Purpose Summit and Pulse NYC Convene Civic Hall for AI and Community Resilience on May 12
A widening disconnect is emerging between how intelligence is being engineered and how communities are actually holding together. Systems are getting faster, sharper, more predictive. Meanwhile, institutions are navigating strain, trust gaps, and uneven infrastructure that does not move at the same pace. Founders are optimizing for scale while cities and public systems are optimizing for continuity. That divergence is becoming a defining pressure point across the startup ecosystem, and it is starting to demand its own room.
On May 12, the Purpose Summit: AI for Community Resilience, presented by Purpose Summit and hosted by Pulse NYC, steps directly into that divide. Set inside Civic Hall in New York, this is not framed as a showcase of capability. It is positioned as a working session on consequence. As part of AI Week New York running May 11–17, the summit sits inside a larger field of innovation while narrowing its lens to one question that carries weight: how AI can support collective action, rebuild critical systems, and strengthen resilience where it actually matters.
The structure reinforces intent. Doors open at 12:30 PM. Programming runs from 1:00 PM to 5:45 PM, followed by a networking reception that extends the conversation beyond the stage. The audience is deliberately cross-sector. Founders, investors, government leaders, academics, and community operators share the same space, not in isolation but in interaction. Civic Hall has long been associated with civic tech and public interest innovation, and that context matters. This is a room designed for friction, where ideas are expected to translate beyond theory.
The speaker group reflects that intersection. Chloe Demrovsky brings experience from global resilience leadership into a conversation grounded in present-day application. Dr. Elizabeth Greig contributes 20 years of disaster response insight, translating real-world stress into frameworks most technology conversations avoid. Alongside them are contributors including Terah Lyons, Mike Pell, Anthony Townsend, Jim Malatras, Derrick H. Lewis, Morris Cox, John Pasmore, Rebecca Darling, Ketaki Sodhi PhD, Mariyam Shamshidova, Brandy Schultz, Nassar Omar, Jay Lundy, Jamil Ellis, Kendra Batchelder PhD, Darren Riley, Stephen Brandt, Devin Abraham, Gregory Ugwi, Javad Mushtaq, Stela Lupushor, Alex Bell, and Ashdeep S. Raj Pannu. This is not a ceremonial lineup. It is a cross-section of operators shaping how the startup ecosystem intersects with policy, infrastructure, and lived experience.
Behind the summit, CIV:LAB, Terreform ONE, and Andus Labs anchor the build. Simon Sylvester-Chaudhuri drives civic collaboration through CIV:LAB, while Mitchell Joachim brings long-horizon design thinking through Terreform ONE. PolicyAlpha joins as a partner, with signals pointing to participation from Microsoft, JPMorganChase, Moody’s Corporation, NAACP Capital, CoreWeave, New York University, Cornell Tech, and MIT Media Lab. The composition of that room matters. It compresses institutional power and emerging builders into the same environment, where alignment is not assumed and has to be worked through.
What takes shape here is a shift in framing. AI is treated less as a standalone market and more as infrastructure that influences capital flow, workforce design, and institutional trust. That repositioning carries implications for how the startup ecosystem evolves, especially as expectations move beyond speed and toward durability. Systems that hold under pressure begin to matter more than systems that simply scale.
Rooms like this tend to register later. The outcomes show up in policy drafts, investment strategies, and product decisions that feel inevitable in hindsight. The startup ecosystem moves quickly, but moments like this introduce a different metric, one that asks not just what can grow, but what can endure under real conditions.









