Archive for the ‘04. Poverty: Structural Change’ Category

Community Progress on Poverty, Leadership and Community

Friday, June 27th, 2008

As we reach the end of another phase of the Horizons process that has been focused on capacity building, it is time to evaluate our community’s progress on stated desired outcomes of the Horizon’s project. It has been a busy and interesting process. Sometimes visible progress seems slow in materializing. However, many, many people have been working very hard and though it may not always be readily apparent, Whitehall is making headway.

The Community Development Board is evaluating our progress based on the following:

 

Poverty

Leadership

Community

Building Knowledge and Awareness

1. Building knowledge and awareness about poverty

In what ways has this community’s knowledge about poverty changed?What evidence do you have of this?

Are more community members talking about poverty?

What kind of difference does it make if people in your community better understand the causes of poverty?

Do you see any evidence that the community understands how public policy (local, state, national) can affect poverty?

5. Building knowledge and awareness about leadership

In what ways has your community’s knowledge about leadership changed? How do you know?

Do community members see leadership as an individual or a community issue? How does it differ?

Is there any evidence that more people in the community feel like they can be or are leaders?

How would your community be different if more people think they have a role to play in community leadership?

9. Building knowledge and awareness about community

In what ways is your community more aware of its strengths or assets?

What evidence do you have that people are more aware of all of the diverse people who live in your community?

What difference, if any, does that make?

Have you learned anything about nearby communities like yours? About resources that your community can take advantage of? What difference does that make?

Building Skills and Mobilizing

2. Building skills and mobilizing around poverty

What evidence do you have that people in the community feel like they can do something to reduce poverty?

In what ways have community members made a commitment to reduce poverty?

How does the community plan to make sure the entire community supports its plans and actions to reduce poverty?

In what ways are community members working to assure low income people are involved in a poverty reduction planning and activities?

What partnerships has your community made to support its work on poverty reduction?

6. Building skills and mobilizing around leadership

What changes are you seeing in the way community leadership is exercised or carried out? How is it different?

How has your community changed after LeadershipPlenty® training?

In what ways have leadership skills been improved/enhanced? What is different?

What changes are you seeing in the way leadership is carried out? How decisions get made in your community?

What difference does the involvement of low income people make in community leadership?

10. Building skills and mobilizing around community

How has your community changed since joining Horizons?

Is your community more hopeful about the future? How do you know?

What evidence do you have that community members see poverty as a community issue?

Are more people involved in creating ideas, plans and taking actions on behalf of the community? What difference does this make?

What new partnerships have been created (within your community, or between your community and others)?

Taking Action

3. Taking action on poverty

What kinds of concrete steps are being taken by your community to address poverty?

How did your community make choices about the actions most likely to have an impact on poverty? How are low income involved?

How does your plan for poverty reduction link with existing leaders, groups and organizations?

What other partnership will help your community carry out its poverty reduction plan?

7. Taking action on leadership

How has your community leadership expanded?

What changes have been made in who is now involved in leadership positions?

  • Are more people participating in leadership?
  • Are different kinds of people (representing more sectors or parts of the community) now participating in community leadership?
  • Does the community leadership reflect the community’s demographic profile?
  • Are more low income people participating in community leadership?

What changes have been made in the way your community recruits and trains new leaders? Sustains existing leaders?

11. Taking action on community

In what ways is your community operating or working differently?

In what new or expanded ways are people contributing to your community?

How are low income involved?

What structures have been created or changed that will help your community?

What new partnerships have been created, and what difference have they made for your community?

Have you learned anything about how nearby communities like yours are taking action to reduce poverty? Do you see any opportunities to exchange information or combine efforts in this work?

Sustaining Action/Creating Structural Change

4. Sustaining action and creating structural change around poverty

What structures have been changed that will enable your community to address poverty in the long-term?

How will you monitor and evaluate your community’s progress in reducing poverty?

What community resources will be needed to sustain the community plan to reduce poverty?

What additional resources would make a difference in your community’s work to reduce poverty?

8. Sustaining action and creating structural change around leadership

What is your community’s plan for maintaining a strong community leadership system?

How can your community sustain the changes it has already made in its leadership?

What structural changes have been made in how the community does its work/makes decisions?

What structural changes have been made so that your community leadership sustains partnerships with others?

12. Sustaining action and creating structural change around community

How will your community make decisions about seeking further resources to support its plans?

Is a system in place to seek, receive, monitor and report on new resources to support community work?

Is a system in place to maintain contact with, or to continue to work with other communities?With your Delivery Organization? In other partnerships?

What new resources have been secured to assist the work of the community?

Structural Change in Whitehall

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

The new Community Development Board has been formalized by the Town Council, and seats have been assigned to interested individuals.  Two vacancies remain, one for a planning board member and one more youth position, ideally from the home school community:

Town Councilman: Mac Smith

Chamber of Commerce: Ann Smith

JLDC: Barb Sunderland

JVCF: Terri Marx

Extension Office: Tom Harrington

Whitehall Schools: Holly Harper

Financial Institution: Roy McBride

County Commissioner: Ken Weber

At large member: Sue Patacini

At large member: Glenna Waltee

At large member: Tammy Johnson

Youth member: Taylor McQuesten

Youth member: Josh Liebers    

Whose Blog Is This, Anyway?

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

(And what’s a blog?)

This blog is for the community of Whitehall to use for FREE in whatever ways are useful to the community. That means Animal Shelter, Walking Trail, Whitehall Schools, Town Council, 4-H, Extension Office, Whitehall Weed Project, Friends of the Library, etc. If your group is from the Whitehall Community, (and not making money for anything other than your community) you can use this blog. The space is provided by the Horizons folks, but the blog remains after the Horizons Project ends in June 08.

If you want feedback on an idea, you can get it through the blog. The high school students are aware of the blog and the ways to use it, and the people who check the WSD website are alerted when the blog is updated. Please take advantage of it! We have a counter on this site so we can see how many hits we get, which will give you an idea of how many people are getting your message.

Blogs are a way of communicating, discussing and keeping a record of what’s been said, done and pondered. This blog is set up so that if you post a comment, it will immediately appear for all the world to see. Only a couple people can write posts (what you are reading right now is a post), but we can post what you want us to, or teach you how to do it if you see your group posting regularly.

The Community Development Board is the keeper of the blog, so if you have questions or ideas, please contact community_devel_whitehall@yahoo.org. 

Need Some Help With a Great Idea?

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

community_devel_whitehall@yahoo.com   Contact Us! 

If you are from the Whitehall Community and you have an idea that will make Whitehall a better place to live, work, grow up, or play, please contact the newly formed Community Development Board!  We will put you on the monthly agenda and attempt the following:

connect you with like-minded indivuduals

alert you of any potential resources

inform you of the process that will get your project completed wth the approval of the Town Council

help you in whatever way we can

Community Development Board Approved!

Monday, November 26th, 2007

The Community Development Board under the Whitehall City Council has been approved, and the first meeting is December 6th at 7pm at the Town Hall. If you would like to serve on the board, contact the Town of Whitehall for more information! These meetings are open to the public.

townofwhitehall@yahoo.com

Faith and Community Groups Visioning Session

Friday, November 9th, 2007

How do you see Whitehall now?
Whitehall has a receptiveness for new business and people with disabilities
Whitehall is very comparable to Columbus with the friendliness, culture, appreciation of hard work
and a nice entrance to town
The mine has brought in a fresh perspective

What could be enhanced in Whitehall?
Walking trails and parks
Stronger marketing of our murals and the historical parts of our area with a theme for the
community
Medical facilites in the future for the ambulance, etc.
Expand the library
Make a positive visual image by picking up trash, rewarding people for keeping this up
Ensure that travelers feel safe so people will be more willing to stay
Have Clays in Calico next to the A & W to draw people

What would you like to see in Whitehall?
Mentoring, community projects, and connections to higher education to help children out of
poverty
A plan for growth
More teaching and educational opportunities for young children, because there is a waiting list
now for Headstart, clearly showing we need more opportunities
Daycare with the high school
We need to maintain our identity because our children will want that in the future
A large diversity in kinds of businesses
Early age daycare
Nursing Home
All types of child care!!!

What does Whitehall need to maintain or sustain?

The pride in our community
School system
Swimming pool
The civic groups in town
The fact that Whitehall works well together in the face of tragedy

How is Whitehall doing on the Whitehall 2010 vision?
It is doing well and many improvements have been made, and leadership understands the speed
of small communities.

Teachers Visioning Session

Friday, November 9th, 2007

What do you like about Whitehall?
The location and size of town
The attractive entrance to town
Class size is small
Good community involvement with the ambulance and school
Youth opportunities such as the pool and the skate park
The amount of young families
Strong sense of community
Whitehall is safe for children
The beauty of the area, and the lack of development
The amount of services
Direction of the education system
People are still friendly

What do you want for the future of Whitehall?
Recognition for at risk youth and families
More advertising for the good point we have
Golf course
Recognition of youth interests and desires
After school care with more school programs directed at youth
Daycare!!!
Daycare at the school for minor parents
Vocational opportunities for those not interested in college
Sustainable youth recreational center
Family and parenting workshops and education
Strong enforcement of ordinances and laws
Better weed control
A hospital and more health care beyond the hospital
More small businesses
Downtown beautification with a main attraction
Keeping access to recreational lands
Address the illegal substance issue in Whitehall
Better sidewalks
Walking trails
Nicer rentals that make people wanting to be proud of them

What are the problems with growth in Whitehall?
The class size is growing
There will be safety issues with new people moving in
Subdivision are too expensive for beginning families and retired couples
Enrollments in school will shift
Impact fees will be positive for the school
There is no early child care for learning, let alone basic child care

Ranchers Visioning Session

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

What do you like about Whitehall?
The small size of the town
It is a good place to raise children with a good school system
The swimming pool

What is Whitehall now?
There are no clear signs, making it confusing when going through town
It has a fire department, skate park, etc.
No hiking trail
A bedroom community with businesses coming and going
Litter in town

What do you hope for Whitehall in the future?
Better signs on rural roads
The park to look nice with someone deputized to police it
No more things put in the park
Having our own vegetables and food available
Have conservation easements, etc.
Responsible growth with sensitivity to present land owners, and an area for workforce housing.
Feasible environmental control with more study on how development impacts the community
Growth so that businesses will be able to stay and grow
More services in town
Traffic control and signal lights
More activities for children and teens
Pride in the town
Rewards for picking up trash
A hiking trail network in Whitehall with paving as money is available
The community is more attractive and we keep up what we currently have
Golf course
More outdoor sports
Having businesses in the business park

Vote for Your Vision— Four Drafts

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

Please read the vision statements below, and vote on which you like best. To vote, go to the bottom of this article and click on the light grey “comment” word. A new window will open, and the comment you make will be posted for all the world to see. You have the option of using a name other than your own. We will stop taking comments/votes on November 15th.

The Draft Vision Statements:

A. Whitehall is managing community change by involving citizens in a shared vision of the future. It is a process of developing an inclusive network to increase community capacity that supports a sustainable economy that improves the overall quality of life by promoting innovative approaches to provide a safe living environment with expanded economic opportunities.

B. Whitehall is a vibrant, centrally located rural community embracing change to ensure a safe, high quality of life for all generations. We celebrate our strengths as a diverse sustainable resource-based community of natural beauty nestled in the mountains and will achieve our full potential while maintaining our traditional caring and friendly atmosphere, spiritual strength and positive attitude to provide everyone the opportunity for prosperity.

C. Whitehall is a friendly and caring rural community embracing future change to ensure a high quality of life for all generations. We have a safe and vibrant economy that supports innovative approaches to provide a quality living environment with expanded economic opportunities. Our foundation is embodied in spiritual strength, helping others and maintaining a safe community.

D. Whitehall is an attractive small town that is home to people of all ages who are active in the outdoors and civic life. We are well-known for our unique character, smart planning and ample resources to meet the needs of our residents. Our central location, diverse job and business opportunities and numerous recreational amenities attract our youth back home.

The four draft vision statements listed below were put together by compiling information from:
1. “Whitehall 2010″ visioning work from 1996
2. Horizons Study Circles in 2006
3. 18 community listening session in the fall of 2007
4. Over 100 elementary student drawings
5. Comments that have been posted on this blog site.

Surveys were mailed to all Whitehall residents and all those people who live in a ten mile radius of Whitehall. Those survey results and the comments and votes posted on the blog will be combined to tweak and finalize the vision statement that is brought to the City Council for formal approval.

Cookies and chips snag 57

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

Today we hung out in the new Community Room at the middle school and held mini listening sessions with kids from each High School study hall. In all, 57 kids came down to talk with us throughout the day. It was a fun day – the kids had some great stories and some interesting observations. As you would expect, there was a lot of variation, but there were some common themes and surprising findings.

Many kids said they really liked Whitehall. They like the size of the town, the location, the great hunting and fishing opportunities and all of our great amenities (the pool, skatepark, movie theater, rodeo arena, library etc). Kids liked our restaurants, especially KFC, the Chinese Restaurant and Crzy Bear pizza. Many kids thought that our medical clinic was really a great and they thought the school was great too.

We asked what kids would like to see in Whitehall in the future. Again, not total agreement, but numerous commonalities. Many said that they wanted to retain Whitehall’s small town feel. Like many adults, they also would like to see less litter and more law enforcement. They wanted to see a new park with picnic tables, playground equipment, swings and maybe even a fountain.

We heard an underlying desire for better understanding of youth by adults in town. One kid said “We can’t just hang out because people think we are getting into trouble.” There was a desire for more places to go and things to do for youth, especially at night. One girl said “We can’t even go out at night. You are looked down upon if you are out at night.” Someone else wanted youth representation on the selection and planning of community events so that events better reflected the interests of youth.

Some things surprised us. A number of kids said that they would like to see more diversity in town. With more people from other cultures, and more cultural events in general, we would have more interesting food, interesting people and different music. Diversity and openness to diversity was of interest to many. Another fairly common comment was the desire for more adults in their 20s and 30s living in town.

We asked about the kinds of jobs that kids would like to see here, specifically to replace mining jobs should the mine close. Some said they wanted high paying jobs so that they could come back and live. “You are not going to make a living earning grocery store wages, housing is too expensive.” Several kids mentioned that they would like a hospital – either as another amenity or as a place that they could come back home to and earn a good wage once they are out of school.

Much of the conversation revolved around improved and upgraded recreational opportunities for youth. A very common interest was a better outside basketball court and the ability to get into the bowling ally again. A number of kids mentioned that the rodeo grounds were great, but that they could use some improvements such as bleachers and stalls. Adding a golf course to town was also a fairly frequent wish of youth. Numerous other recreational opportunities were mentioned including more shopping opportunities, lazer tag, paint ball, dirt bike/motorcross etc. Adding an animal shelter was mentioned by almost every group.

More to come on the great conversations we had with the city council, ranchers, senior citizens, middle school student council and 4 H’rs today.