HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgenda - Mail Packet - 1/26/2021 - City Council Ad Hoc Community Impact Committee Agenda - January 25, 2021City Manager’s Office
City Hall
300 LaPorte Ave.
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970.221.6505
970.224.6107 - fax
fcgov.com
A GENDA
City Council Ad Hoc Community Impact Committee
Monday, January 25, 2021, 3:00-5:00 p.m.
Location: Virtual
Public is encouraged to listen through Zoom
https://zoom.us/j/93008063610
Or Telephone: Dial: (253) 215-8782 or (346) 248-7799
Webinar ID: 930 0806 3610
Committee Members: Susan Gutowsky, District 1
Julie Pignataro, District 2
Emily Gorgol, District 6
Committee Contact: Ginny Sawyer, gsawyer@fcgov.com
Note: Per Ord. No 079, the Committee Chair, may in consultation with the City Manager and City
Attorney, determine that meeting in person would not be prudent for some or all persons due to a public
health emergency or other unforeseen circumstance affecting the city. As well, an individual Committee
member may request to participate remotely even if the rest of the Committee will be there if the member
has a concern about their or others’ health or safety by notifying the Clerk at least three hours in advance
of the meeting.
1.Call meeting to Order
2.Approval of November 23, 2020 minutes
3.Agenda Review
4.Discussion Items
a.Equity Indicator Follow-up- Criminal Justice and Civic Engagement Focus
i.Presentation by Janet Freeman, Kate Jassin, Victoria Lawson, Sukhmani
Singh
b.Next meeting agenda
5.Other Business
6.Next meetings
February 22
March 22
April 26
There are three or more members of City Council that may attend this meeting. While no formal action will
be taken by the Council at this meeting, the discussion of public business will occur, and the meeting is
open to the public via Zoom.
Attachments:
1.On-line Article: Governing for Equity: Implementing an Equity Lens in Local Government
https://icma.org/governing-equity-implementing-equity-lens-local-
government?_zs=M0Ogh1&_zl=S8aL7
2.GARE Logic Model
City Manager’s Office
City Hall
300 LaPorte Ave.
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970.221.6505
970.224.6107 - fax
fcgov.com
Ad Hoc Community Impact Committee
Meeting Minutes
Monday, November 23, 2020, 3:00-5:00pm
Councilmembers present: Susan Gutowsky, Julie Pignataro, Emily Gorgol
Staff: Ginny Sawyer, Darin Atteberry, Kelly DiMartino, Carrie Daggett, Jackie Kozak-Thiel, Jeff Swoboda
1.Meeting called to order and October 26, 2020 minutes approved.
2.Discussion Items:
a.Ideas and Learnings around Equity Offices and Programming
Panel Discussion featuring:
Manisha Paudel, Equity Coordinator, Des Moines, Iowa
Nia Davis, Human Relations Analyst, Asheville, North Carolina
Lucas Smiraldo, Policy Analyst, Tacoma, Washington
General Program/Office Overview:
Iowa
Member of GARE for 2-years. Focusing on a 3-year transformation of looking inward first. They do not
work directly with the public. Utilizing a staff steering committee that represents all City departments.
Moving to their CMO office.
North Carolina
Office established in 2016 under the CMO. Elected officials have made equity a priority. Biggest win is
normalization of equity conversations. IT employees spend 3 hours a week on equity work. Early
adopters…big asset.
Washington
Office/work started for 5-years ago. Big wins: GARE cohorts, regional effort and across the City. Every
department creates a racial equity plan…with metrics and office supports.. Built in accountability.
Learnings/Challenges:
Race can be an uncomfortable term. Use equity more frequently.
It is a collective effort.
There will be a lot unexpected outcomes.
Unrealistic expectation that an office will make swift change.
Lot of pressure when mistakes are made.
Opportunity for growth but not easy.
People are at different levels of understanding.
Office development requires over-communication with the community.
Be intentional with the information collected and actions taken. Transparency matters.
Equity in policies, practices, and procedures flows from top down. Passion for equity starts at the
top.
Things will not turn around quickly and the call for immediate results will come.
Be comfortable with the uncertainty both internal and external efforts.
Community content experts…pay for the expertise.
Accountability measures need to be built in from the start.
Recommendations:
Recognize limitations of a small office. More resources may be required.
Incorporate the work across the organization…rather than building a big equity office.
Ask the “why?” why are we even doing this? Spend a 3-4 hour session to dive in. Needs to be
more than it’s the right thing to do or we want to be good.
Do a salary comparison.
Find the shared value and articulate it. Leadership support is crucial. Keep equity Office close to
leadership/to you. Leadership should be able to answer questions.
Set expectations. Recognize that problems weren’t created over night and they won’t be solved
overnight.
Not just one office job…need all employees.
Don’t pay for studies if you know the answer.
Give tons of grace to whomever leads the charge.
Process will take years. Be comfortable with the uncertainty both internal and external efforts.
Discussion:
Thank you.
Q: Was funding hard to establish?
A: Tacoma repurposed other departments. Pandemic has helped proved the worth. Iowa- moving and
becoming it’s own division. Internal equity assessments. 3-years ago probably would not have been a
successful effort. City-wide training adding costs.
Q: What does external work look like?
A: Nia: positions focused on community engagement. Position created to be outward focused.
Reimagining Policing sessions. Working with Boards and Commissions…human relations, task force,
grant from GARE for non-profit partners. Tacoma: not comprehensive. 60% inward…maybe 30 %
outward. Liaison to Commissions. They all want to be a platform for community feedback. Iowa: Trying to
show up at other City meetings to be present.
b. Presentation of Peer City Research and Current Exploration of an Equity Office in Fort
Collins
Discussion:
Excitement that this will launch.
Ah-ha moment – SSA totally busy with Council priorities. May involve restructuring.
We’ve embedded SSA into the City…apply it to equity.
Is it detrimental to partially staff? Or is any start a good start? Manisha: Don’t underpay the staff.
Think in terms of investment. Maybe start with a visioning process. First 3-years (normalizing
phase) lots of work and very challenging. Nia: Burnout is an issue…should be everyone’s work
but work will fall to who is hired. Invest in who you hire and set them up for success. Lucas: Level
of need may not be obvious until the work starts. Explore the level of need as you establish the
office. Importance of a symbolic statement…can’t pay less than other executive positions.
Timeline for next steps? Want to be thoughtful and timely. Need a director level recruitment
which takes 3-6 months. Need all Council on board. Next year at this time will have an office.
How will equity Indicators play into the office? How do we prioritize? Identify and establish
accountability. What needle do we want to move?
Next meetings
January 25
February 22
March 22
April 26
Council Ad-Hoc Committee
•Established by Resolution in June 2020.
•Overall purpose: Ensuring that the City is creating an environment
that provides safety and equity for all residents.
•Committee focus has included emphasis on community
engagement, budget, program development, and police services.
Update on the City of
Fort Collins’ Equity Indicators
Janet Freeman, Kate Jassin, Victoria Lawson, Sukhmani Singh
Presentation Flow
Strategic Alignment & Definitions
Project Objectives
Equity Indicators: Framework
Criminal Justice
Civic Engagement
Integration and Next Steps
3
Strategic Alignment
STRATEGIC ALIGNMENT
City Plan
Neighborhood Livability & Social Health 1.4
Neighborhood Livability & Social Health 1.3
High Performing Government 7.3
SSD Strategic Plan
Council Priorities
BUDGET
Revision Offer:$60,000
Donated Funds: $30,000
4
Council Priorities
DEVELOP
EQUITY
INDICATORS
APPLY EQUITY
LENS
GARE
Framework
6
Equity Indicators:
Project Objectives
7
Track
Disparities in outcomes faced by
community members most likely
to experience inequality
Support
Data-informed policy-making
Increase
Transparency and accountability
so impacted communities can
co-create/lead solutions and
equity work can be better
prioritized at both an
institutional and systemic level
Community engagement happens at every step
Gather data Analyze data & develop strategies
Implement solutions
Evaluate and communicate the impact
8
Set vision
Gather Data &
Disaggregate
by
Race/Ethnicity
Analyze Root
Causes
Develop
Strategies &
Implement
Solutions
Evaluate and
Communicate
Impact
Strategic
Objective
NLSH 1.4
revised 2020
We are
here
Equity Lens Prework:
Establish Disparity Baseline
Indicators are ways to assess and measure difficult-to-define concepts
•Allow us to measure progress in achieving goals related to these concepts
Equity Indicators are ways to assess and measure disparities on those
concepts
AgendaEstablishing Equity Indicators
Concept Indicators Equity Indicators
Criminal Justice Incarceration rates Disparities in incarceration rates for
different racial and ethnic groups
Economic Opportunity Income Disparities in income for different
genders
AgendaProcess of Developing Equity Indicators
Background
Research
Data
Diagnostic
City and
County Staff
Discussions
Preliminary
Landscape
Analysis
Community
Input
Final
Landscape
Analysis and
Equity
Indicators
Partnership with Internal City Equity Team
We are here
AgendaExploring Differences Between Groups
1.Identify percentage, rate, or rating for outcome or perception for each
group and overall [focus on race and ethnicity]
2.Compare the outcome or perception for each group to the overall outcome
or perception
a)More negative outcome/perception = negative number
b)More positive outcome/perception = positive number
3.Establish whether there is a meaningful difference in outcomes or
perceptions between groups*
a)Statistical significance testing (if possible based on data available)
b)Comparison to set threshold
*Note that both approaches used to establish differences have limitations
AgendaData Sources for Preliminary Landscape Analysis
Existing reports
•Ex: 2020 Sustainability Gaps Analysis, Feasibility Study for Inclusionary Housing
Publicly available data or dashboards from local sources
•Ex: Colorado Department of Education, Fort Collins Police Services Transparency Data
Publicly available local data from national sources
•Ex: American Community Survey 5-year estimate, Bureau of Justice Statistics Annual Survey
of Jails
Data provided by City/County departments
•Ex: Fort Collins Community Survey, Larimer County Community Health Survey (Health
District)
AgendaKey Domains
Domain % of Measures Allowing For
Race/Ethnicity Comparisons
Of Those, % With
Racial/Ethnic Differences
City Services 61%55%
Civic Engagement 86%67%
Criminal Justice & Public Safety 100%100%
Economic Opportunity 88%60%
Education 100%73%
Environmental Justice 100%40%
Housing 100%56%
Public Health 100%24%
Social Inclusion 88%43%
Transportation 100%33%
AgendaFindings Across Areas
15%
0%
26%
8%9%9%
0%2%0%
-61%
-10%
-43%
-31%
-38%
0%
-37%
-70%
-60%
-50%
-40%
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
Non-Hispanic
White
Hispanic/Latinx Asian or Pacific
Islander
Black Native American Other Non-Hispanic,
Non-White
Hispanic and/or
Other Race
AgendaCriminal Justice and Public Safety
Law Enforcement
Criminal arrests/citations
Traffic citations
Use of force in the population
Use of force for those arrested/cited
Representation among police officers
Police service quality ratings
Incarceration and Community
Supervision
Jail incarceration
Probation
Perceptions of Safety Neighborhood safety ratings
*Racial/ethnic differences across all measures
AgendaCriminal Justice and Public Safety
Criminal arrests/
citations:
35 in 1,000 in Fort
Collins
•36 in 1,000 whites
•7 in 1,000 Asians
•168 in 1,000 Blacks
•37 in 1,000 Native Americans
Traffic citations:
45 in 1,000 in Fort
Collins
•45 in 1,000 whites
•10 in 1,000 Asians
•87 in 1,000 Blacks
•10 in 1,000 Native Americans
AgendaCriminal Justice and Public Safety
Use of force in the
general
population:
1 in 1,000 in Fort
Collins
•1 in 1,000 whites
•1 in 1,000 Hispanic/Latinx
•<1 in 1,000 Asians
•8 in 1,000 Blacks
•2 in 1,000 Native Americans
Use of force for
those receiving a
criminal arrest/
citation:
22 in 1,000 in Fort
Collins
•19 in 1,000 whites
•26 in 1,000 Asians
•43 in 1,000 Blacks
•46 in 1,000 Native Americans
AgendaCriminal Justice and Public Safety
Jail
incarceration:
16 in 10,000 in
Larimer County
•13 in 10,000 whites
•36 in 10,000 Hispanic/Latinx
•6 in 10,000 Asians
•85 in 10,000 Blacks
•12 in 10,000 Native Americans
Perceptions of
neighborhood
safety (0-100):
80 overall rating
•80 for whites
•75 for Hispanic and/or other race
AgendaCivic Engagement
Engagement with Government
Voter turnout (note: income only)
Representation on Boards and Commissions
Attending government events
Trust in government
Engagement with Community
Community group membership
Volunteering
Opportunities to volunteer
*Racial/ethnic or income-based differences on five of seven measures
AgendaCivic Engagement
General election voter
turnout:
78 in 100 in Fort
Collins
•69 in 100 from lowest income group
•76 in 100 from second-lowest income group
•79 in 100 from middle income group
•82 in 100 from the second-highest income group
•86 in 100 from the highest income group
Attendance at
government events in
Fort Collins:
27 in 100 in Fort
Collins
•28 in 100 of whites
•24 in 100 Hispanic and/or other race
AgendaCivic Engagement
Representation rate
on Boards and
Commissions:
8 in 10,000 in Fort
Collins
•9 in 10,000 whites
•2 in 10,000 Hispanic/Latinx
•4 in 10,000 Asians
•5 in 10,000 multiple race
•0 in 10,000 other race
Percentage who
report that they
trust the local
government:
62 in 100 in Fort
Collins
•67 in 100 non-Hispanic whites
•38 in 100 Hispanic/Latinx
•48 in 100 non-Hispanic non-white or multiple
AgendaCivic Engagement
Perceptions of
opportunities to
volunteer (0-100):
69 overall rating
•71 for whites
•63 for Hispanic and/or other race
Community group
membership in Fort
Collins:
45 in 100 in Fort
Collins
•47 in 100 non-Hispanic whites
•27 in 100 Hispanic/Latinx
•52 in 100 non-Hispanic non-white or multiple
AgendaSelecting Equity Indicators
Community
and other
stakeholder
input
Data
availability and
interpretability
Equity
Indicators
across 10
domains
Integration & Next Steps
Project managers & service area directors/department heads can examine disparity gaps
•Work with community to identify root causes & develop interventions
Benchmarking to comparison cities
Integrating into budget process
•Increased transparency on overall investments and impacts on equity gaps
Dashboard
•Begin in Q1 and further build out in alignment with new Equity Office
•Include indicators aligned to City efforts to mitigate institutional and systemic impacts
Committee Q&A
25
•What questions does the Committee have?
•What feedback does the Committee have on the Equity Indicators
project?
GARE Logic Model Normalize Organize Operationalize CONDITIONS that affect implementation of actions in each phase • Clear vision & mission about RE
• Improved understanding of
govt’s role in addressing RE
among core team
• Improved knowledge of RE
concepts among core team
• Identification of opportunities
to integrate RE into routine
operations
• Improved capacity of local
gov’t to implement RE Action
Plan (knowledgeable & skilled
teams within department)
• Groundwork established for
inclusive engagement
• Accountability mechanisms
begin to be established
Developing stage………
• Improved knowledge of RE
concepts among gov. employees
(ability to identify root causes)
• Increased skills to deal with and
communicate about RE among
government employees
• RE is integrated into routine
operations
• A cadre of peer trainers
• Partnerships are developed
across departments to address
cross-cutting issues
• Partnerships with CBOs to
address RE
• Input is sought from
communities
Across departments,
accountability mechanisms are in
place to increase and sustain RE
focus; to community outcomes
are identified
Implementing stage……… Sustaining stage………
• Mechanisms are in place for continued and
ongoing staff orientation and professional
development about RE
• Mechanisms to track and gauge impact of RE
efforts
• Mechanisms to collect data about RE from
community
• Cultivated career pipelines to develop future
candidates from communities of color
• Racial demographics of employees reflect
community demographics
• Partnership development (internal and external) is
ongoing
• Improved community capacity to address structural
racism
• Leadership builds & shares power with community
In all departments and local government as a whole:
• Implementation of RE Tool
• Reputation for addressing RE
• Data-informed decision-making processes
• Community engagement mechanisms in place
• Work to improve community outcomes IMPACT Moving the needle Having impact that decreases racial inequity and improve success for all groups CONDITIONS that affect outcomes in your city and/or region (e.g., political landscape, community incidents, local and state economy)
• Establish clear vision and mission
• Develop & deliver introductory RE
training curriculum
• Develop a cadre of skilled internal
trainers
• Create additional RE training &
modules
• Conduct biennial employee survey
on RE
Actions
• Create RE organizational structure,
including Action Teams within and
between depts and with community
• Conduct community RE survey
• Establish RE fund to build capacity
to address structural racism
• Convene regional collaborations
• Develop RE Plans within & across
depts and in four areas (workforce,
contracting, community
engagement, communications)
• Develop RE Plans with community
and external partners
Outcomes: