lessons from the united states: what works? by megan a. curran

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Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

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Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran. Introducing: First Focus. Who We Are : First Focus is a bipartisan child advocacy organization committed to making children and their families a priority in federal policy and budget decisions. Based in Washington D.C. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Lessons from the United States:What Works?By Megan A. Curran

Page 2: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Introducing: First Focus

Who We Are: First Focus is a bipartisan child advocacy organization committed to making children and their families a priority in federal policy and budget decisions.

Based in Washington D.C.

Page 3: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Introducing: First Focus

How We Work: •Bipartisanship

•New Partnerships•Research for Results

•Engaging State Leaders

Page 4: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Introducing: InclusionUS

Promoting economic& social inclusion

in the United States.Who We Are: •Team of research and consultancy associates known for int’l expertise, nat’l influence, and local knowledge all with experience in both the US and UK.

Page 5: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Coalition Partners

THE COALITION TO PROMOTE

ACCESS & OPPORTUNITY

Page 6: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Improving Access& Delivery: A Model for Action

Page 7: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

A ‘Special Relationship’:Why the US cares about the UK

• October 2011: UK Child Poverty Study Visit– London & Liverpool– 10 US participants– Highlights from Liverpool:

•Home-Start Wirral•The Tranmere Project•Vauxhall Children’s Centre•Blackburne House•Stockbridge Village•Liverpool City Region Child Poverty & Life Chances

Commission

Page 8: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

The US Story

Impact & aftermath of the (continuing?) recession in the

United States…

Page 9: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

2010: Children with Unemployed Parents

Notes and Sources: Unemployment rates are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Local Area Unemployment (LAU) data base, not seasonally adjusted, (accessed 11/18/2010). Count and percentage of children with unemployed parents based on tabulations of Current Population Survey data, January -September 2010.

Page 10: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

1Poverty Rate is the percent of households with income below the federal poverty line 2Child poverty is the percent of children under 18 years old living in households with income below the federal poverty lineSource: U.S. Census Bureau, 2010 American Community Survey, and 2007 ACS.

The Effect of the Recession on Poverty & Child Poverty

Page 11: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Children Living in Low-Income Households

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, 2011 Annual Supplement, and 2008 Annual Supplement.

Page 12: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Child Poverty in Selected States:2007 & 2010

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2010 American Community Survey, and 2007 ACS.

Page 13: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

2007 & 2010 Poverty Rates: Metro vs. Nonmetro Areas

Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, 2010 American Community Survey and Current Population Survey, 2008 Annual Supplement

Page 14: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Federal Action: White House Neighbourhood Revitalization Initiative

“If poverty is a disease that infects an entire community in the form of unemployment and violence; failing schools and broken homes, then we can’t just treat those symptoms in isolation. We have to heal that entire community. And we have to focus on what actually works.”

– Barack Obama, 18 July 2007

♦♦♦

“[I]n this country, change comes not from the top-down, but from the bottom-up” & “the change we seek…will not come from government alone.” – Barack Obama, 21 June 2008

Page 15: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Federal Action: White House Neighbourhood RevitalizationInitiative

A new approach to federal engagement in neighbourhoods of concentrated poverty:•Interdisciplinary, to address the interconnected problems in distressed neighbourhoods;

•Coordinated, to align the requirements of federal programs so that local communities can more readily braid together different funding streams;

•Place-based, to leverage investments by geographically targeting resources and drawing on the compounding effect of well-coordinated action;

•Data- and results-driven, to facilitate program evaluation, to guide adjustments, and to develop best practices;

•Flexible, to adapt to changing conditions on the ground.

Page 16: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Federal Action: White House Neighbourhood Revitalization Initiative

A focus on 5 initial programmes:

•Promise Neighbourhoods•Choice Neighbourhoods•Byrne Criminal Justice Innovation Programmes•Community Health Centres•Behavioural Health Services

PLUS: White House Social Innovation Fund

Page 17: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Federal Action:Promise Neighbourhoods

Q: What is a Promise Neighbourhood? A: Obama initiative modeled after

New York’s Harlem Children’s Zone.

[Cradle to College to Career & Community]

Page 18: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

DC Promise Neighborhood Initiative: Target Neighborhoods

Page 19: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:DC Promise Neighbourhood Initiative: Planning Components

• 5 key components for DC:– Leadership & Management– Breaking Down Silos– Strategy Development– Community Engagement– Fundraising & Sustainability

*For a detailed description of the above, check out the January 2012 Urban Institute paper: “Bringing Promise to

Washington DC – The DC Promise Neighborhood Initiative” by Jennifer Comey, et al.

www.firstfocus.net

Page 20: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Page 21: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Promise Neighborhoods: Resources

• Harlem Children’s Zone – www.hcz.org

• National Community of Practice– www.promiseneighborhoodsinstitute.org

• DC Promise Neighborhood Initiative– www.dcpni.org

Page 22: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Federal Action: Social Innovation Fund

“Combines public & private resources to grow promising

community-based solutions that have evidence of results.”

3 Areas of Focus:• Economic Opportunity

• Healthy Futures• Youth Development

Page 23: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

State Action: Connecticut Commission on Children

• Bipartisan creation in 1985.• Links government, private, voluntary,

and philanthropic sectors.

• Mission: Elevate issue of children’s needs and services within the state & move from crisis funding and programs to prevention services and outcomes.

Page 24: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

State Action: Connecticut Commission on Children

Areas of Success:

• Prevention

• Leveraging Resources

• Poverty Reduction

• Civic Engagement

Page 25: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Local Action: Facilitating Sustainable Employment

• Employer Resource Networks (ERN)– Developed in response to concerns of

business owners about retentions & skill levels of local workforce.

– Pools small group of mid-size employers in same area/industry to offer training and life skills to entry-level and low-wage workers

– Local Example: Lakeshore Employer Resource Network, Michigan (LERN)

Page 26: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

What Works?

Progress Can Be Made Even in Tough Times

…what we know so far on what works…(in no particular order)

– Leveraging Funding & Pooling Resources– Scaling Up with Flexibility– Leadership– Building Constituencies of Support– Evaluation (with caveats!)

Page 27: Lessons from the United States: What Works? By Megan A. Curran

Children in the Budget:

www.firstfocus.net

Thank You!

For more information: Megan A. Curran

Senior Director, Associate Family Economics & [email protected] [email protected]