Univ 291 mercy housing lakefront final presentation!

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A COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH PROJECT BETWEEN LOYOLA UNIVERSITY STUDENTS AND MERCY HOUSING LAKEFRONT’S TENANT LEADERSHIP COMMITTEE Mercy Housing Lakefront

Transcript of Univ 291 mercy housing lakefront final presentation!

A C O L L A B O R A T I V E R E S E A R C H P R O J E C T B E T W E E N L O Y O L A U N I V E R S I T Y S T U D E N T S

A N D M E R C Y H O U S I N G L A K E F R O N T ’ S T E N A N T L E A D E R S H I P C O M M I T T E E

Mercy Housing Lakefront

Background and History

1989 – A group called Lakefront SRO converts a single-room occupancy hotel in the Uptown neighborhood into a 69-unit building.

Provided rooms and social services to people who had long experience of homelessness.

2006 – Lakefront SRO combined with the national organization, Mercy Housing, to become Mercy Housing Lakefront

MHL has 12 permanent supportive housing buildings in Chicago providing 1,307 units to some of the city's most vulnerable residents.

Buildings in Uptown area:

Harold Washington

Major Jenkins/Delmar Apartments

Malden Arms Apartment

Miriam Apartments

Carlton Apartments

Context for Research

Mercy Housing Lakefront is funded by a mix of city, state, and federal housing programs along with private and philanthropic donations.

Major Budget Spending cut proposed in 2011/2012 Illinois State budget

Cuts of up to 8% to Department of Human Services.

Proposed cut would affect the services offered to Mercy Housing Lakefront tenants.

Raises concerns for some of the tenants Could be any other ways to buffer the effects of the proposed

budget cut?

Research Questions

Where are the free food resources in the area available to Uptown Mercy Housing Lakefront tenants?

Has the increase in food prices and decrease in federal assistance strongly impacted the tenants of Mercy Housing Lakefront in Uptown?

How are tenants coping with these changes through their spending habits, grocery store preferences, and food pantry visits?

M A P O F T H E F R E E F O O D R E S O U R C E S A V A I L A B L E T O T H E T E N A N T S L I V I N G I N T H E M E R C Y H O U S I N G L A K E F R O N T B U I L D I N G S I N

T H E U P T O W N N E I G H B O R H O O D

Map

Data Collection & Methodology

Need for knowledge of free food resources established at first tenant meeting

Data Collection Online research Resource from tenant compiled by Alderman James Cappleman’s

46th Ward Community Service Office direct2food.org

Looked for: Eligibility based on boundaries Reliability of information

Recorded: Name, address, hours of operation, telephone numbers, any

additional services

Data Analysis

Geographic Information Systems (GIS) mapping

Visual representation of quantitative and qualitative data

Map is meant to be a resource that is easy for anybody to use

I N O R D E R T O F I N D O U T I F T H E E C O N O M I C D O W N T U R N H A S E F F E C T E D T E N A N T S O F

M E R C Y H O U S I N G L A K E F R O N T ’ S A B I L I T Y T O O B T A I N F O O D

Survey

Survey

Data Collection

30 question survey, split into 4 sections

Neighborhood

Food budget

Food pantries

Grocery stores

Surveyed 50 Mercy Housing Lakefront tenants

Conducted structured interviews following CITI guidelines

Data Collection

Quantitative

Direct questions with a narrow range of answers could be classified along nominal, ordinal, or scaled measurements.

Focus on statistical trends in food budgets at Mercy Housing Lakefront.

Qualitative

Open-ended questions-giving the tenants the opportunity to expand and elaborate on their answers.

Focus on the “Hows?” and “Whys?”

Data Analysis: Quantitative

Social Statistics Software: SPSS 19

Provided a statistical method for analyzing our community collected data and produced averages and proportional statics to support our research question.

Presentation of Data: Quantitative

Presentation of Data: Quantitative

Presentation of Data: Quantitative

Presentation of Data: Quantitative

Presentation of Data: Quantitative

Results and Findings: Quantitative

Statistical trends support food cut backs in the Mercy Housing Lakefront community

Increase in food pantry usage, 67% frequent food pantries in last 6 months.

Almost unanimous agreement that food prices have risen in the last 6 months

Downturn has affected access to quality food resources

Data Analysis: Qualitative

Read through each survey multiple times focusing on one section at a time

Recorded all answers

Grouped responses based on similarities in order to find common themes.

Compiled all responses into a single fluid narrative

Results and Findings: Qualitative

Neighborhood

Pro: Location, Diversity

Con: Gentrification, Homelessness

Changes: Decrease Crime, Increase Jobs

Food Budget

Food Prices Increase

Link card unchanged

General Assistance cut

Food Pantries

Increase in wait time

Only go as a last resort

“Doing the best they can”

Grocery Stores

Shop the sales

Quality vs. Cost

Traveling for savings

Limitations of Research

Spoiled surveys

Misunderstandings and miscommunications

Survey variation

Sample size and population

Implications

The area is becoming gentrified: Housing cost are increasing, cost of living is increasing, a growing backlash against homeless and tenants of supportive housing.

Due to the budget cuts and increasing food prices, tenants at Mercy Housing Lakefront are becoming more depended on resources in the area. Resources which are becoming depleted.

Growing tension between what Uptown is and who lives there and what Uptown is becoming and who wants to live there

Must ensure the food budget crisis does not escalate and advocate for the tenants’ right to food.

Suggestions for Further Research

Originally, “Background and Community Information” section was intended to give context to responses; however, it ended up serving as a general interest and suggestions component to the survey.

Many of our suggestions are based off tenant concerns Safety

Effects on Local Food Pantries

Tenant Diet

Tenant Rights

Community Building

Conclusion

Map of free food resources will be useful for Mercy Housing Lakefront tenants

Survey provided information about issues affect tenants and areas of interest

Entirely collaborative process

This is the tenants’ map, tenants’ survey, and the tenants’ results to use as they want

Strongest and most powerful resource – tenants