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Welcome to Oakland! The California Endowment
Conference Center October 23-‐24, 2014
May 3, 2013 Expanding Business Engagement Ini2a2ve
US DOL Employment & Training Administra2on
SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES LEARNING NETWORK JOBS & COMMUNITY RESILIENCE CONVENING:MOVING FROM PLANNING TO ACTION"
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SUPPORT TEAM
Vinz Koller Social Policy Research Associates
Sujata Srivastava Strategic Economics
Kris9n Wolff Social Policy Research Associates
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WHERE ARE WE?
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AGENDA
• Thursday Thinking Friday Foray-‐ing
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SPECIAL GUESTS
Kalima Rose PolicyLink
Josh Geyer US HUD
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WHY THIS PANEL
Kris9n Wolff Social Policy Research Associates
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ONE YEAR AGO
Kris9n Wolff Social Policy Research Associates
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“We don’t expect every student to become an Etsy seller, but rather to apply the skills they learn to any entrepreneurial path they want to follow. We do believe, however, along with the City of Rockford, that this will lead to real economic impact.”
“This pilot program has the poten2al to be not just what Mayor Morrissey calls a “pathway to prosperity” for Rockford, but a blueprint for similar programs across the country and around the world.”
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Boston meets Honolulu (& Seattle & Raleigh…)
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BENEFIT CORPORATIONS
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WHAT ABOUT HEALTH AND WEALTH?
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NEW DEVELOPMENTS
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NEW DEVELOPMENTS
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NEW DEVELOPMENTS
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FROM THE MARGINS TO THE CENTER
“Government alone cannot solve society’s biggest problems.” We need a new ecosystem – a collaboration between public and private sectors, citizens, and philanthropists – that creates a market for public value. There’s no blueprint, but innovators, changemakers, hackers, and neighbors are building it everyday.
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IN CASE YOU WERE WONDERING…
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PANELISTS
Dr. Sandra WiD TCE/Healthy Communi2es North
Virginia Hamilton
US Department of Labor
Martha Hernandez FundGoodJobs/ICA Advisors
Jack Madans Code for America
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ABOUT THE PANEL
Dr. Sandra WiD TCE/Healthy Communi2es North
Building Healthy Communities
Does Your Zip Code Matter More Than Your Genetic
Code ?
Why does economic opportunity
matter for health?
Wealth = Health
1. Access to resources to support health 2. Increase our odds of living in a healthy neighborhoods
3. Mediate daily and chronic stress 4. Increase social inclusion and poli9cal power
Individual income and assets matter for health
Cost of Poverty in San Francisco Bay Area
Ø Every additional $12,500 in household income buys one year of life expectancy
Ø (Benefit appears to plateau at household incomes above $150,000)
Ø Similar gradients in Baltimore, NYC, Philadelphia, Hennepin County (Minneapolis-St. Paul), Colorado, California, AND Cuyahoga County ($6304/year of life)
Communities of Opportunity
Good Health Status
• Parks • Safe/Walkable Streets • Grocery Stores and Healthy Foods
• Good Schools • Clean Air • Quality Housing • Public Transporta9on • Good Jobs • Strong Local Businesses
• Financial Ins9tu9ons
• Limited/Unsafe Parks • Crime • Fast Food Restaurants • Liquor Stores • Poor Performing Schools • Pollu9on and Toxic Exposures
• Limited Public Transporta9on
• Absence of High Quality Financial Ins9tu9ons
• Predatory Lenders
Disinvested Communities
Poor Health Status
Neighborhood wealth matters for health.
500
600
700
800
900
1,000
1,100
1,200
1,300
1,400
<10% 10%-19.9% 20%-29.9% 30+% Neighborhood Poverty Group
Ag
e-A
dju
sted
Mor
talit
y R
ate
Philadelphia Cuyahoga County Hennepin County
Bay Area Colorado
Alameda County
California Los Angeles County
Strong Social Gradient in health by neighborhood poverty
Building Healthy Communities
Creating places where
children are healthy, safe and ready to learn.
14 communities taking
action to make where they live healthier
Policy and systems change
BHC Planning Process
“TransformaAve Twelve” Policy Domains
Health Happens in Schools
School Climate
School Wellness
Comprehensive Supports
Health Happens in Neighborhoods
Food Environment and Food Systems
Land Use Planning and An9-‐Displacement
Community and Economic Development
Environmental Health and Jus9ce
Systems That Restore and Heal
Healthy Youth Opportuni9es
Health Happens with Preven2on
Public Health
Health Homes
Health Care Services
Healthy Communities
Resident Power
Leveraging Partnerships
Changing The
Narrative
Youth Leadership
Collaborative Efficacy
POWER
POLICY
NARRATIVE
Advancing Economic Opportunity in BHC
Ø Long-range planning for economic equity l East Salinas
Ø Shaping individual development projects l Richmond
Ø Building the workforce pipeline – focus populations l Alameda County/Oakland
City of Salinas: Economic Element/General Plan
City Leadership Impact
Ø First-ever to incorporate health and racial equity policy priorities
Ø Priorities guided by authentic community engagement process
Ø Economic element will drive the priorities for the next General Plan Update that will include health and racial equity policy priorities
Ø Buy in from unlikely partners (Ag., Growers)
The Opportunity
Ø K-16 Career Pathways for Youth
Ø Youth internship/Employment Ø Transit oriented development Ø Youth small business
enterprise Ø Culturally rooted community
kitchen Ø Business Permit Streamlining Ø Living wage Ø Criminal Justice Reform/
Supportive Mental Health & Healing Re-Entry
Shaping Individual Development Projects
UC Berkeley Richmond Bay Campus
Anticipated Impacts
Ø 133 acres, three quarters the size of the current UC Berkeley main campus
Ø Eventually include 5.4 million square feet of building space
Ø 10,000 staff, faculty, and visitors on an average day
Ø Estimated construction costs over $1 billion
The Opportunity
Ø UC and LBNL have agreed to Community Benefit Agreement to address:
Ø Local Hire Ø Small Business Development/
Procurement Ø Education and Career Pathways
The Challenge
To deepen strategic investments that create more opportunity for Richmond and other East Bay residents… without exacerbating gentrification and displacement
Building the Workforce Pipeline – Focus Populations
21st Health Careers Pathways Expand capacity of California health systems to provide high-quality & cost-effective care by preparing healthcare workforce representative of and with roots in diverse communities – and focused on prevention: Challenge: To develop a seamless health career pathway system that can be leveraged to help youth (especially young men of color) stay on track toward educational advancement and/or living wage careers
Alameda County Boys and Men of
Color Alliance
• Comprehensive Employment & Workforce Initiative for BMoC, especially those with barriers to employment
21st Healthy Careers
Pathways
• Expand capacity of California health and prevention systems by preparing healthcare workforce representatives of and with roots in diverse communities
Alameda County Pipeline
Partnership
• Strengthen regional health career pathway system for underserved youth and increase diversity of the healthcare workforce
Healthy Food
Education
Residents
Parks and
Activities
Housing
Economic Justice
Contact: Sandra Witt, DrPH. Director - Healthy
Communities North
Childcare
Preschool
Transpor-tation
Policy Makers
Jobs
Safe Neighbor-
hoods
Clean Air
Medical Care
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ABOUT THE PANEL
VIRGINIA HAMILTON US Department of Labor
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ABOUT THE PANEL
Martha Hernandez FundGoodJobs/ICA Advisors
Martha Hernandez Managing Director
Talent Management Initiative [email protected]
510-566-0400
Innovating on Good Jobs
Mission
ICA creates good jobs for people with high barriers to employment by
providing small business owners with expert consulting, education &
investment to grow their businesses.
Education
Consulting
Capital
Our Approach
People
Investment
GOOD JOB CREATION
Our Impact: Tactical & Operational
Traditional Approach One (1) Year
4 per Month
5 Staff Members
26% FT Placed
Retention Not Tracked
TMI Approach Six (6) Months
5 per Month
1.3 Staff Members
40% FT Placed
90% Retention
http://www.innercityadvisors.org Code: PElive14
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ABOUT THE PANEL
Jack Madans Code for America
@jackmadans
Good governance and good policy are now inextricably linked to the digital….
Government can work by the people for the people in the 21st century
Governments Companies Communities
Capabilities • Design for and with
people • Listen to the community • Collaborate with others • Default to open • Leverage data for better
decisions • Create greater choice of
tools • Organize for outcomes
codeforamerica.org/focus"
CalFresh (Food Stamps):
Your CalFresh benefits may stop at the end of this month.
Questions?Call (415) 558-1001.
Respect costs less.
[CHECK BALANCE]
[HOLD]
[CLEAN]
Share your ideas: c4a.me/ideas
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THANK YOU PANELISTS !
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QUESTIONS?
• Live audience: Raise hand • Online audience:
- Tweet #SCLNjobs - Use chat
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BREAK
We’ll resume at 11:15 PST