Nothing can be counted as progress in a community until the children and youth are well-served and show healthy development and steady, sustained advances in learning. The needs of children and youth in inner-city communities are very great, yet these communities continue to receive too little attention in most places. Even in those urban areas where major revitalization initiatives have been put into place, disinvestment of all kinds—economic, professional, and social—is the pattern, and fractionation across agencies, professional societies, and bureaucracies is pervasive. Human development and education must be key considerations in sustainable economic and community development efforts in our nation's inner-city communities. Leadership in developing an overarching positive "vision" of what can and should be done for children and youth in urban America is critical. We provide a synopsis of the proceedings from a national invitational conference focusing on such a vision. The highly diverse participants at the conference offered views of what