Shreveport-Bossier: My City, My Community, My Home
Where are we as a community? Who do we want to become in the future? Join Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, as each week he interviews a resident of Shreveport-Bossier about the community from that particular person’s lens and perspective.
Episodes
Thursday Jan 25, 2024
Thursday Jan 25, 2024
Education Thought Leader, Dr. Michael Hicks, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:38 1. Although you and I don’t know each other all that well, we go way back. We were at Caddo Middle Magnet at the same time and then after that at Captain Shreve together.
I once heard you use the term “invisible backpack.”
Explain what that is and tell me, if you could, what was in your invisible backpack in those years at Middle Magnet and/or Shreve.
9:37 2. You hold a Doctorate degree in Education Leadership from Louisiana Tech University and your area of expertise is in leadership, justice and identity. You have a wide range of experience in education, starting as a substitute teacher in Caddo Parish, and later working as a community mental health specialist, school counselor, and faculty member at esteemed higher education institutions, including Southern University at Shreveport and Centenary College of Louisiana.
A couple of people have said to me recently how the Magnet school system might not be the ideal school system for our community, particularly in how it potentially has a negative impact on some of our neighborhood schools.
In your opinion, is the Magnet school system a bridge too far? Do you know of or see a better approach for our community?
19:44 3. You taught a course at Centenary College entitled “Doing Race”. We have talked quite a bit on this podcast about how to do better creating and accepting a multi-ethnic Shreveport.
How do we do better as a community dealing with our differences differently, and in fact better?
27:48 4. You have a unique perspective as your father, Dr. Raymond Hicks, was the President of Grambling University in the nineties. What is the same or worst today in terms of local race relations?
34:52 5. And, what is better you think now, in terms of race relations, than it was when we were growing up here and when your dad was President at Grambling?
Thursday Jan 18, 2024
Thursday Jan 18, 2024
Laura Baxter, Director of the Institute for Childhood Resilience at LSU Health Shreveport, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, and Kristi Gustavson, CEO of the Community Foundation of North Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:56 1. Define adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and why do they matter?
2:41 2. Why do some of us thrive despite adversity while others are overwhelmed by similar experiences?
3:44 3. Is our community resilient? Can resilience be built or is it something you’re born with? Explain.
5:44 4. What are the services provided by the Institute for Childhood Resilience (or ICR as it is commonly known)? When did it start and what is the genesis behind its formation?
9:09 5. I know you were instrumental in ensuring that every Caddo Parish educator receives ACEs training. Why did you do that and how did you do that? Explain how all of that went down.
14:31 6. What could cause a kid to carry an "emergency brain" from home to school?
15:56 7. Where would you go from there? Do you feel like the whole community needs to understand ACEs? If so, why?
17:52 8. What can parents do? What can community members do?
19:37 9. You once said, “There’s this great opportunity for learning but there’s also a great possibility of damage.” Why is the first five years of life the sweet spot?
22:30 10. You also once said, “Every child in this community deserves a childhood.”
I am a parent who has a low ACEs score. Why as a community member should I care about other people in my community who have high ACEs scores?
How are we doing a better job in our community recognizing trauma? And how are we doing a better job building resilience?
28:34 11. If you're a parent, why is it important to understand your own ACE score? What should you be on the lookout for relative to parenting your child?
Thursday Jan 04, 2024
Thursday Jan 04, 2024
Architect Mike McSwain sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:26 1. Mike, you are one of our community’s most beloved architects, having designed countless projects including the Sci-Port Discovery Center, Bossier Parish Community College, the Cyber Innovation Center and renovations to the Shreveport Regional Airport and Municipal Auditorium, to name but a very few.
Let’s start here today.
One of your projects was the creation of the East Bank District in Bossier. Talk to me about the genesis of this project, if you could, and lessons we can learn from its success that might reinvigorate and revitalize other areas of our community.
7:15 2. I have known you for a long time but until I started preparing for today’s discussion I had never heard the story about how you first decided to become an architect. Would you mind sharing some of that? I think you were in Texas Tech in Lubbock and I’ll let you take it from there.
8:35 3. Your wonderful sense of design is not only on display for us to appreciate all over Shreveport-Bossier but you have been the architect on projects all over the world, including designing condominiums in Indonesia and a luxury estate community in China.
You have done a significant amount of travel over the last 15-20 years. When you meet people during your travels and they ask you what it’s like in Shreveport-Bossier, what do you tell them?
10:06 4. Are there particular cities around the country that provide examples to you of what Shreveport-Bossier should aspire to in the future? If so, can you talk about a few of the cities and the characteristics of them you feel we should strive to emulate?
12:46 5. Compared to some other cities around the country, Shreveport-Bossier could be called conservative in its thinking or openness to new ideas or perspectives. Yet, you have seemed to always transcend that, delivering some of the most progressively designed projects our area has seen these last 30 or so years.
What advice or words of wisdom can you offer to our younger creative class – architects or any kind of creative - to make them feel like it is possible to find support for personal and perhaps progressive expression in the Shreveport-Bossier community?
16:08 6. As you look around at our community, what do you think is holding us back?
21:49 7. Lastly, what gives you hope that we might be headed in a good direction as a community?
Thursday Dec 28, 2023
Thursday Dec 28, 2023
Father Raney Johnson, administrator at Cathedral of St John Berchmans and one of the chaplains at Loyola College Prep, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:32 1. On 6/5/21, you were ordained the first native-born priest of the Diocese of Shreveport.
I read where you once said: “Being called ‘Father’ will take some getting used to. When I’m with another priest, and someone else says ‘Father,’ I assume they’re talking to him, not me. But then, it turns out they are talking to me.”
My first question today is, have you gotten used to being called Father yet?
2:33 2. You are the administrator at St John Berchmans and one of the chaplains at Loyola College Prep. Give me a snapshot if you could of what a typical week looks like for you at St Johns and Loyola? How are you working with the students, when are you saying mass for the St Johns congregation and for the Loyola student body, what days and times are you available for confession?
Just give me a sense if you could of what a typical week for Father Raney looks like.
6:55 3. What is the difference between a cathedral and a church?
9:58 4. Share, if you could, any advice or words of wisdom you have for people listening, who are contemplating pursuing the priesthood.
11:34 5. Many cities similar-sized to us have large universities and/or sports teams that bring the community together. We probably will never have either of those things in Shreveport-Bossier. What do you see that can help unify us more in the future as a community or help bring us together more than we are today?
13:26 6. As you look at our community, what are some of the things that concern you the most?
15:46 7. What gives you hope that we’re headed in the right direction?
20:26 8. How many individual Catholic churches do we have in Shreveport's Diocese?
Thursday Dec 21, 2023
Thursday Dec 21, 2023
Entrepreneur and Multiple Local Business Owner Andrew Crawford, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:26 1. Andrew, you are part of the Atkins-Crawford family, one of the most philanthropic and important families in the history of Shreveport. Can you talk some about your family’s history in the community and just some about how you were raised?
6:35 2. You are owner or part owner of 3 Rhino Coffees, Cuban Liquor, Jacquelyn’s Café and the Crawford Design Group. I’ve read or listened to numerous interviews with you and building community is a theme you come back to quite often. How do you explain your commitment to this community and your almost unmatched drive to give back to it and make it better?
10:35 3. Many cities similar-sized to us have large universities and/or sports teams that bring the community together. We probably will never have either of those things in Shreveport-Bossier. What do you see that can help unify us more in the future as a community or help bring us together more than we are today?
12:06 4. As you well know, one of our major issues is the fact that we export so much of our talent. In your opinion, how do we do a better job retaining our best and brightest?
13:28 5. You've been back since 2010. In the thirteen years since you've been back here, do you feel like things are better than when you arrived back home?
14:46 6. As you look around at our community, what are some of the things that concern you the most?
21:28 7. How do we produce more Andrew Crawfords?
24:45 8. What gives you hope that we’re headed in the right direction?
25:56 9. What conversations, if any at this point, are you having with your kids about their city, their community?
Thursday Dec 14, 2023
Thursday Dec 14, 2023
Lieutenant Amy Bowman, Shreveport Police Department, and Doctor James Patterson, Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport, sit down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:27 1. Lieutenant Bowman, you are a Lieutenant in the Shreveport Police Department. Until recently, you were a Community Liaison Officer or CLO, as it is often known.
You once said, “Community policing isn't a unit. It's a concept…We have an opportunity to do so much in the community, and you see the positive as well as the negative. It's the best of the policing world."
Let’s start here today. Talk to me about community policing and why it is such an important aspect in a successful police department.
2:19 2. Dr. Patterson, you serve as the Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine at LSU Health Shreveport. I would like to direct my next couple of questions to you.
My first question is, what defines a crisis?
4:25 3. My next question is, what does Shreveport’s current crisis system look like?
7:04 4. This is going to help with public safety, correct?
8:04 5. I know we're still trying to figure this out because I've participated in some meetings. But is there anything you can tell the public about how potentially this would work? How is there a situation where maybe the police doesn't respond and someone that is more appropriate responds?
10:03 6. And people out there understand for the most part that we have a shortage of police officers, jails are overcrowded. What a lot of people don't know is that we don't have a lot of room in the emergency rooms either. Is that accurate?
11:31 7. I have read that nearly 50% of 911 calls received by Shreveport police are mental health related. How is the Shreveport police better addressing the growing mental health needs of our community?
12:30 8. Is the CIT training (Crisis Intervention Team) for law enforcement somewhat similar to the preparation, for instance, that we're trying to do for our teachers and school staff by training them in ACEs (Adverse Childhood Experiences)?
17:34 9. I believe that the Tommie McGlothen case helped lead to an increased focus on mental health. Can you talk about the case and what it showed the Shreveport Police Department it needed to do differently?
22:46 10. In speaking about mental health, former Police Chief Ben Raymond said, "So we're going to kind of work in conjunction with mental health experts so that we have better encounters with citizens, less violent encounters with citizens and overall just provide better service".
Take me through how you would respond to a call as an officer before this increased focus on mental health and how your approach might look different today?
26:54 11. Dr. Patterson, what are best practices for transforming our current behavioral health crisis care?
29:43 12. Lieutenant Bowman, what has changed and is more challenging today than it was when you first began working with the Shreveport Police Department?
32:16 13. Lastly, Lieutenant Bowman, what is better today than it was when you first started?
Thursday Dec 07, 2023
Thursday Dec 07, 2023
Young Adult Author Kayvion Lewis sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, and Community Activist LeVette Fuller, to answer the following questions:
0:49 1. Kayvion, you are a massive, local success story. The US book rights for your book Thieves’ Gambit were acquired in a seven-figure deal and Lionsgate has acquired the movie rights with Steven Caple Jr, who directed Transformers: Rise of the Beasts and Creed II, attached to direct.
Let’s start here today.
What has it been like to grow up here in Shreveport?
2:15 2. Kayvion, if I am not mistaken, you are 24, a graduate of Caddo Magnet High, and worked at the North Shreveport Branch of Shreve Memorial Library for three years. What have public libraries meant to you? 3:47
3:47 3. Do you feel pressure to be a role model?
4:32 4. I have listened to numerous interviews with you and one thing that becomes quite clear is how driven you are. Can you talk about where that comes from? And, in general, just some about how you were raised?
6:23 5. Did you feel any pressure to maybe reconcile such a nebulous career? A very limited group of people get to actually do what they love, that's creative, and actually get paid to do it. Did you ever feel like there was any push back or resistance from your family about something they might see as impractical?
8:40 6. With all the people you’re meeting, all the new experiences, if you had to drop them into Shreveport, what would you feel like you had to answer for that isn’t ideal?
9:56 7. On the flip side of the previous question, what would you be most proud of?
10:32 8. We struggle here, exporting a lot of our best and brightest. What kind of advice do you have for leadership locally to retain more Kayvion Lewis(es)?
11:52 9. Something we have in common is both of our fathers were police officers. Is there anything in your upbringing, with your father, to make you keenly aware of your situational awareness?
13:50 10. Something we talk a lot about on this podcast is the self-esteem issue that we struggle with as Shreveporters, people just not feeling comfortable or feeling proud to be from here. I don't feel like you have that. If you don't suffer from that, why do think that is? What sort of advice or wisdom do you have for other people to embrace this as their home?
16:32 11. I was very impressed with the character development and the characters that are culturally well developed, in particular your Asian characters. How much of that is because of your travels? And is there anything else that led to that development?
18:15 12. Someone comes to visit you, never been here before, they want to shadow you on a normal Kayvion work day in Shreveport. Take me through what that looks like. I want to see it from the time you wake up to the time you go to bed.
And then they want to do the same, in a typical Kayvion fun day in Shreveport or just a recreational, non-working day. I want you to describe both of those for me from start to finish.
Thursday Nov 09, 2023
Thursday Nov 09, 2023
Angel Martin, Triathlete AND Director of Student Activities and Recreational Sports at LSU Shreveport, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:25 1. Angel, you recently competed in one of the most prestigious and daunting races in the world, The Ironman World Championship held in Hawaii. For those of you unfamiliar with the race, all in one day it consists of the following:
A 2.4 mile swim followed by a 112 mile bike ride followed by a 26.2 mile run
You once said that your goal for this year’s race was to arrive healthy and finish happy.
Tell me about the race and did you accomplish your above goal?
8:15 2. Training for these kinds of races obviously takes incredible discipline and time. Give me an example of what a typical training week looked like for you as you prepared for October’s race.
11:34 3. Even though this podcast is through my work at the YMCA, you are actually the first elite athlete and super marathoner we have interviewed.
You weren’t always a super marathoner, you came from the world of track and field. Specifically, you were an accomplished pole vaulter for Northwestern State University Track and Field.
I’ve read where you said the following about the local fitness community:
“I found my people. My community of like-minded weekend warriors who shared a spirit for pushing our personal limits. Through triathlon I’ve made lifelong friends, many that I consider family.”
For those out there listening talk to me about what the fitness community looks like that we have here and any advice you might have for plugging into it.
14:55 4. You have a full time, important career. You serve as the director of student activities and recreational sports at LSU Shreveport.
Talk to me a little about your role and some of the things the lay person may not know about the different student activities and recreational sports offered at LSUS.
18:26 5. I came across the following quote from you,
“I live life remembering my ‘why’. I have a ‘why’ that applies to my family, my career, and my training. Everyone’s ‘why’ is different, and there are 1000 reasons to say why not, but all we need is to focus on the one reason that keeps us going.”
For those out there who struggle finding their why, is there any advice or suggestions you might offer?
Wednesday Nov 01, 2023
Wednesday Nov 01, 2023
Ryan Williams, Chief Executive Officer and Owner of Seedlinks Behavior Management, LLC, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:29 1. Ryan, you were raised in the MLK community, graduated from Green Oaks and went on to receive your Bachelors and Masters from Grambling and Louisiana Tech.
You are the CEO of several companies and extremely active in our community. Let’s start here today. Talk to me about Seedlinks Behavior Management, your company, and some of the services you offer.
3:42 2. In speaking about mental health emergencies you once said,
“They don’t necessarily need a police officer, they need a doctor, they need a social worker, they need someone to ask NOT what’s wrong with you but how can I help you.”
Talk to me about some of the barriers that exist today in our community for dealing with mental health emergencies.
7:25 3. I’m going to pull another quote from you. You once said,
“If you don’t stop people who are cut from bleeding, they’ll bleed on people that didn’t cut them and I think that’s what we’re dealing with in our community”
Talk to me about the vicious cycle of stress as I have heard you call it.
10:05 4. I have also heard you use the phrase “complete city” before. Tell me what it means to be a complete city and what it will take if we ever want to become one.
14:52 5. Lastly, what gives you hope that this community is headed in the right direction?
Thursday Oct 26, 2023
Thursday Oct 26, 2023
Sophia Herron Sanders, Director of Child Life & Community Engagement at the Gingerbread House, sits down with Jeffrey Goodman, Director of Marketing and Development for the YMCA of Northwest Louisiana, to answer the following questions:
0:34 1. Sophia, you are the director of child life & community engagement and a forensic interviewer at the Gingerbread House, one of our community’s oldest and most important nonprofit organizations.
Opened in 1998, the Gingerbread House Children’s Advocacy Center is focused on child abuse advocacy. You serve children 2 to 18 who have experienced any sort of abuse, sexual or physical, or been a witness to any sort of violent crime.
I read where one of your employees once said each case you see is very different but the trauma is real.
Since most of us are unaware of the process, take me through some of the initial steps of what a case may look like.
5:32 2. The Gingerbread House operates to lessen the trauma experienced by child abuse victims while criminal allegations are being investigated and to provide support for the child victim throughout the investigation, prosecution, and treatment phases of a case.
Sticking with maybe the same case that you outlined above, take me through some of what the next steps will look like after the child has first come to the Gingerbread House, received the forensic interview and the investigation of the case has begun.
9:08 3. You once said,
“An opportunity arose where I could put my talents as a child life specialist here at the Gingerbread House and help other children who had probably gone through something similar or an abusive situation, and I can make them feel as comfortable or as heard as I felt when I was 13.”
Would you mind sharing a little about your first interactions with the Gingerbread House?
15:10 4. Before the Gingerbread House, maybe convictions were around a 5% rate in these kinds of abuse cases. Now with the Gingerbread House's assistance, convictions are around the 95% rate.
Can you talk about this?
19:21 5. There are 13 children’s advocacy centers throughout the state and of the 13 in the nine parish area that you serve, the Gingerbread House has the largest case load in Louisiana. I know the Gingerbread House is heavily involved in prevention education and training. Talk to me about some of the work you do in the area of prevention.
23:31 6. The Gingerbread House is also a critical resource for the families in our community. I read the following:
“When the families first come in for the interview, you can hear the pain in their voices, the hurt, they’re scared, they have no idea what to expect. We’re here to provide that support and that comfort to the families and let them know that everything will be okay.”
Can you talk to me about some of the family advocacy work at the Gingerbread House?