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USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National Conference - May 14, 2005

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Page 1: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

USING INFORMATION FORCOMMUNITY CHANGE

Finding the Datathat Work for Your

Community

Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit,

The Urban InstituteNAPC-CIC National Conference - May 14, 2005

Page 2: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

FOR COMMUNITY INDICATOR SYSTEMSMajor improvement in data availability

Purpose this briefing– Review the new opportunities– Talk about how to take advantage of them

Advances driven by needs for new data to enable interpretation

1. Data for smaller areas (neighborhoods)– Problems unevenly distributed across space– City level averages tell little (misleading)– Need to know where, how much, when

2. Data for larger areas (for comparison)– Don’t know where you stand unless know how relate to others

Page 3: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Three kinds of advances affect LOCAL AND STATE/NATIONAL DATA

Local National

New data setsAutomated records, local agencies

Making data sets (admin.& survey) accessible

Tools (access and manipulate)

GIS technology

Web technology

GIS technology

Web technology

New/stronger

Institutions

Intermediaries

(e.g., NNIP)

Intermediaries

(e.g., Fannie Mae Fdn., NICS)

Page 4: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Local administrative data – power withMULTI-SOURCE, MULTI-TOPIC SYSTEMS

Neighborhood level –social/economic/physical

Births, deaths Crimes TANF, Food Stamps Child care Health Schools Employment

Parcel level – physical/economic

Prop. sales, prices Prop. ownership Code violations Assessed values Tax arrears Vacant/abandoned City/CDC plans

Page 5: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

PARCEL LEVEL DATA -BALTIMORE

Page 6: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

NEIGHBORHOOD DATA -BALTIMORE

Page 7: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

NEIGHBORHOOD PROFILES- PROVIDENCE

Page 8: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Institutions: National Neighborhood Indicators Partners (NNIP)

AtlantaBaltimoreBostonCamdenChattanoogaClevelandDenverDes MoinesHartfordIndianapolisLouisvilleLos AngelesMiami MilwaukeeNashvilleNew OrleansOaklandPhiladelphiaProvidenceSacramentoSeattleWashington, DC

Page 9: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

More cities -- at various stagesBattle Creek CantonChicagoColumbusDallasDetroitGrand RapidsKansas City Las VegasLittle RockMemphis Minneapolis NewarkNew Haven New YorkPhoenixPittsburghPortlandRichmondSan AntonioSt. LouisToledoUticaWinston-Salem

Battle Creek CantonChicagoColumbusDallasDetroitGrand RapidsKansas City Las VegasLittle RockMemphis Minneapolis NewarkNew Haven New YorkPhoenixPittsburghPortlandRichmondSan AntonioSt. LouisToledoUticaWinston-Salem

Page 10: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

NNIP Data Intermediaries:INFORMATION FOR CHANGE

Democratizing Information- Facilitating the direct use of data by stakeholders

not just writing the reports yourself

A central mission — strengthening, empowering low-income neighborhoods

- Partners work for many clients but influence

of this theme evident in all their work

Information as a bridge for collaboration

Page 11: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

NNIP DATA INTERMEDIARIES

NNIP Partners (to date, mostly nonprofits partnering with governments)

- Government agencies (Seattle)

- Community foundations (Atlanta, Boston, Denver)

- University centers (Cleveland, Los Angeles)

- United Way based groups (Des Moines, Indianapolis)

- Nonprofit intermediaries (Chattanooga, Louisville, Miami, Milwaukee, Nashville, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Providence, Sacramento)

- Local Coalitions (Baltimore, Camden, Hartford, Oakland, Washington)

All work by collaborating - With public agencies, nonprofits, businesses

Page 12: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Offer a one-stop-shop for data - Tremendous efficiency for users - Benefits of social infrastructure

Positioned to maintain trust of data providers and users over long term

- Not linked to short term political interest - Care with cleaning and release of data

Are, or can be, locally self sustaining - Fee/project income can cover majority of cost

- But some local general support required

Page 13: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

NNIP – LOCAL APPLICATIONS

Comprehensive Indicator Systems- Only Boston and Baltimore so far- Expect expansion, with links to CIC, KNII

Applications indicators in change initiatives- Welfare-to-work planning (5 cities)

- Prisoner reentry issues (12 cities)

- Neighborhood health studies/programs (5 cities)

- Community development/land market (6 cities)

- Early warning indicators

- Applications with neighborhood residents (use indicators in improvement planning, change external laws/practices)

Page 14: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Recent national initiatives create NEW OPPORTUNITIES

Community Indicators Consortium National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership

(NNIP) National Infrastructure for Community Statistics

(NICS) Key National Indicators Initiative (KNII) Fannie Mae Foundation’s DataPlace

All call for new efforts to BUILD LOCAL CAPACITY– Recognize few cities have systems so far

Page 15: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Building tools around innovations

NNIP Partners’ Data System and DataPlace

Cross-site studies to learn about the dynamics of neighborhood change

Many forms of dissemination

Limited technical assistance to help groups in new cities get started

NNIP: Partnership Agenda

Page 16: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

National Infrastructure for Community Statistics (NICS)

– Goal – accessible, integrated sources of data at all levels

– 30-40 federal agencies, national nonprofits, local stakeholders and foundations coordinated by Brookings

– A forum to exchange data, services and products:

» Data: new sets with community-level information

» Tools: to better access, manage, combine, clean, compare and analysis community statistics

– Began with four workshops on local, state, federal and private stakeholders

– Currently beginning pilot projects and fund raising

Page 17: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Key National Indicators Initiative (KNII)

– Goal – create national indicator system and promote use of indicators at all levels

– Mobilized by GAO, now coordinated by National Academy of Sciences

– Will use available data sources to describe American people, the economy, and the environment

– But also identify gaps for key unanswered questions

– Current funding from Hewlett Foundation; role in system development uncertain

Page 18: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Created in response to request for easy-to-access data from KnowledgePlex users’ survey

Housing and demographic data at geographic scales from the neighborhood to the nation

Dynamic interfaces for producing maps, charts, tables, and statistical profiles

Aids to facilitate data use, such as metadata, analytic guidebooks, and illustrative analyses

Directory of housing data resources on the Web

Fannie Mae Foundation’s DataPlace

Page 19: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

National data –MULTI-SOURCE, MULTI-TOPIC

Neighborhood level –census tracts/zip codes

Decennial Census Mortgage lending Subsidized housing Establishments Income/EITC School characteristics Nonprofit sector

Larger-Area Data – counties, metros, states

Population estimates Amer. Comm. Survey Building Permits Unemployment Home prices Local employment (LED) Income/poverty

Page 20: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National
Page 21: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National
Page 22: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National
Page 23: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National
Page 24: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National
Page 25: USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE Finding the Data that Work for Your Community Tom Kingsley and Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute NAPC-CIC National

Mailing address:Tom Kingsley or Kathy Pettit

National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership

c/o The Urban Institute

2100 M Street NW

Washington, DC 20037

Web site: www.urban.org/nnip Email: [email protected] , [email protected]

Finding the Data that Work for Your Community