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Sustainability Through Community Engagement

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Saved by Pahniti Tom Tosuksri
on June 28, 2011 at 2:46:06 pm
 

Description: 

Grassroots digital inclusion efforts are historically very difficult to sustain without strong community partners.   This session features brief presentations on four successful but very diverse approaches to community partnership-building, followed by open discussion of this vital subject.  Who are the key partners in your community and why?  What’s your approach to seeking and managing successful collaborations?  How have your partnerships led to more sustainable strategies for technology adoption and access?  Don't forget how this is done, make your notes below!  
 

Time: Tuesday 1:30-2:30

 

Location: Ballroom 

 

Moderator: Bill Callahan, OneCommunity 

Panelists: Cecilia Garcia, Benton Foundation; Will Reed, Technology for All; Lynda Goff, OneCommunity; Bill Gruber, Time Warner / Cleveland City Council Neighborhoods Technology Fund.

 

Files:immigrant-hlth-media11.pdf

 

Notes:

Partners:

How we think about IMPACT. How we think about ALLIES.

 

Sustainability: where are you going to get more money? How can programs continue past a grant period? Do they need to?

     Organizations aren't able to anchor themselves with a single grant source - have to find numerous avenues for funding.

 

We need the stature, sense of necessity along with the relationships to attract funding - People need to talk to US - not the other way around.

OR, have a user/customer base and market share - they pay you instead of applying for grants/funding (haven't found one that works with CTC's)

 

Cecilia Garcia: Benton Foundation

Executive Director

 

Founded by Chales Benton

 

Sound Partners to Community Health Program

     Developed a complex community collaboration model

 

New Routes to Community Health

     3 year program

     8 sites selected along the country

     LA, Chicago, St Paul, Atlanta, Oakland, Boston, Philadelphia, San Francisco

          1. Has Health Care Provider

          2. Media Broadcasting

          3. Immigrant Population & Representative

 

Lessons Learned

 

Engage community members in all aspects of the porcess

  • Generate priorites for the project
  • Offer opportunities for leadership and risk taking
  • Envision a different future
  • Participating in evaluation of the project

 

Building effective and authentic collaborations in communities - need effort and support. Time is a requisite.

Essential to identifying social capital - sum total of assets in a community including skills and experience of community leaders.

 

Building on existing community strengths

  • Organizations working in the community gain power when they are connected to existing assets
  • Youth act as brokers among languages cultures and service systems
  • Active engagement most often occurs in those places where community members feel comfortable and safe

 

Brought up issues previously unaddressed in the community

Broadband enabled reach to go beyond the immediate community by soliciting outside input

 

Leave communities better equipped than when the project started

  • Foster collaborative leadership within the community
  • Bridge divides and help build social capital in the community
  • Urge others to speak

 

Time, Effort, and Support

     Granters need to pay attention to relationships and the time involved in establishing them

 

Different topic each time a grant was written - e.g Childhood Obesity

 

Common understanding of who the stakeholders are

 

Impact of economic downturn on immigrant organizations

     Adjustments needed to be made - a partner had to back out because of lack of sustainability

     Granters need to not give up - identify a new leader and move forward

 

LA Cares, Chinese Senior Center

 

Will Reed - Technology for All

techforall.org

 

Relationship with Rice University

 

Technology as a tool to empower low income communities

 

Started with

Idea, Donor, and a Partnership with MD Anderson YMCA

 

Enron helped fund - board of directors partnered. 

     Great relationship in terms of funding and staff

 

"You don't always know everything about your partners."

 

Upon collapse, funding was cut immediately.

 

Myth

"If they partner with someone else, their available resources get smaller. Dividing up the money."

 

Reality

"Through partnership, not only is there more capacity, but more knowledge, and larger potential for funds."

 

Who are our partners?

 

Past: SBC, Microsoft, Enron, Compaq, BP, TIF, Technology Opportunities Program (TOP), SmartForce Learning Solutions for the Human Enterprise, CBOS (Community Based Organizations)

 

Tech 4 All was able to help with the transition of Katrina victims to the Astrodome to get internet access and computers for the dislocated people trying to find family members.

Working with partners makes things happen.

 

Present: 70 CBO's, austinfree.net, Rice U, National Science Foundation, BTOP, Methodist Hospital Research Institute, MAIN (Metropolitan Austin Interactive Network), Microsoft, National Institute of Health.

 

Rice U - helped created a public wifi network

Methodist Hosp - device to send HIPA compliant data over the internet for a quick diagnosis based on a few factors

 

Texas Connects Coalition: Austin, Houston, San Antonio, Corpus Christi, Nuevo Larado

 

Future - whatever it holds, CBO's will be part of the equation.

 

What can we do that is mutually beneficial?

How can we, by both working together, get the most of the partnership?

 

Lynda Goff - Winston NET

Model for sustainability

 

IT Director at Wake Forest University

Needed to get fiber from Med School to Undergrad

     Do that, and around the city too! Share with K-12 admin, City Gov't, etc.

 

Generating a non-profit - WinstonNET - to provide broadband internet services to institutions. 

     Decided to charge some nominal fee for usage, to use that funding towards a Digital Inclusion program in the City.

     2001 - created Community Technology Centers.

          Rec Centers, Libraries, Churches, YMCA

          Computers were donated by corporations

 

Through the collaboration of WinstonNET - became a recipient of PCC & SBA programs

LSTA

Digital Bridge Training Program (3 year grant, Volunteer-based)

     County made it a permanent position after measuring success of the program - one coordinator.

 

Community-based Organizations that work together that are thinking about Digital Inclusion

 

Bill Gruber

Shaker Hts - City Attorney

 

Adelphia was a partner and funder.

 

Use regulation and de-regulation to leverage funds for neighborhood tehnology and centers.

 

State level - Utility commissions.

     First - Deregulate Phone Services

     Generated a funding source

 

When Adelphia came to purchase Cable Vision - there was a locally regulated monopoly.

     Idea from Community Members (Bill Callahan) requested funding for neighborhood tech centers.

     $3M to Neighborhood Tech Programs through the Cleveland Foundation

          Board - oversee the grant fund, including Adelphia officials, Cle Foundation, and Cle City Council

     $500K more came along afterwards

 

How to best utilize $3.5M?

     $1M over every 3 years to be spent - building computer centers

               Up to $50K per grant - to create those centers based on geography 

                                                 to support existing centers

                                                  to support programs that help centers ( CAP, Inc, computer refurbisher )

 

Time Warner issued 159 grants over 9 years, $2.7M given out. Average grant of $17K.

 

Should be around $2M left for new centers.

 

Groups that had received funding in the past will continue to be funded as they are invited back to continue to sustain.

 

Questions: 

For Bill

How many centers are still in existence? How have they been evaluated?

- 13 recipients last year - have been around for at least 9 years. Evaluation comes from outside consulting, presentations from the center.

 

For Lynda

Has the fiber been utilized for households?

- Only for institutions at the moment, elected officials blocking additional usage of the fiber optics. 

What about muni wifi?

- Question has been posed but nothing gone through

 

For Cecelia

Correlation with SBA/PCC Programs?

- Deep involvement allows leadership to emerge through the partnership, which can work very well with BTOP programs

 

For Bill

What in particular is being used to help with sustainability for those 13 centers?

- Decrease the operation cost

 

 

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