Case and Materials

Solving Problems Block by Block: Clean Sweeps and Neighborhood Improvement in Buffalo, NY

  • Authors Yamile Nesrala, Lisa C. Cox, Jorrit de Jong, Katharine Robb, Lindsay Woodson
aerial view of houses and trees in a neighborhood

Last Updated

Topics
Collaboration, Data and Evidence, Innovation, Strategic Leadership and Management

Location
Northeast Region, United States

Overview

How can cities build trust in underserved neighborhoods through collaborative action? This case explores the city of Buffalo, New York’s Clean Sweep program, which brings city departments and community partners together to address quality-of-life issues in low-income areas by combining targeted enforcement with assistance and outreach. The case raises questions about how city leaders can navigate the tension between efficiency, effectiveness, and trust building, while balancing organizational capacity and the evolving needs of residents.

Introduction

This case examines Buffalo, New York’s longstanding Clean Sweep program and the challenges it presented to Oswaldo Mestre, Jr., the city’s director of Citizen Services, in moving the initiative forward. For over two decades, the innovative program had brought together staff from various city departments and outside community partners to improve the quality of life in Buffalo’s most distressed neighborhoods. Mestre had been instrumental in the program’s design and management from the beginning.

The case explores how, under Mayor Byron Brown’s and Mestre’s leadership, the neighborhood improvement program grew steadily from six to eight Sweeps per year in 2002, to around thirty-four in 2023; developed a data-driven process to select neighborhoods and improve collaboration among participants; and moved away from an emphasis on law enforcement and towards building resident trust and capacity. In 2022, when a racially-motivated mass shooting killed ten Black residents on the city’s East Side, Mestre and his trusted advisors joined the broader effort to support the community by conducting several consecutive Clean Sweeps in the affected neighborhood. This suggested that the program had evolved from an enforcement-oriented intervention that sometimes intimidated residents to a service-oriented intervention that many residents knew and perhaps even trusted.

As the last Clean Sweep of the 2023 season came to a close, Mestre considered what should come next: Would continuing to grow the Clean Sweeps overtax partners, leading to attrition and lesser impact? Would it compromise the quality of the services and interactions with residents? Was there a way to increase impact while holding steady? Were Clean Sweeps just a Band-Aid disguising ineffectual neighborhood development policies, or a promising approach to neighborhood revitalization?

Learning Objectives

This case study was designed to set the stage for a class discussion on how the use of data, collaboration across silos, and reinventing ways of working can transform city government. Focusing on the themes of collaboration across boundaries and data-informed collaborative innovation, the case explores the conditions under which city departments and external partners can work together and involve residents to solve pressing issues.

The overarching learning objectives are the following:

  • Reflecting on the types of efforts required to deliver on an ambitious key mayoral priority;
  • Recognizing the barriers to collaborative problem-solving; and
  • Identifying leadership levers to transform local government.

 

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The Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative is located at the Bloomberg Center for Cities at Harvard University.