
The City of Maricopa was incorporated in 2003. Not long before that, it was farmland at the edge of the Gila Indian Reservation, and before that it was the John Wayne Ranch. During the real estate boom, Maricopa was one of the fastest-growing communities in the country. It was the entrepreneurial dream of two men, real estate developers, who founded El Dorado Holdings to buy the land, lobby the state to get a road built to that connected to I-10, master plan the community, and get homebuilders to build houses.
The builders and the residents of Maricopa awoke from that dream in 2008 to find growth stalled, jobs gone, and home prices under water.
That’s how I came to be sitting in front of sixteen people around a table this morning on the first day of New Venture, the business acceleration program Stealthmode Partners offers entrepreneurs in Arizona when we can get cities to underwrite it. New Venture, developed by the Kauffman Foundation, is a program to get people comfortable with starting a business.
Many of the people looking back at me had moved to Maricopa from California, but one came from New York and one woman was actually born and raised in Maricopa. To a person, they loved the community and wanted to stay.
And so they were gathered to learn how to become self-sufficient by starting their own businesses.
After more than a decade of sitting with these groups, I can predict some things:
1) the group will bond at about week five
2) they will form a trust network and do business with each other whenever they can
3) their ideas won’t necessarily change the world
4) but their ideas will impact their community
5) most of them will remain in business, even though they might not end up with the idea they came in with
6) they won’t generate the traditional jobs statisticians who count “job growth” are looking for
7) most of them will not need “jobs” again
8)many of them will become friends
9)I will hear from some of them again years later with updates and results, and
10) this phenomenon of community-based businesses is little understood by typical economic development professionals, or by traditional funding sources, who don’t pay attention to it. It is best understood by people like Muhamed Yusef, founder of the Grameen Bank, who won a Nobel Prize for deploying it in third world countries. If Arianna Huffington is right, the only way to save America from becoming one of them is to deploy that model in places like Maricopa.
Once in a while, there will be a breakout idea in the group, but I don’t care. It doesn’t take a breakout idea to build a successful business; it takes a person with passion and a connection to customers.
That’s why I love what I do. It is so wonderful to watch people come into their power as business owners that the nature of their businesses isn’t important to me: what’s important is the passion they bring to them. Last year we saw people make a success of a business that cleans up dog poop from residential and commercial landscapes. And we saw a woman put herself into remission from cancer using entirely natural therapies and go on to develop a practice devoted to helping others do the same.
We have seen every industry from construction to containers, from web apps to window treatments. They all can work to build community and bring us out of the Recession.
I can’t wait for next week to see those Maricopa entrepreneurs again. Or the ones in Gilbert . Or the ones in Tempe. Or the ones in cities we haven’t reached yet:-)

Yesterday i went to my primary care doctor. The P.A. said, as she looked at my records, ”you haven’t been here in a while.” I agreed, and the next thing she said was “we have to send you for blood work.” Here, Ididn’t agree. i had blood work in May as part of a visit to another doctor, to whom my primary care doc referred me.
But she didn’t have the results. His office never send them to the referring physician. And neither did the lab, despite the fact that I have been a patient of both the physician and the lab for ten years.
Thankfully, I had them myself. I hauled out my trusty iPad, got on the office’s (unsecured) wireless network, and retrieved them from Google Health, where I participate in an online pilot program to give patients access to their own records. My insurance company, the pharmacy and the lab upload my results for me. I was able to prove the date of the tests and share the results, saving myself some time and the system some money.
That’s the least significant example of why patients need their own records I can think of. Many other examples involve life and death. Patrick Malone, a leading patient safety advocate, writes a newsletter on health affairs, and I’ve lifted this from his latest issue.
Having your own medical records is an essential first step to becoming an informed, proactive patient. It accomplishes a bunch of things all at once.
You become literate in your own body. You learn the lingo your doctors use and you remind yourself of the concerns your doctors have about you that you might rather not think about.
You learn a lot about your doctor. Does he or she have an organized set of records? Do they record what you told them in your sessions with reasonable accuracy and completeness? If the answers are no, you might want to think about getting another doctor.
You can correct errors. Do your records say something about you that’s just plain wrong? Or do they leave out something important, like an allergy to a common drug such as penicillin? Now is your chance to fix things before they have bad consequences.
You can prevent potentially huge failures in communication. People find abnormal test results in their own records with distressing frequency — but usually they don’t look until it’s too late. There are so many test results getting filed into medical records and so many opportunities for miscommunication that you can never assume no news is good news when the doctor’s office has failed to tell you about a test result.
You should especially get a copy of every lab report, X-ray study and specialist’s report. The easiest way is to start asking for these routinely, up front, when you’re about to have the test done. But if you’ve got any kind of complex medical history, go ahead and ask your primary doctor’s office for a copy of your entire chart.
How do you do it?
Just ask. Put it in writing. You have a legal right to your records in all 50 states. Remember, it’s your body, and you can save a life, maybe your own, by reading your own records.
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Although you do have a legal right, according to the law in my state, the lab only has to provide the results to the person who authorized the test. This does put a great deal of power in the hands of that primary care doctor. Make sure you have a good one, and that she cooperates with your desire to have and read your own records. As all these practices go online with medical records during the next few years (my own doctor is doing it now), this should be easier. But as Malone points out, you have to READ your records, too, because often it is still garbage in, garbage out.
