One Hundred Cities. One Goal. Reduce Poverty.. What is poverty?
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Transcript of One Hundred Cities. One Goal. Reduce Poverty.. What is poverty?
One Hundred Cities. One Goal. Reduce Poverty.
What is poverty?
Defining the Issue
United States Canada
• Poverty reduction addressed in federal law
• Poverty defined at federal level
• No federal law addressing poverty• No official definition of poverty
• Federal Poverty Guidelines• Measures absolute need
• Low-Income Cut-Off (LICO)• Measures relative inequality
• $11,170 for one person (2012) • Ranges from $16,038 (rural) - $23,298 (urban) for one person (2011)
• 15.1% (2010) • 9.6% (2009)
Underlying Paradigms
United States Canada
• Poverty is about a lack of self-sufficiency, caused by low income
• Poverty is about social exclusion, caused by low income
• People should strive to be
independent of government
assistance
• It is the responsibility of government to ensure the well-being of all citizens
• Core ideological paradigm is individual responsibility
• Core ideological paradigm is the social contract
• We are successful if we help people become self-sufficient
• We are successful if we build communities where all people have the resources to fully participate
Why Vibrant Communities?
The Impetus
History of Vibrant Communities
Vibrant CommunitiesAn experiment designed to test a specific
way to address the complex realities of poverty through local level action.
Theory of Change:Guided by 5 principles & assisted by extra supports provided by national sponsors –
local organizations and leaders can revitalize poverty reduction efforts in their
communities and generate significantly improved outcomes.
What are the elements of Vibrant Communities?
The Complex Nature of Poverty
“Poverty is a complex issue. There is no single cause and no one solution. Its successful reduction, and ideally its eradication, require a set of linked interventions undertaken by all orders of government working in collaboration with communities.”
Poverty Policy
Sherri Torjman,
Caledon Institute of Social Policy
October 2008
Vibrant Communities Partners
Business• Credibility and voice,
connections, funding and other resources
Nonprofit Organizations• Experience on the ground,
service delivery, ability to ramp up change efforts
Government• Connections to elected
officials, funding and other resources, policy change
Citizens with Lived Experience • Expertise about the issues,
practical and relevant solution, connections to other citizens
Part One – Exploring Principles
The Communities
What is the Impact?
• Increased Community Engagement
• Enhanced Community Innovation
• Policy and Systems Change
• Decreased Poverty
Personal
Assets
PhysicalAssets
Social Assets
HumanAssets
Financial Assets
Inner resources
•Self-awareness•Self-esteem and self-confidence•Hope and motivation
Basic material goods and services
•Emergency supports•Food•Housing•Transportation•Dependent care
Relationships and Networks
•Civic participation•Support networks
Income, Savings and Sources of
Financial Security
•Employment income•Non-employment income•Savings and financial assets•Reduced debt/costs
Skills, knowledge, education & health
•Health•Life skills•Financial literacy•Education•Employment Skills
SustainableLivelihoodsApproach –
Assets Pentagon
What have we learned?
Using a comprehensive, multi-sectorapproach communities can …
1. Raise the profile of poverty.
2. Build a constituency for change.
3. Encourage collaborative ways of working.
4. Begin to shift systems underlying poverty.
5. Generate changes for a large number of people living in poverty.
VC Success Factors
• Influential and credible convener(s)
• Cross-sector, connected leadership table
• Challenging community aspiration
• Clearly articulated purpose and approach
• High degree of resident mobilization
• Research which informs the work
Cities Reducing Poverty – 6 Case Studies
• Get both a bird’s eye and worm’s eye view
• Learn to navigate the local context
• Learn by doing
• Make both vertical and horizontal connections
• Be persistent and have appropriate expectations
Cities Reducing Poverty
Tamarack, October 2011.
• Get both a bird’s eye and worm’s eye view
• Learn to navigate the local context
• Learn by doing
• Make both vertical and horizontal connections
• Be persistent and have appropriate expectations
Cities Reducing Poverty
Tamarack, October 2011.
Comprehensive Strategies
Strategy Advantages Limitations Enabling Conditions
Thousand Seeds
• Addresses multiple factors
• Mobilizes broad support
• Scale of activities overwhelming
• Difficult to ensure synergies
• Constellation governance
Pool Ball • Easy to manage• Quick results
• Weak effects •Ripple effects not always known
• Focus on high leverage cause and effects
Weaving • Addresses a network of cause and effects
• May not impact a large number of people
• Learn by doing approach
Hybrid • Weaves together and leverages all three strategies
• Difficult to manage and sustain
• Clear framework for change
• Strong leadership
Now…What’s Next?
The Landscape has Changed
• Municipally: 84 collaborative poverty reduction roundtables have connected to Vibrant Communities
• Provincially: 11 provinces and territories have or are developing poverty reduction strategies
• Federally: A new all-party Roundtable has been formed to focus on poverty, the Government of Canada – HUMA committee, Senate Roundtable on Cities and Federation of Canadian Municipalities have identified poverty as a critical issue
Our Aspiration:
Imagine…100 cities reducing poverty
TOGETHER
Vision: To create Vibrant Communities by significantly reducing the human, social and economic costs of poverty for Canadian cities.
Mission: We will create a connected learning community of 100 Canadian cities with multi-sector roundtables addressing poverty reduction.
Goal: We envision aligned poverty reduction strategies in cities, provinces and the federal government resulting in reduced poverty for 1 million Canadians.
Cities Reducing Poverty – Learning Community Priority Actions:
Learning Community DevelopmentCity Charter and Business Case
Aligned Policy Agenda Poverty Summit
Common Evaluation Framework
Want to Learn More?Email now
Get an auto reply with four ways to stay involved and easy to sign up links.
Join our Learning Community
www.vibrantcanada.ca
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