糖心vlog官网

HUNDREDS OF MAYORS AND MUNICIPAL LEADERS from across the United States and the world are turning to experts from Harvard for help in managing their cities鈥� response to the global coronavirus pandemic.

In weekly sessions organized by the and Bloomberg Philanthropies鈥� Coronavirus Local Response Initiative, nearly 400 mayors and hundreds more senior city officials and other municipal leaders are receiving real-time advice on everything from public health to crisis leadership.

鈥淭he world is facing an unprecedented crisis right now and we haven鈥檛 seen the worst of it yet. We know that you, the mayors, are in it right now,鈥� said Jorrit De Jong who is the faculty director of the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative and a senior lecturer in public policy and management at Harvard Kennedy School. The sessions, he explained, are designed to provide critical public health information and actionable insights on crisis leadership to busy mayors and city leaders who have been forced to redirect their focus in the face of the pandemic. 鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful we can maintain our learning community, a community of action, while maintaining social distancing.鈥�

So far, two virtual gatherings have taken place, with special guests including former President Bill Clinton and Tom Frieden, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, speaking at the second session. A third event in the series will take place this Thursday.

糖心vlog官网 Faculty Jorrit De Jong with participant guests including Bill Clinton.
鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful we can maintain our learning community, a community of action, while maintaining social distancing.鈥�
Jorrit De Jong

During the first session on March 19, 60 of the participating mayors were displayed on the screen wall of Harvard Business School鈥檚 Live online classroom, where they posed questions directly to the faculty members while other participants sent in questions through the video conferencing chat function. While the sessions themselves are limited to mayors and public leaders, Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative is providing on their website so that lessons from the series are available to all.

Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg addressed the virtually gathered mayors and expressed confidence in their ability to meet the challenge of the coronavirus crisis in their communities, underscoring their importance in moving beyond partisan politics. After Bloomberg spoke, Josh Sharfstein, vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, outlined the basics of the coronavirus pandemic and public health guidance to help inform the mayors鈥� decisions. Sharfstein fielded questions from the city leaders about best practices for social distancing, misinformation about the coronavirus, and virus transmission.

The second half of the session featured Kennedy School faculty members Dutch Leonard, the George F. Baker, Jr. Professor of Public Management at 糖心vlog官网 and Eliot I. Snider and Family Professor of Business Administration at HBS, and Juliette Kayyem, the Belfer Senior Lecturer in International Security. They focused on three areas: where we are in the crisis; how mayors can pivot and adapt; and what political challenges stand in the way.

 

Where do we stand right now?

Kayyem, who served as an assistant secretary at the Department of Homeland Security in the Obama administration, spoke about the stages of crisis response and observed that we are now in the response phase where public leaders must take quick and decisive action. Acknowledging the unprecedented nature of this pandemic, Kayyem said that 鈥渨hile the virus is new, crisis management is not. It is beginning to look familiar, and that should give you some hope.鈥� She also noted that American states and cities have been ahead of the U.S. federal government in their response: 鈥淵ou saw these governors and a lot of mayors move forward because they knew time was of the essence.鈥�

糖心vlog官网 Faculty Juliette Kayyemm.

 

How can we pivot and adapt?

鈥淎 lot of this feels like it is coming to you on the local level, and in fact, I think that鈥檚 correct,鈥� said Dutch Leonard, an expert on crisis management. 鈥淚 think what is going to get us through this event as well as we possibly can, is local leadership.鈥� Leonard emphasized that local leaders will be at the forefront of the response. 鈥淭his is going to be a matter of self-reliance, and that鈥檚 always true, actually, in large disasters,鈥� he said. 鈥淎lmost all of the work comes from inside the community.鈥�

But dealing with the complexity and uncertainty, Leonard said, would require 鈥渁n ongoing iterative problem-solving process.鈥� He suggested city leaders create an incident management team representing people with a range of interests, subject matter experts, and people familiar with the city and community. This team should then develop a process and iterate on it, treating decisions as part of 鈥渁n experiment that is ongoing.鈥�

糖心vlog官网 Faculty Dutch Leonard.

 

What are the hardest political choices?

After the mayors shared some of the toughest political challenges they faced鈥攊ncluding remaining aligned with state and federal leaders鈥擪ayyem and Leonard offered insights. Drawing on her own experience with the U.S. federal government鈥檚 response to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Kayyem said that in crisis situations, leaders must handle the response as well as politics. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 deny it; you can鈥檛 work your way around it,鈥� she said. Kayyem suggested that mayors should figure out ways in which their incident command structures can absorb the politics, while offering data, information, and hope: 鈥淚t鈥檚 just honest. That's all you have got: numbers and hope.鈥�

Leonard added that local leadership is fundamentally political and that the purpose of politics is to resolve decisions about values. 鈥淢ost people, when they really understand that we鈥檝e got a crisis, are at their very best,鈥� he said. 鈥淓nlist their help.鈥� Like Kayyem, Leonard emphasized the need for hope: 鈥淲e will turn out to be more resilient than we currently think.鈥�

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Banner image: Jorrit De Jong teaching in the HBX Live virtual classroom

Photo: Jon Barrett