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USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE An Introduction to the National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) Detroit NNIP Meetings May 11 – 13, 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE An Introduction to the National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) Detroit NNIP Meetings May 11 – 13, 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 USING INFORMATION FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE An Introduction to the National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) Detroit NNIP Meetings May 11 – 13, 2011

2 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership LOCAL PARTNERS IN NNIP The defining functions uBuilding and operating information systems with integrated and recurrently updated data on neighborhood conditions uFacilitating and promoting the direct practical use of data by community and city leaders in community building and local policy making uEmphasizing the use of information to build the capacities of institutions and residents in distressed neighborhoods

3 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership 1) Data and Technology People relate to data analysis at the neighborhood level. 2) Institutions - Long-term and multifaceted interests - Positioned to maintain trust of data providers and users 3) Progressive Mission: Information for Change NNIP Success Requires Three Innovations

4 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership Shared Mission: Information for Change uDemocratizing Information –Facilitate the direct use of data by stakeholders uWork for many clients –Technical assistance to nonprofits –Informing city’s service provision –Market analysis for local retail uBut a central focus on strengthening, empowering low-income neighborhoods uInformation as a bridge for collaboration among residents, public agencies, nonprofits, businesses

5 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership Obligations to the NNIP Partnership uContinue to meet NNIP standards at home –Perform the basic NNIP functions in full uSubmit documentation on accomplishments/lessons –Twice per year – data holdings, analysis, dissemination uParticipate actively in work of the Partnership –Participate in at least one Workgroup –Best efforts to attend all meetings, conferences, workshops –Make presentations to partners, participate in peer learning uPromote NNIP principles –Note and promote affiliation with NNIP and its principles in local work and professional activities

6 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership Milwaukee Collaborating to Reduce Lead Poisoning How does this work in practice?

7 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership Milwaukee: Lead Poisoning uLead-poisoned children have more learning disabilities, require more special education, and are more likely to enter the juvenile justice system uNonprofit Center cleans & geocodes lead tests, then shares data and maps among all partners uCity uses data to target abatement programs, justify funding and gain political support uNonprofits use “walk-lists” to take next steps uCombining the strengths of each partner resulted in large improvements in children’s health

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11 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership Cleveland Real Estate Owned Properties: Holding Lenders Accountable How does this work in practice?

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13 Prices of Distressed Properties Leaving REO, 2005-08 Source: NEO CANDO, Case Western University N=2,941

14 Top Sellers of REO Properties, Cuyahoga County, 2007-2008 Seller Number of REO properties sold, $10,000 or less Percent of total REO properties sold REO properties sold by seller, all prices Percent of REO properties sold for $10,000 or less by seller Deutsche Bank National Trust48618.59%108944.63% Wells Fargo30411.63%77139.43% Fannie Mae2399.14%98224.34% U.S. Bank National Association1947.42%51937.38% LaSalle Bank National Association1626.20%32250.31% Bank of New York1124.28%40427.72% JP Morgan Chase Bank1033.94%29834.56% HSBC Bank752.87%16346.01% Homecoming Financial Network732.79%17342.20% Wachovia Bank562.14%15037.33% Total (top sellers)180469.00%487162.46% Total REO properties sold2614 7799 Source: Cuyahoga County Auditor transfer data from NEO CANDO, Center on Urban Poverty and Community Development, Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University. http://neocando.case.edu

15 Judge Raymond Pianka orders Wells Fargo Bank to bring foreclosed properties up to code in Cleveland

16 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) uCollaborative effort since June 1995 –First meeting of UI and first six local intermediaries to discuss partnership –Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Denver, Oakland, Providence –Several funded in 1980s by Jim Gibson through Rockefeller’s Community Planning and Action Projects uJune 1996 – UI assessment completed, report published, partnership funded

17 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) 1997: Washington, D.C. 1999: Baltimore, Indianapolis, Miami, Milwaukee, Philadelphia 2002: Camden, Chattanooga, Des Moines, Los Angeles, Louisville, New Orleans, Sacramento 2003: Seattle, Hartford 2004/2005: Nashville, Chicago, Columbus, Dallas, Memphis 2006/2007: Grand Rapids, New York, Minneapolis 2008/2009: New Haven, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Detroit 2010: Portland, Kansas City, San Antonio and more to come...

18 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership NNIP Leadership MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT Active Work Groups & Chairs uNNIP Shared Indicators: Charlotte Kahn, Garth Taylor uComprehensive Redesign NNIP Web Site: Kathy Pettit, Steve Spiker, Matt Barry 2011 Executive Committee uDave Bartelt, Philadelphia uPhyllis Betts, Memphis uTim Bray, Dallas uClaudia Coulton, Cleveland uMatthew Kachura, Baltimore uSteve Spiker, Oakland Recently Stepped Down Matt Barry, Denver uMichael Rich, Atlanta uJohn Stern, Nashville uMike Barndt, Milwaukee Garth Taylor, Chicago uCharlie Bruner, Des Moines uSandy Ciske, Seattle

19 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership JOINT WORK PROGRAM – NNIP PARTNERSHIP uAdvance the state of practice 1.Informing local policy initiatives (substantive cross- site work) 2.Developing tools and guides (NNIP Elements of Practice) uBuild/strengthen local capacity 3.Developing capacity in new communities 4.Services to an expanding network (Community of Practice and Partnership) uInfluence national context/partnering 5.Leadership in building the field

20 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership EVOLUTION OF NNIP ACTIVITIES u1999 – cross-site work on welfare reform complete, first guides/reports published u2003 – cross site work on health complete, work begun on elements of practice, expand role of Executive Committee u2005 – discussion/agreement on 2006-2009 work plan and policy manual u2006 – cross-site initiative on parcel-level data systems complete, formal initiation of “work group” agendas u2007 – cross-site work on prisoner reentry complete, school readiness & success project begun u2008 – Launched work on foreclosures, continued work on school readiness and indicators u2009 – Children and foreclosures project begun, exploring “health and neighborhood”

21 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership CURRENT FUNDING Annie E. Casey Foundation - General Support/Meeting Costs - Cross-site school readiness and success initiative (recently) Macarthur Foundation - Support for the Sustainable Communities Initiative - New grant for book on Information and Community Change - Support for Shared Indicators Initiative (with the McKnight Foundation) Open Society Institute - Grant to UI on secondary effects of foreclosure and project to link public school data to foreclosure data in 3 cities (New York, Baltimore and DC)

22 The Urban Institute / National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership Other Things to Know uNNIPNews – general listserve for anyone interested in Neighborhood Indicators uNNIP “Key Partners List” – UI list internal to the network for partner-specific announcements –Often more than one person per site uNNIP Google Group – Partner and UI staff discussion group (by invitation) uEmail Kait at kfranks@urban.org to join NNIPNews or NNIP Google Group.kfranks@urban.org


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