Sharing School”. Thanks to the collaboration between these organizations and with the support of OuishareAvanzi and Societing, the School has been able to host highly qualified professionals and experienced innovators. The guest star of the event has been Neal Gorenflo from Shareable, an American leading organization in the field of sharing economy and collaborative practices.

The event held in Rome at Porta Futuro, had the main objective of dealing with the mainstream tendency of sharing economy and to understand if such trend can become the leading paradigm of the new economy. Andrea Fusco, Director of Department III – Services for placement and quality of life of the Province of Rome, the future Metropolitan City, was very happy to host the Sharing School initiative.

Minister Counselor for Public Affairs of the US Embassy in Italy Elizabeth McKay, reminded how the sharing economy has already changed things; it is no longer a new phenomenon and thanks to technological interactions and social media, we are exploring a potential that can disrupt traditional forces. Customers become service providers themselves, acting as catalysts for phasing into the system resources and goods that are normally not exploited.

We were used to think about sharing economy as some “nerd stuffs”, while nowadays there is a sort of “media bulimia” that affect the topic of sharing economy – says Francesco Russo, President of RENA. It is undeniable that we are assisting to a growing tendency of the concept of collaboration, as we simply trust strangers. However, the problem is that we shall distinguish what sharing is really about, and that is the aim of the Sharing School. There is a paradigmatic change of society and in the next future, 40% of the online staffing will be served through services provided by the sharing economy. Then, the approach of the initiative is not only about telling the story of a new economic trend.

As Neal Gorenflo recognizes, we are all here to learn how to gather people and create a common homogeneous vision about the sharing economy. But here we encounter obstacles, since we need to dissolve the gap between trans-formational economy and trans-action sharing, which basically maintains social hierarchies. Neal Gorenflo talked about making a choice between the red pill and blue pill like in The Matrix movie. The blue pill is a story about the re-adaptation of the old capitalist paradigm to the new economic trends, where Uber and AirBnB are the concrete examples of how initiatives of such strand of the sharing economy can still create monopolies. On the other hand, the red pill is the one that inspired our research. It is about the resurgent collaborative experimentation and it is what can wake up reality. We need to open cities, to make them available for use and to activate citizens by creating an economy “by and for” the people. We need to invest on transformational sharing much rather than transactional sharing.

However, as Matteo Lepore – Commissioner to Economy, Development of the City, Tourism, International Relations and Digital Agenda of the City of Bologna –  underlined, if we talk about social order and sharing economy, we are inevitably bound to themes such as politics, democracy and participation. In fact, even taking the red pill has the risk of initiating a debate between citizens and the political representation. It is all about a systemic change, otherwise there would be no way back from the loss of collaboration between citizens and institutions. Step by step, we are loosing the sense of citizenship, by projecting a vision of citizens as the residual assets of society. Fortunately, the City of Bologna was able to initiate a process of human capital reactivation, thanks to the implementation of the “Bologna Regulation on public collaboration for urban commons” that seeks to transform the Public Administration in an enabling factor. The City of Bologna is thus a starting point for understanding how collaborative practices can rehabilitate citizens and regenerate urban networks, for instance with the instrument of the “pact of collaboration“. The underlying idea is that important results can only be achieved through effective practices of co-working, which involve citizens and professionals through a platform of mutual exchange of skills and knowledge.

Starting from the community to build competences and deliver effective results on the territory is also the strategy of the City of Milan , says Renato Galliano, Director of Smart City Service in Milan. We have to recognize that it exists a network of collaborative urban cities, which is itself a new form of infrastructure. This is the confirmation that collaborative economy is not only about isolated and scattered projects of mobility sharing, start-ups and civic crowdfunding. The social innovation entails a renaissance of the cities in a wider context, whereas citizens are the locomotives of change and public administrations are the habilitating infrastructure.

As Christian Iaione, Coordinator of LabGov, reminded we have to reinforce the processes of active citizenship and active entrepreneurship, to foster a steady dialogue between the five actors of collaborative governance and to create an “Italian way” to sharing. Indeed, the real sharing is centered on the restitution of value to the community. This is a good opportunity also for the City of Rome. Daniela Patti – from the staff of the Comminisioner to the Urban Transformation in Rome – affirmed that we need to create a network of collaborative cities, to develop instruments to regenerate abandoned urban spaces and to consolidate practices for exploiting the latent potential of the great cultural heritage.

Alex Giordano (Societing and Rural Hub) warned against the dysfunctions that an incorrect practice of sharing economy can create. In this sense, we should not only focus on the quantitative approach and upon capitalist mechanisms. It is in fact essential to reason on communities and social impact. If we have a look at territorial distributions, it is possible to notice how people are divided by interests and have lost the sense and ethic of community building. Fortunately there are breeding grounds of innovation that create value, even if their outreach is limited by disabling institutional leaderships. The problem is that those who have the courage to produce social innovation are constantly marginalized, as Simone Cicero of Ouishare, noticed. Even Enrico Parisio, of Coworking Millepiani says that we need to express such new exigency, as a pedagogic stimulus for social innovation. When we started talking about sharing economy, nobody believed it could be real, reminds Ivan Fadini of Impact Hub Roma. For this reason we are strongly committed today on avoiding the reiteration of traditional economic capitalism.

The commoners will be the heroes of social innovation.

Stay united!

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Presentata a Roma la prima edizione della Sharing School.

Si è tenuto il 22 gennaio 2015 l’evento di presentazione della Sharing School di Matera, la prima scuola sulla sharing economy e sulla condivisione per promuovere in Italia un nuovo paradigma sociale, economico e istituzionale. L’incontro, ospitato da Porta Futuro e reso possibile grazie alla collaborazione tra Casa NeturalRENA, Collaboriamo e LabGov, con il supporto di Avanzi, OuiShare e Societing, ha visto la partecipazione, grazie al supporto dell’Ambasciata americana in Italia, di Neal Gorenflo co-fondatore di Shareable.

L’evento, incentrato su temi dell’ economia collaborativa e innovazione sociale, ha rappresentato un importante punto d’incontro tra ospiti internazionali, attori istituzionali, accademici e società civile. Se si vuole sviluppare un nuovo concetto di economia, è necessario rivedere gli orizzonti sociali e promuovere spazi innovativi di collaborazione. E’ in un contesto di inclusione sociale e di promozione della cittadinanza attiva che la sharing economy deve prendere piede perché, come ricorda Neal Gorenflo, le persone devono rappresentare lo snodo per un’economia collaborativa.

Dobbiamo cominciare a comprendere come l’implementazione di un modello di governance condivisa non ruba potere alle amministrazioni, semmai ne rinvigorisce la struttura e la riempie di nuovi contenuti. Per questo il prof. Christian Iaione, coordinatore di LabGov, invita a pensare all’economia come un bene comune che possa essere curato e messo a punto con interventi di animazione da parte di tutti quei soggetti coinvolti nell’ambito della sharing economy, inclusi i cittadini.

Bologna Regulation on public collaboration for urban commons

Bologna Regulation on public collaboration for urban commons

Schermata 2014-12-18 alle 19.06.26

The City of Bologna has just adopted the translation prepared by 2013/2014 LabGov interns as the official English version of the Bologna Regulation on public collaboration between citizens and the city for the care and regeneration of urban commons. The official English version of the Regulation is available here.

LabGov interns participated actively to “La città come bene comune” (i.e. “The city as a commons“) project in Bologna, carrying out research activities, training programs and co-design sessions. One of LabGov strategists, Christian Iaione, was also a key member of the working group which drafted the “Regolamento sulla collaborazione per la cura e rigenerazione dei beni comuni urbani” of the Comune di Bologna.

According to the regulation active citizens (i.e. social innovators, entrepreneurs, civil society organizations and knowledge institutions willing to work in the general interest) can enter into a co-design process with the city leading to the signing of a “patto di collaborazione per la cura o rigenerazione dei beni comuni urbani“. Urban commons are mainly public spaces, urban green spaces and abandoned buildings or areas.

Using the institutional technology of public collaboration (i.e.co-progettazione” or “amministrazione condivisa“) Italian cities and communities can transplant Elinor Ostrom‘s idea of “governance dei beni comuni” (i.e. “governance of the commons”) in urban contexts, as Sheila Foster has already theorized.

The regulation is at the same time a form of social innovation enabling tool and fosters the birth of collaborative economy or sharing economy ventures. Indeed the regulation has dedicated specific articles to “innovazione sociale e servizi collaborativi“, “creatività urbana” and “innovazione digitale“. As a matter of fact social innovation and collaborative services, urban creativity, digital innovation  must be the centerpiece of a “sharing city” or “collaborative city“, which is by default a commons-oriented city and therefore a co-city.

Last, “public collaboration” is centered upon the use of bottom-up or collaborative “nudge” or “nudging” techniques  and “service design” techniques. Indeed, the regulation strengthens the importance of information/communication tools, training and educational initiatives, facilitation activities, as much as the need for measuring and evaluating the impact of the regulation and collaboration pacts or initiatives activated under the umbrella of the regulation.

Subsidiarity comes to Taranto

Subsidiarity comes to Taranto

banner_tarantoThe Circular Subsidiarity Laboratory begun on the 5th of September with professor Iaione

Born in collaboration with the Services Center for Volunteering of Taranto, the Circular Subsidiarity Laboratory – Together for a new development  is the new project of Labsus – Laboratory for Subsidiarity designed to all volunteer organizations of the Taranto’s territory. The Laboratory aims to empower local participants to the ideation and realization of a project for the local development based on the principle of subsidiarity and shared administration.

IMG-20140906-WA0001The first meeting has been held on the 5th and 6th of September at the Don Bosco Institute in Taranto by professor Iaione. On the first day the focus was about the evolution of the relations among public institutions, private enterprises, third sectors and citizens. Iaione made reference also to the Regulation on the Collaboration among Citizens and Administration for the Care and Regeneration of Urban Commons adopted by the Municipality of Bologna after a two years experimentation on field with Labsus. On the second day, the 27 participants has been involved in a co-working session. The working group have laid down the foundations for future design of the Laboratory.

The Laboratory will continue its activities until the 17th of October, when there will be a public event for the presentation of the outputs with the presence of Gregorio Arena president of Labsus. The next meeting devoted to the urban regeneration experience there will be on the 25th and 26th of September with Alesssadra Feola and Elena De Nictolis.

Poster_Laboratory

 

Let us save Lake Chad

Let us save Lake Chad

Conference of donors for the regeneration of Lake Chad

Conference of donors for the regeneration of Lake Chad

On April 4-5, 2014, a conference was held in Bologna with the specific aim of facing the ecological disaster that Chad is victim of, namely the drying-up of Lake Chad and to collect funds to finance the five-year investment plan for its revitalization. The conference was the result of years of international cooperation at all levels and it had the privilege to host not only the most important actors of the African continent, but also eminent personalities of the Italian politics. In fact, the President of Mauritania and current President of the African Union, Mohammed Ould Abdel Aziz, the President of Niger, Mahamadou Issoufou, the President of Chad, Idriss Déby Itno, the President of the African Commission, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and the former President of Nigeria, Olusengun Obasanjo attended the conference. On the other hand, among the participants there were also Lapo Pistelli, Deputy Minister of Italian Foreign Affairs, Vasco Errani, president of the Emilia Romagna Region, Vincenzo Stingone, Quaestor of Bologna and Mario Ennio Sodano, Prefect of Bologna. The Chairman of the conference was the President of the UN-African Union working group, Romano Prodi, who is also the President of the Foundation for World Wide Cooperation. The latter has been the driving force of the renewed interest in Lake Chad. The reasons why Lake Chad is so fundamental for the local populations were best explained by Romano Prodi, who in his opening remarks pointed out that the Lake constitutes the most important hydrographic system of that region. During the last 50 years, the lake has lost 90% of its water resources, thus provoking not only en ecological disaster, but also a humanitarian one. The security and stability of the region is at stake, since its fragile equilibrium risks to be broken by extremist factions, international terrorists and in particular by the fight for the scarce resources, in a context where the population overcrowding will be a matter of serious concern in the near future. The international community has been trying several times to devise possible solutions and technical plans to revitalize Lake Chad, and the last significant effort is represented by the “Transaqua project”, which over thirty years ago envisaged the possibility of linking the near Congo river with Lake Chad. Today, the technical plan around which the conference revolved draws inspiration from the Transaqua project, but it is more far-reaching than its predecessor is. In fact, it deals not only with technical matters, such as the re-organization of the production systems and the rehabilitation of the actual irrigation systems, but also with political issues, like the improvement of the local governance and the creation of a permanent international cooperation, in order to assure a continuous supervision of the phenomenon. Thus, the only durable solution possible is one that takes into consideration the importance of Lake Chad for the African peoples and in which the local governments undertake their responsibility of revitalizing the area, under the auspices of the whole international community. The Bologna conference was a step towards such a solution and on April, 5th the “Declaration of Bologna” was finally approved, which represents the basis of the launch of the action plan which will be operative in the forthcoming meeting of the Commission of Lake Chad (CBLT) that will take place in July 2014. The Bologna Declaration demonstrates that a sustainable future for the Lake Chad region is possible only through the creation of partnerships between public and private actors willing to regenerate an environmental common good that represents the future of the African continent.