Remove 2022 Remove Development Remove Social Services
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Urbanism obituaries, 2022 | Death clusters of people, buildings and organizations as an indicator of institutional failure

Rebuilding Place in Urban Space

Recently, I thought about demolition of historic buildings in cities like Detroit as deaths, and that they were worthy of a listing in my annual article on "Urbanism-related Obituaries (2022)." Doubling down on place values ," 2022 (this entry has 20+ links to other posts) Deaths of newspapers. Mention this a lot.

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Data-Driven Decision-Making Gets Real

GovLoop

For example, a person must understand a dataset in order to develop a narrative around it that makes the information more digestible to a broader audience. “If For instance, Ariga pointed to the fraud surrounding pandemic- related social services benefits. “I And agencies should encourage professional development.

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How results-driven contracting improved outcomes for Chicago’s most vulnerable: An interview with Lisa Morrison Butler, former Commissioner, Chicago Department of Family and Support Services – Episode #202

Andy Feldman's Gov Innovator podcast

We discuss specific steps in results-driven contracting with Lisa Morrison Butler , the former Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Family and Support Services ( DFSS ) and now the Executive Vice President and Chief Impact Officer at Results for America. Develop a calendar to roll out reform across the department.

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CRA Podcast Episodes

CRA Today

Are you one of the 95 percent of banks that are underreporting community development loans under the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)? SHOWNOTES: Community Development Loans Demystified with Krista Shonk, VP & Senior Counsel, Regulatory Compliance and Policy, Fair & Responsible Banking, ABA.

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In Chicago, Collaboration Makes Early Childcare Better

GovLoop

health, education, home visiting, social services) in a robust, long-term research-practice partnership singularly focused on helping the City achieve its overall vision for a strong early childhood system.” CECIDS will evolve in the coming months.

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Re-Thinking Public Transit as “Micro-CED” with Wilson NC Leading the Way

Community and Economic Development Program of UNC

Local governments commonly provide on-demand services for special populations – for example, older adults or those needing para-transport. Can they keep up with demand for the service? The hope is that access to all sorts of social services can be increased. And it had positive results too.