Champions of the Lost Causes

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What makes us take up causes others think are impossible? What draws others to the cause, bonds us together and gives us an inexhaustible energy and an unwavering belief that we'll succeed? Host Marvin Stockwell draws on his own experiences and talks to fellow Champions about the successes, setbacks…

The OAM Network


    • Jan 6, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 1h 5m AVG DURATION
    • 72 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Champions of the Lost Causes

    Episode 71: Tom Murphy

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2025 38:40


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to former Pittsburgh Mayor Tom Murphy about his long life of championing causes - from his early days in the Peace Corps and as an activist, to his long career in politics, which most notably includes his time as mayor. Many credit Tom with turning the former industrial city's economic fortunes around. After he left office, Tom spent years as a consultant with the Urban Land Institute. It was in this role that Tom led a ULI panel in Memphis to advise on the highest and best use of Memphis' Fairgrounds and Mid-South Coliseum. When the panel recommended reactivating the Coliseum, it was a major victory for Marvin and other Coliseum activists. In this conversation, Marvin and Tom reexamine the issues that have kept the Coliseum closed and speculate on what might eventually reactivate the historic building. For more episodes of this podcast, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 70: Michael Lawrence-Riddle

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 73:58


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks with Michael Lawrence-Riddle, Executive Director at Self-Evident Education, at his office in Northampton, MA. The two discuss Michael's work with educators, students and communities to encourage people to think critically about the role of race and institutional racism throughout United States history. They also talk about their shared experience as musicians in addressing social justice issues. For more information about Self-Evident Education, visit selfevidenteducation.com For more episodes of this podcast, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 69: Linda Zebian

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 57:58


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks with Muck Rack Senior Director of Communications Linda Zebian at her home in Wilbraham, MA. The two discuss championing the cause of the free press in a polarized age of disinformation, and how, by developing relationships with journalists and PR pros alike, Muck Rack plays a unique role in fostering a dialogue between these increasingly connected and interdependent professions. For more information about Muck Rack, visit muckrack.com For more episodes of this podcast, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    pr muck rack wilbraham
    Episode 68: Christine Lutts

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 34:30


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks with Christine Lutts, board chair of Friends of Greenlawn Cemetery, at her home. Over the last twelve years, Christine and her organization have made steady progress in restoring Dickson Memorial Chapel & Conservatory and Greenlawn Cemetery as places of peace and beauty in Salem, MA. For more information about Greenlawn Cemetery, visit friendsofgreenlawn.org For more episodes of this podcast, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 67: Alicia Lehrer

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2024 39:19


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Alicia Lehrer, executive director of the Woonasquatucket River Watershed Council at her office in Providence, RI. The two discuss the group's origins, how their work to clean up the river and surrounding land has progressed, and how it evolved into the collection of connected parks, bike paths, and greenspaces that improve the quality of life for thousands of residents. For more information about the Woonasquatucket River Watershed Council, visit wrwc.org For more episodes of this podcast, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 66: Asima Jansveld

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2024 49:52


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Friends of The High Line's Chief Program and Engagement Officer Asima Jansveld about The High Line's earliest days, facing down demolition threats, working through adversity and, finally, persevering! The two also talk about the new challenges that came from The High Line's success, and The High Line Network, a learning cohort of people engaged in best-practices infrastructure-reuse work. For more information about The High Line, visit thehighline.org For more episodes of this podcast, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 65: Rochelle Joseph

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2024 73:06


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Rochelle Joseph, board chair of Support The Pink House, a group working to preserve the historic landmark, which has drawn countless photographers to capture its unique beauty. The 10-year fight to save it has had many twists and turns and it's not over yet. The Pink House is once again under demolition threat. For more information about The Pink House, visit supportthepinkhouse.com For more episodes visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 64: Nupur Chaudhury

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 69:53


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks with ioby CEO Nupur Chaudhury at the Sheraton Hotel lounge in Brooklyn. The two discuss how ioby has grown and changed over the years to help fund neighborhood-level change all over the country, which include Marvin's own causes - saving the Mid-South Coliseum and the summer road trips for the podcast. They also talk about ioby's improved site functionality, and what the future may hold for peer-to-peer learning among ioby project leaders. For more information about ioby, visit ioby.org For more episodes visit ⁠⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 63: Kim Yim

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 46:40


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Kim Yim, president of the Pleasant Village Community Garden in East Harlem. What began as people seed-bombing vacant lots in the early 1970s to beautify their neighborhood grew into a community garden that serves as a place to build community, grow food, share meals and, through composting, reduce waste and improve the environment. The two talk about how the garden grew, the challenges they've faced, and how Kim and her community work to solve problems and continue to improve the space and welcome newcomers. For more information about the Pleasant Village Community Garden, visit pleasantvillagecommunitygarden.com For more episodes visit ⁠⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 62: Doug Pick

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2024 70:37


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Feed More President and CEO Doug Pick about the organization's efforts to collect, prepare and distribute food to people facing hunger across 34 Central Virginia cities and counties. The two talk about Feed More's origins and explore why people champion causes and give of themselves to help others. For more information about Feed More, visit feedmore.org For more episodes visit ⁠championsofthelostcauses.org⁠ For other fine podcasts, visit ⁠backtothelight.net

    Episode 61: Christopher Reyes and Kathryn Hicks

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 74:58


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to two of his fellow co-founders of Baron Von Opperbean and the River of Time (BVO), Chief Visionary Officer Christopher Reyes and Chief of Games and Technology Kathryn Hicks, on location at the former site of the Mississippi River Museum at Mud Island Park in downtown Memphis. BVO is an immersive playground experience being built inside the long unused space. For Marvin, the adaptive-reuse project represents a new chapter in his life as a Champion, alongside his Coliseum work that is still ongoing. For Christopher Reyes, it's the opportunity to build a BVO fifteen times bigger than his 2020 proof-of-concept pop-up. For Kathryn Hicks, it's a chance to leverage her AR/VR and game-building experience to make the BVO experience all the more engaging. Invest in Baron Von Opperbean and the River of Time at wefunder.com/bvo For more episodes visit championsofthelostcauses.org For other fine podcasts, visit backtothelight.net

    Episode 60: John Carroll

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 61:05


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to City Leadership executive director John Carroll at his Crosstown Concourse office. The two explore how the nonprofit helps recruit, catalyze and develop leaders at every level to help Memphis grow and thrive.

    john carroll crosstown concourse
    Episode 59: Marvin Stockwell

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2024 46:25


    Guest host/producer J.D. Reager interviews Champions of the Lost Causes founder Marvin Stockwell at the Memphis Listening Lab. They discuss last summer's podcast road trip, what's next for the show, the Mid-South Coliseum, and more.

    Episode 58: Libby Crimmings

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 74:23


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Libby Crimmings, president of Atlas Community Studios, at her office in Des Moines, Iowa. The pandemic showed everyone just how portable some types of work can be, and that was an advantage to small to midsize cities looking to attract and retain creative professionals who can do their job from anywhere. Marvin and Libby talk about how adaptive reuse of old buildings is helping renovate downtowns and neighborhoods across the United States, and how Libby's work is helping communities adapt to meet evolving quality-of-life expectations.

    Episode 57: Joe Vital and Dean Dovolis

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 73:06


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Joe Vital and Dean Dovolis of the East Phillips Neighborhood Institute at Dean's office in Minneapolis. With the help of many, Joe and Dean have championed the cause of the East Phillips Depot, a building that people in the surrounding neighborhood want repurposed as an urban farm and commercial center, but that the City of Minneapolis wants to demolish, despite the environmental dangers to people living nearby. Decades-old disinvestment, redlining, environmental racism, a hostile and indifferent mayoral administration, marches in the streets, lawsuits, occupations, and forced removal by police have all been part of this eight-year fight. Marvin, Joe and Dean talk about all that, but also about how the tide has recently turned in favor of the activists.

    Episode 56: Keith Hammonds and Charlie Denison

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2023 66:34


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Keith Hammonds and Charlie Denison, owner and editor of the Boulder Monitor, at their office in Boulder, MT. Championing the cause of a free press has always come with its challenges, but journalism is in the midst of a paradigm shift away from printed newspapers to digital distribution, and toward new funding models, among which there is still no clear standard. Marvin talks to Keith and Charlie about the challenges of informing a public that has many other options for receiving information, and about the unique role journalism must continue to play alongside owned media and social media.

    Episode 55: Mark Lakeman

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2023 95:11


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Mark Lakeman at his office in Portland. Mark is the founder of the City Repair movement, which has changed countless neighborhoods in Portland, OR and spread to other U.S. cities and other countries. People need civic gathering spots, but when American cities were designed, the plazas and piazzas were left out. Marvin and Mark talk about why social bonds between neighbors have suffered as a result, how that maps over to larger societal problems, and the steps Mark and others have taken to change that, one neighborhood at a time. *We apologize for the poor audio quality of this interview.*

    american portland mark lakeman city repair
    Episode 54: Alyse Nelson

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 69:04


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Alyse Nelson, a board member of Squeaky Wheels, a grassroots, bike-advocacy nonprofit in Bainbridge Island, Washington. Marvin and Alyse discuss Alyse's work to implement Bainbridge Island's comprehensive bicycle pedestrian infrastructure plan, and how her day job as city planner with the City of Seattle helps her understand the pressures and limitations of her Bainbridge Island municipal counterparts, as they work together to realize change.

    Episode 53: Sue Campbell

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2023 55:20


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to book marketing coach Sue Campbell in Portland, Oregon. A published author herself, Sue helps authors overcome self-doubt and develop the mindset and habits to bring their books into the world. Sue and Marvin talk about the importance of books, how stories have power, and how Sue works to remove traditional barriers to writing to make the world more just and kind.

    Episode 52: Ken Pogson

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 66:54


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to VooDoo Doughnut founder Ken Pogson in Portland, Oregon. Even a for-profit business is a cause to those hearty souls who take the risk, but Voodoo Doughnut has had a charitable thrust since its earliest days. Ken explains how the company's philanthropy started simply enough with giving away day-old doughnuts, and how it grew along with the business into larger checks that do more good. Ken and Marvin also explore Ken's Memphis roots. Back in the mid 1980s, Ken was Marvin's first real boss at the old Fare Four movie theater. Ken was shaped by Memphis' 80s and 90s Antenna Club music scene and his friends in the Grifters. Throw in Memphis pro wrestling and Prince Mongo's various establishments, and all of a sudden the Voodoo Doughnut brand makes complete sense. It's uniquely Portland, but has Memphis' hands all over it.

    Episode 51: Cory Cachola

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 112:05


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Brand New Voices publisher Cory Cachola in Portland, OR. Cory is an advocate for web3 and the community that's growing around this emerging evolution of human connection on the web. The promise of the internet was always to connect us, but as the tech and computing power have improved, so has the web's ability to deliver on the depth of what we all dreamed was possible in the web's earliest days. Cory is a proponent of cryptocurrency, NFTs and the blockchain, but he's most interested in why these developments have come about, and what it says about human yearning for connection, meaning, freedom, and opportunity.

    Episode 50: Jason Waligoske

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 69:43


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Jason Waligoske, owner of Yep Yep Organic Farm in unincorporated Dexter, Oregon. For Jason, the benefits of eating organic started with working on his grandparents' farm as a boy, then later working at, then owning his favorite health food store. After a short-lived, crop-science job showed him the negative effects of pesticides and GMO technology, he had a vision for starting an organic farm. Jason chose aquaponic farming because it creates a symbiotic relationship between the crops that grow in water and the fish that swim below, and because he says it creates produce with superior nutritional value and taste.

    Episode 49: Joe Demaree

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 72:58


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to artist and musician Joe Demaree at his home in San Jose, California. Many artists first champion the cause of their creative vision and then organize their lives around moving it forward. Joe has an unwavering commitment to his artistic vision, and the community he's built around art, music and the free exchange of ideas.

    Episode 48: Mischelle Brown

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 50:35


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to educator Mischelle Brown in Oakland, California. Mischelle's use of risky play to provide better learning opportunities for her neurodivergent students was at first seen as unorthodox, and besides, there was no funding at her school for what she wanted to do. Undaunted, Mischelle crowdfunded the money she needed through ioby, and after after engaging in rock climbing, blowing glass and building forts, students' grades went up and disciplinary incidents went down. In fact, the benefits of risky play are well-documented in research dating back to the 1960s. Now armed with the data to show her program works, Mischelle is looking for new ways to use risky play to improve education.

    Episode 47: Terrence Murtaugh

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2023 50:32


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Terrence Murtaugh in Phoenix, AZ. Terrence is the founder of the Heavy Pedal, a cycling apparel company based in Phoenix. Marvin and Terrence talk about his non-traditional, iterative path to finding his calling. His transition from graffiti artist to graphic designer, web developer and business owner with a track record of backing good causes didn't happen overnight. It started by championing the cause of his own life, and digging down deep to expect more of himself.

    Episode 46: Sara Vaas

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 65:46


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Sara Vaas at CONO's offices in Colorado Springs, CO. CONO is a nonprofit that works to connect neighbors to each other and the civic process. Marvin and Sara talk about the challenges of elevating citizens' voices as the city grows, and how CONO is working with the City to organize ongoing citizen input. The two also talk about Sara's work as an artist, and how that has translated into the creativity and drive necessary to work with her community to effect change and empower others.

    Episode 45: Sean Crouch

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2023 70:50


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to LA-based writer and director Sean Crouch at his home. Known for shows such as Wolf Pack, The Exorcist, Lore, The 100, Numb3rs and Unforgettable, Sean talks to Marvin about his role in the current writer's strike, and how it differs from his experience of the writer's strike of 2007. The two explore why changes in how episodic shows are produced have hurt the apprenticeship model that helped Sean work his way up, as well as AI's potential to plagiarize and diminish the role of writers.

    Episode 44: Sarah Kephart and Andy Hoffman

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2023 47:15


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Sarah Kephart and Andy Hoffman at Envision's Wichita headquarters. Sarah serves as Envision's arts manager, and Andy serves as call center supervisor. What started in Wichita in 1933 as an effort to find jobs for blind people has grown into a multi-state nonprofit with every service imaginable to support people who are blind and visually impaired. The three talk about Sarah and Andy's ongoing work and ruminate on what it means that a cause still calls new Champions, whose dedication to mission is undimmed by the many years.

    Episode 43: Andy Scurto

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2023 51:31


    Host Marvin Stockwell talk to Andy Scurto at the Tulsa's Promenade Mall. Andy followed his daughter's love of playing hockey into being a fan, coach and ultimately owner of the Tulsa Oilers. Marvin and Andy talk about Andy's passion for youth sports, how the team gives back to the youth in Tulsa, and how a vacant former Macy's is being converted into a facility with two new ice rinks to serve the team and the Tulsa community.

    Episode 42: Janae Bradford

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2023 58:49


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Janae Bradford at Tulsa City Hall. Janae leads the City of Tulsa's Office of Financial Empowerment and Community Wealth. Marvin and Janae talk about how her career in finance and nonprofit work prepared her well to champion the cause of financial stability from within municipal government, and how she's applying best practices that are working in other cities.

    Episode 41: Sharon Chapman

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 53:07


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Sharon Chapman, executive director of the Next Step, at the Ft. Smith, AR shelter for people experiencing homelessness. What began as a church outreach serving a daily meal in the 1980s has grown into a multifaceted nonprofit that provides not only emergency shelter, but also transitional housing and other services aimed at helping people become permanently housed. Marvin and Sharon talk about why Sharon feels called to this work, and how her circuitous path and unique mix of professional gifts prepared her well to lead the organization in this phase of its growth.

    next step sharon chapman
    Episode 40: Steve Foutch

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 48:33


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to Steve Foutch at Hy-Vee Arena in Kansas City. Steve bought the historic Kemper Arena for $1 and set out to do what many people said was impossible – save and repurpose the building. After he and his team solved many structural and engineering challenges, the building was relaunched in 2018 as the multi-use Hy-Vee Arena. Steve also weighs in on the fate of Memphis' Mid-South Coliseum. There are many correlations between the two arenas and several shared lessons learned.

    Episode 39: John Rash

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 80:16


    Host Marvin Stockwell talks to John Rash at the Champions of the Lost Causes home studio in Memphis. John is the creator of the Southern Punk Archive, a growing physical and digital repository of videos, photos, fliers, music, films, and oral histories that document the South's many thriving DIY punk scenes. Before now, the contributions that southern punk scenes have made to the national conversation on free expression has been underreported and underappreciated.

    Episode 38: Jen Frank

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 52:12


    People champion all sorts of causes, but the uber-cause that we can sometimes miss is that of our own precious lives. This is where Jen Frank uses her gifts as a career and life coach to help the people she coaches. Our lives and how we make contributions in the world is a multi-faceted equation in which we balance the things we yearn for with other competing priorities. Jen helps people get unstuck and on to living lives of deeper fulfillment.

    jen frank
    Episode 37: Erin Barnes & Dawn Arrington

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 91:54


    IOBY is a crowdfunding site that helps people make positive changes in their communities. We discuss how Erin and her founding partners discovered their niche in helping smaller neighborhood-level actors make change. We also chat with Dawn about her development from being a project leader in Cleveland to her role as IOBY's Place-Based Strategies Manager, with national responsibilities.

    Episode 36: Svitlana Muzychenko

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 75:27


    Svitlana Muzychenko, founder of UA Brokers Without Borders, works with Ukrainian grassroots organizations to address emerging humanitarian needs that stem from the ongoing war with Russia. We'll discuss Svitlana's early life in Ukraine, how she moved to Brazil and started her own technology firm, and how she has used her professional skills and network to help her fellow Ukrainians survive.

    Episode 35: Mia Henley

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 69:46


    Mia Henley is the executive director of Creative Aging, a nonprofit that makes music and arts programming more accessible to older adults in Memphis. Everyone needs community to live a healthy, fulfilled life, but family and work connections often fall away as we age. The arts have the transformative power to build skills, confidence and community, and in doing so, the arts can improve physical and emotional health among seniors.

    Episode 34: McKrell Baier

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 80:50


    McKrell Baier is the director of the BridgeUp, GiddyUp nonprofit program. Through her unique and compassionate approach to horseback riding and Equestrian sports, McKrell and her team work with children ages 11 to 18 to help them become more confident, responsible, empathetic and goal-oriented. With wealth and privilege often associated with Equestrian sports, McKrell is also working to make the sport more accessible to all through her free program.

    Episode 33: Tina Sullivan

    Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 47:47


    Tina Sullivan, executive director of the Overton Park Conservancy, played a pivotal role in resolving the decade-long fight over the Memphis Zoo parking cars on the park's Greensward. Today's hard-fought wins are built on the activism of Overton Park's past, including the landmark Supreme Court court case in 1971 that kept Interstate 40 from bisecting the park. Tina's passion for the park's rich history is matched only by the excitement she has for the park's future, in which the Overton Park Conservancy will work with stakeholders at the Overton Park Shell, Metal Museum, the renovated golf course, Memphis Zoo and old growth forest to collaborate on future programming at one of Memphis' crown-jewel signature parks.

    Episode 32: John Michael

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 59:29


    Media consolidation in the 1990s forced John Michael off the 96X airwaves in Memphis and on to a successful career in radio that included a stint at the vaunted KROQ in Los Angeles. John found that his varied experiences taught him a lot about what worked in radio. Those experiences also showed him how radio was broken and disconnected from the audiences it once served, and he began to think about how to reinvent it. John recently rebooted 96X and plans to involve the Memphis music community to make the station all it can be.

    Episode 31: James Dukes (IMAKEMADBEATS)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 94:29


    After cutting his teeth as a musician and producer in New York City, James Dukes (IMAKEMADBEATS) returned home to Memphis in 2011 to find a music scene that at first seemed stuck in the past. As he began to work with local artists, he discovered an eclectic and uniquely creative group of artists that would become the backbone of Unapologetic, a label and artist collective James founded and has since grown.

    new york city unapologetic imakemadbeats james dukes
    Episode 30: Nick Oyler

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 71:39


    Nick Oyler is the Bikeway & Pedestrian Program Manager for the City of Memphis. When the push for bike lanes in Memphis resulted in early victories for the bike/ped movement and then gave way to the city's initial buildout, Nick was away at college, grad school, then working in Germany. Following all that news from afar, Nick thought that he might have missed his moment to get involved. But as many multifaceted causes require, there was plenty of work left to be done when he got back to his hometown. Nick's experience of riding a bike when he was young helped pave the way for his interest in city planning and to his current role, and helped him see the many benefits to cities and people of having a well-designed system of bike lanes and walkways. Memphis has come a long way, but it still has a lot of work ahead of it.

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