| To combat joblessness and poverty in low-income communities,
multiple organizations must work together with local residents. But productive
collaboration on such complex issues is notoriously difficult to create
and sustain, partly because partners often have different priorities and
agendas. Learning from real-world experiences is critical if this strategy
is to work.
This report provides a detailed look at a major current
collaborative effort: the Jobs-Plus Community Revitalization Initiative
for Public Housing Families (or Jobs-Plus). It shows how the seven cities
in this national demonstration have attempted to build inclusive and productive
partnerships to design, fund, and operate an ambitious, place-based employment
initiative for residents of selected public housing developments. The
lessons drawn have important practical implications for a wide range of
community-building and other initiatives.
Jobs-Plus seeks to boost employment among all working-age
residents through employment and training services, financial work incentives
(especially by limiting rent increases for employed residents), neighbor-to-neighbor
outreach, and other efforts to promote and support work. In each of the
participating cities, selected in 1997, the partners have included the
public housing authority, the welfare department, local workforce development
agencies, resident leaders, and other local organizations. The chosen
cities were Baltimore, Chattanooga, Cleveland, Dayton, Los Angeles, St.
Paul, and Seattle. Cleveland and Seattle are no longer in the demonstration,
but Seattle is still operating its Jobs-Plus program.
Among their key challenges and accomplishments to date
are:
- Collaborative governance and management.
The collaboratives' experiences point to the value of: vesting governing
authority in a core group of active partners while keeping the larger
group in the dialogue in other ways; establishing explicit lines of
authority between the governing partners and program staff; devising
better mechanisms for holding staff - and partners - accountable; and
distinguishing funding and management of the collaborative from that
of the program.
- Collaboration in service delivery. Some
sites have made considerable progress in building an integrated network
of services with close coordination among frontline staff. Such coordination
is critical in order to serve and monitor residents effectively across
a geographically dispersed network of providers. Toward this end, agencies
have modified staff training procedures and expanded their interagency
data-sharing efforts. Moreover, some sites have changed broader agency
policies as a result of their participation in the collaboratives. Most
welfare agencies, for instance, have allowed residents to meet their
welfare-to-work obligations by participating in Jobs-Plus.
- Housing authority adaptations. Jobs-Plus
challenged housing authorities' nearly exclusive focus on housing management
and traditional isolation from the activities of welfare and workforce
development agencies. Examples of important housing authority adaptations
include efforts to: improve internal coordination (e.g., to implement
the rent incentives or link employment assistance to efforts to head
off evictions); "fast track" internal decisionmaking for Jobs-Plus;
transfer Jobs-Plus funds to independent agencies to address procurement
constraints; and permit other partners influence over key hiring decisions,
even for staff on the housing authority's payroll.
- Residents' involvement. Residents have had
a significant influence in shaping the Jobs-Plus programs, despite sometimes
tense relationships between residents and housing authorities. Some
sites have succeeded in reaching beyond traditional leaders in building
the technical capacity of residents to assume specific leadership and
staff roles in the program.
The Jobs-Plus demonstration was conceived by its two
principal funders - the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
and The Rockefeller Foundation - along with MDRC, which is managing and
evaluating the demonstration. It is supported as well by the U.S. Departments
of Health and Human Services and Labor; the Joyce, James Irvine, Surdna,
Northwest Area, Annie E. Casey, Stuart, and Washington Mutual Foundations;
and BP. Future reports will examine the program's rent incentives, residents'
participation in Jobs-Plus, other implementation results, and effects
on employment, welfare, and quality of life. The present report was written
by Linda Y. Kato and James A. Riccio.
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Funders
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, U.S. Department of Labor, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Joyce Foundation, The James Irvine Foundation, Surdna Foundation Inc., Northwest Area Foundation, The Annie E. Casey Foundation, The Stuart Foundation, BP, and Washington Mutual Foundation.
The findings and conclusions presented in this report do not necessarily represent the official positions
or policies of the funders.
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