Introduction
Over the past decade, remarkable advances in the availability and
sophistication of computer technology have enabled many government and private
sector organizations to develop and use timely local-level data for policy
development, planning and program implementation. Where not long ago local
decision-makers relied primarily on federal decennial census data, they now
have access to much more current and reliable information about their
community. Local governments, private civic improvement organizations,
community foundations and private community-based services organizations are
beginning to build and use data sets to create local indicator systems that, in
turn, have become fundamental tools for tracking and understanding community
viability, health and social functioning. Few people doubt the importance of
this movement. Many predict this reliance on local-level information will
increase as data become even more available and as we develop new techniques
for analyzing, interpreting, and using it.
The U. S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) has a keen interest in
partnering with states and localities to further the availability and
appropriate use of local-level data. This compendium is a useful tool for
achieving that goal. This introductory section presents ASPE's objectives in
supporting the development of this document and sketches out the process used
in compiling information for the overall project. It also provides a brief
background discussion about the community-level social indicator movement
including its recent context, the types of organizations that are becoming
involved in it, and the purposes for which they are using indicator
information. This section concludes with details about the format for the
descriptions of the highlighted indicator systems and resource
organizations.
This compendium is a resource for people in local, state and federal
government agencies, private sector organizations and others who are
interesting in learning more about the growing use of community-level social
indicators. It is designed as a user-friendly tool that showcases an
interesting and diverse selection of indicator systems and resources
organizations. It is intended to facilitate information sharing among those who
are doing local indicator work and to provide background information for those
who are new to this rapidly evolving area of interest. By focusing attention
specifically on community-based indicator systems, this publication may also
increase awareness of current data resources and inform discussions of
strategies for improving the availability, quality and applicability of local
indicator data.
This document was developed by a project team including the ASPE Project
Officer, and staff of the Research Triangle Institute in North Carolina, and
Child Trends, Inc. in Washington, D.C. The effort spanned a twelve-month period
beginning in September 1999. The project team cast a wide net in gathering
details about a large number of systems and organizations in order to select
ones included here. It relied heavily on the World Wide Web and electronic
searches of health and social service journal indexes. The project team also
consulted with federal agency representatives and private sector experts for
their input about the most interesting systems and the principal resource
organizations.
The project team used three criteria to narrow the initial list of
systems: 1) the breadth of data sources used for the system; 2) methods used in
compiling data for each indicator in the system; and 3) clarity of available
information about the system (its structure, uses, upkeep, and so forth).
The write-ups about the systems and resource organizations that appear
in later sections of this publication are based principally on information the
project team developed in its initial searches, supplemented with input from
each selected system's sponsoring organization. The sponsoring organizations
provided extensive input to the effort, reviewing descriptive text, confirming
categorizations in the overview matrixes, and providing supplemental
information on data sources for indicators.
As is the case with any cutting-edge and fast evolving field such as the
community-level indicators movement, practitioners use a variety of terms to
describe important components of this work. The following are short definitions
of three terms that are fundamental to the field:
- Social Indicator: A measure reflecting the status of the
population (e.g., age range, income level, education attainment), and
contextual influences (e.g., social, economic, ecological, and political
influences) known to affect well-being at a particular time or over a period of
time.
- Community-Level Social Indicator. A social indicator that can
be collected, reported and meaningfully interpreted for geo-political units
such as neighborhoods, towns or cities, metropolitan areas, or regions.
- Community-Level Social Indicator System. A compilation of
community-level social indicators based on data from one or more sources such
as archival, surveillance, or administrative data developed for other purposes
and, in some cases, other information including data developed from surveys
implemented specifically for tracking local indicators.
Although calls for the use of data on social conditions to inform
program priorities and social goals and policies were heard as early as the
1960s, the use of social indicator data did not truly flourish until the past
decade.1
Three factors have contributed to the tremendous recent growth in the
use of community-level social indicators as tools of governance and advocacy:
the computer information revolution; the devolution of power from the federal
to state and local governments; and a renewed emphasis on service
integration.2
- Advances in Computer Technology. In recent years, computers
have become increasingly powerful, less expensive, and more accessible. At the
same time, accessibility to the Internet and the World Wide Web has enabled the
sharing of large amounts of information. Finally, advances in database
technologies have allowed us to manage information more efficiently then ever
before. These factors have made it possible to organize and share social
indicator data widely and at a reasonable cost, promoting the development of
social indicator databases in more and more communities across the
country.
- Devolution. Devolution is the transfer of control over the
design and implementation of programs from higher to lower levels of
government. During the 1990s there was a substantial power shift from the
federal to the state levels in a number of program areas. Many states have in
turn devolved control over some programs to the local and community levels.
Given more control over policy and program design, and over the choice of
outcomes they hope to affect, local and state governments have increasingly
looked to social indicators for planning purposes.
- Renewed Emphasis on Service Coordination and Service Integration.
Service providers at the local level have long been frustrated by the lack
of coordination across social programs that serve the same clients. There are
many causes for this lack of coordination ranging from local turf issues to
"stove piping", where budget and program requirements from federal, state, and
local agencies effectively limit the ability of programs to coordinate their
activities. Some communities that are working to integrate services use social
indicators to identify areas of overlapping responsibility, create cross-agency
efforts focused on common goals, and track overall performance of the social
services system.
The systems featured in this compendium illustrate the diversity of
organizations that are relying on local-level indicators in their work. They
also highlight the many purposes for which public and private entities use
indicator data. There are three major types of entities using indicators for
policy and program implementation: government agencies, civic betterment
organizations and service providers, and advocacy organizations. Each is
described briefly below.
- Government Agencies. Individual agencies and departments have
long used their own data to plan their work. With increasing pressures to be
accountable for resource allocation decisions and to tackle more complex
issues, local governments are increasingly finding ways to incorporate data
into planning and assessment tasks. The Portland-Multnomah County Benchmarks
project, described on page 65, and the Florida Department of Children and
Families' Community Services Planning Center, described on page 53, have used
indicator data to focus government agency planning on programs that can improve
performance in benchmark areas.
- Civic Betterment Organizations and Service Providers.
Nonprofit citizen groups and service providers have been instrumental in
developing and using social indicator data for their own planning and to
champion their utility in community-wide planning. The United Way of America,
for example, is actively encouraging its local affiliate organizations to use
indicator data for planning and for documenting the impact of their efforts.
The Champlain Initiative described on page 49 is one example of a project that
is following the United Way model. The Quality of Life Indicators Project in
Jacksonville, Florida, outlined on page 33, is another good example of an
indicator system project managed by a private community betterment
organization.
- Advocacy Organizations. State and local-level advocacy groups
are increasingly using social indicator data to identify areas of need,
advocate for their improvement, and hold community leaders accountable. KIDS
COUNT organizations in many states are prime examples of private organizations
that are using indicators to advocate for the well being of children and youth.
The national KIDS COUNT project is highlighted in the resource organizations
section on page 135. California's Children, described on page 89, is another
excellent example of an indicator system that is used for advocacy, as is the
Status of Children in Metro Kansas City project outlined on page 61.
These organizations use indicators to help achieve an increasing number
of objectives including assessing long and short-term needs, tracking progress
in meeting goals, and evaluating their efforts and reflective practice. Some
entities choose to restrict themselves to only one or a few objectives, while
many use local indicator data for multiple purposes.
- Assessing Needs. The most common use for community-level
social indicators is in examining and assessing the unique needs of a place
either at a particular time or over a period of time. Most, if not all, of the
systems featured here are used either directly or indirectly for assessing
needs. A classic example of this is the long-standing effort of state and local
health departments to implement health surveillance systems for monitoring
disease outbreaks and tracking other public health issues. The Health Status
Indicator Project in Erie County, Pennsylvania, highlighted on page 55, is an
example of an indicator system that is used to assess health needs. The Vital
Signs of the New Century Region project, described on page 75, was designed to
assist in a long-term strategic planning process and is another particularly
good example of a system used for needs assessment.
- Tracking Progress toward Goals. Many local government
agencies, community-level service providers, and advocacy organizations monitor
social indicator data to understand whether they are progressing toward their
long-term goals. The Georgia Policy Council for Children's Family Connection
network project, described on page 97, exemplifies such a system. The Quality
of Life Indicators Project in Jacksonville, Florida, described on page 33, is
another good example, as it has used its system for tracking particular
community-level indicators for a number of years.
- Evaluation and Reflective Practice. Formal program
evaluations rarely rely on social indicators, where experimental and
quasi-experimental designs are more common.3
However, more and more programs are beginning to use social indicators as tools
for management and reflective practice. Typically, these programs build
logic models relating program activities to desired outcomes, and develop
theories of change specifying how they expect their program activities
to improve outcomes over time. The connections between activities and outcomes
in these models are based to varying degrees on science, theory, and the common
sense expectations of those involved. This exercise alone tends to promote a
rational and carefully considered planning process and encourages agreement
among the stakeholders in the process. Over time, trends in the indicators are
monitored, and program activities modified in response. Data from the Cleveland
Area Network for Data Organizing (CAN DO), described on page 25, have been used
to support this use of social indicators by the Cleveland Community-Building
Initiative.4
Finally, it is worth noting that there is a great deal of diversity in
the central topical focus of existing community-level indicator systems. The
following five areas are among the most common ones at this time.
- Public Health and Education. The public health field has long
relied on indicator data for planning, resource allocation and assessment of
need. A prime example is the federally organized Healthy People
initiative described on page 167. The education field has also made extensive
use of social indicators to track the overall and individual progress in
student achievement. Nearly every indicator system featured in this compendium
includes some focus on public health and education issues.
- Environment. The environment is a major topic among the
organizations that are using community-level social indicator systems for
planning and advocacy. Hundreds of local-level "sustainable community" projects
have been developed over the past decade, many of which manage a social
indicator system to support their work. The Sustainable Seattle project,
outlined on page 41, is one of the oldest and best known of this group. The
Livable Tucson Vision Program on page 43 is another example. And, the
Redefining Progress resource organization, described on page 151 is a leader in
the field of environmental-focused community indicators.
- Children, Youth and Families. Many public and
private-supported community indicator projects emphasize the well being of
children, youth, and families.5 Several projects
highlighted in this compendium focus on this topic. These include: the
California's Children system on page 89, the Georgia Policy Council for
Children project on page 97, the Status of Children in Metro Kansas City report
card on page 61, and the Annie E. Casey Foundation supported KIDS COUNT
projects described on page 135. KIDS COUNT is particularly interesting in that
it is a network of state-based organizations that regularly release
county-level trend data on child and youth well being.
- Comprehensive Community Change Initiatives. Comprehensive
community change initiatives attempt to rebuild the social and economic fabric
of a community or neighborhood by implementing a holistic strategy involving a
full range of resources. A core philosophical tenant of these projects is that
all aspects of a community are closely inter-related, and therefore, in order
to bring about lasting change, many of those inter-related components must be
tackled simultaneously. A number of these initiatives have commenced over the
past decade, and many of them use indicator concepts in their planning
processes. The Neighborhood Facts project in Denver is one example.
As noted earlier, the notion of assessing and monitoring the
aggregate-level of health and human services in specific communities or
neighborhoods is not new. Social researchers have for decades sought to
identify and measure key characteristics of small areas that distinguish them
from one another with respect to health, safety, and quality of life.
Communities and neighborhoods now routinely use social indicator data to
identify and quantify needs, inform their planning process, and assess progress
in achieving programmatic and policy goals.
The federal government has worked to support the wider development and
application of community indicators through several efforts. The Resource
Organizations section of this compendium describes efforts of a few federal
agencies to create model indicators and provide data that communities can
incorporate into local indicator systems. In addition, ASPE has supported the
growth of existing indicator systems by funding states to incorporate
indicators of youth and child well-being into their state and local planning
processes. Finally, the development of this compendium, and a related workshop
held in June 2000, have fostered communication around the current resources,
benefits and challenges of indicator systems at the community level. Discussion
at the workshop, which included federal agency representative and officials
from agencies and organizations that manage community indicator systems,
identified a range of issues to be addressed as both the technology and
application of indicator data continue to evolve:
- Access to Data. Given the substantial investment required to
define and compile data from various sources, communities are eager for
resources that will provide them with current data on their community, in a
format that can be compared to similar communities. The American Community
Survey described on page 169, and the Community Health Status Indicators
project described on page 163, are two important resources developed by the
federal government. Some communities are also incorporating proprietary data
purchased from market research firms into their indicator systems.
- Data Management. Advances in computer hardware and software
and enhanced communication among computer users via the Internet have greatly
facilitated communities' abilities to compile and store data across agencies
and over years. The investments required are considerable, however, and the
process of negotiating among entities that contribute and use data can be
difficult. Support for collaborative "data warehouses" provided by the National
Neighborhood Indicators Project (described on pages 159) and the Annie E. Casey
Foundation's Making Connections initiative provide important resources
to communities engaging in this effort.
- Definition and Use of Community Indicators. The "art" of
social indicator data -- choosing what is to be measured and how the data will
be used -- is no less challenging than the "science" of data gathering and
management. Many of the community indicator systems described in this
compendium, particularly those developed through inclusive citizen
participation, are the product of extensive discussion of community goals and
priorities. Some in the field have questioned the emphasis on problem-focused
indicators, turning instead toward strength-based approaches such as the Search
Institute's developmental assets, described on page 153. There is also
extensive debate over the appropriate use of community-level indicators to
assess the efforts of programs and agencies that cannot reasonably be expected
to have an impact over the entire community or issue.
- Need for Expertise. As the technology and application of
community indicator systems evolve, so do the demands for skills and expertise
required to develop, maintain and extend them. Many of the leaders of the
indicator systems featured in this compendium have developed their skills on
the job. The resource organizations highlighted in this document can help
individuals and other organizations expand their capabilities. However, using
technologies such as geographic information systems and assessing the
applicability of indicators developed at the state or national level for local
use, will call for new and different skills than those that may be currently in
place.
The following pages include brief write-ups about 43 selected
community-level indicator systems and private and government-supported
organizations that are sources of further information about managing and using
indicator data.
The write-ups about the indicator systems are in the following standard
format:
Background: Information about the sponsoring organization that
created and/or manages the featured indicator system, how and why the system
was developed, current uses of the system, and plans for further development.
- Number and types of indicators: Categories of indicators, as
defined by the sponsoring organization.
- Data sources/requirements: Overview of the types of data used
in the indicator system; how data are compiled, updated, and processed; and
availability of data in print or electronic formats.
- Sponsor: Organization that finances and/or manages the
indicator system.
- Contact information: Name(s) and contact information for more
in-depth information about the indicator system.
- Publications: Title and, in some cases, short descriptions of
relevant publications about the indicator system and how to access either print
or web-based copies.
- List of indicators: A chart showing individual indicators
that comprise the system including information about the data sources for each
indicator. A few of the write-ups describe organizations that are managing data
archives, rather than indicator systems per se. The write-ups about
these organizations do not include an indicator chart.
The descriptions of the featured resource organizations are also in a
standard format:
- Background: Information about the resource organization, its
work in the community-level indicator field, and its plans for further
activities.
- Resource description: The service, publication, or data
offered by the resource organization.
- Contact information: Name(s) and contact information for more
in-depth information about the featured organization.
- Publications: Title and, in some cases, short descriptions of
relevant publications and how to access either print or web-based reports.
Finally, Tables A and B, which are displayed on pages 11 and 13
respectively, provide an overview of the focuses of the indicator systems
highlighted in this publication. Table A lists the topical areas covered by
each system, and Table B displays the types of data used and the geographic
focus of each one.
Table A Topic Areas in Featured Indicator
Systems |
| |
Topic Areas |
| Indicator System |
Children & Family |
Health |
Alcohol/ Tobacco/ Drugs |
Community Development |
Economy |
Environment |
Justice |
Education |
| Community-Wide Systems |
| Anchorage, Alaska - Healthy Anchorage Indicators Project |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
|
| Cleveland, Ohio - Cleveland Area Network for Data Organizing (CAN
DO) |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
| Denver, Colorado - Neighborhood Facts |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
| Jacksonville, Florida - The Quality of Life Indicators Project and
the Community Agenda Indicators Project |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| Seattle, Washington - Sustainable Seattle |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| Tucson, Arizona - The Livable Tucson Vision Program |
X |
|
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| County/Region-Wide Systems |
| Chittenden County, Vermont - Champlain Initiative |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| Dade and Monroe Counties, Florida, - Florida Department of
Children & Families, Community Services Planning Center |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
| Erie County - Health Status Indicator Project |
|
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
|
| Indianapolis, Indiana - Metropolitan Statistical Area - Social
Assets and Vulnerability Indicators Project |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
X |
X |
| Kansas City Metropolitan Area, Kansas and Missouri - The Status of
Children in Metro Kansas City |
X |
X |
|
|
X |
|
X |
X |
| Multnomah County, Oregon - Portland-Multnomah County Benchmarks
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| Pierce County, Washington - Pierce County Quality of Life
Benchmarks |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| Roanoke Area, Virginia - Vital Signs of the New Century Region
|
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
| San Diego County, California - San Diego County Child and Family
Health & Well-being |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
| Texas - Community Health Information System |
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
X |
| State-Wide Systems |
| California - California's Children |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
| Georgia - Georgia Department of Community Affairs Community
Indicators |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
| Georgia - Georgia Policy Council for Children and Family
Connection |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
| Illinois - Illinois Project for Local Assessment of Needs |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
|
X |
| Massachusetts - Massachusetts Community Health Information Profile
|
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
X |
| Michigan - Michigan Critical Health Indicators |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Minnesota - Minnesota Milestones and the Children's Report Card
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
| New York - New York Touchstones |
X |
X |
|
|
X |
|
X |
X |
| Rhode Island - Rhode Island Unified Needs Assessment Project |
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Vermont - Vermont's Framework for Collaboration |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
Table B Types of Data and Smallest Level of
Geographic Aggregation in Featured Indicator Systems |
| |
Data Type |
|
Geographic Aggregation |
| Indicator System |
Primary |
Secondary |
|
Neighborhood |
City or Town |
County |
Region |
| Community-Wide Systems |
| Anchorage, Alaska - Healthy Anchorage Indicators Project |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Cleveland, Ohio - Cleveland Area Network for Data and Organizing
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Denver, Colorado - Neighborhood Facts |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Jacksonville, Florida - The Quality of Life Indicators Project and
the Community Agenda Indicators Project |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Seattle, Washington - Sustainable Seattle |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Tucson, Arizona - The Livable Tucson Vision Program |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| County/Region-Wide Systems |
| Chittenden County, Vermont - Champlain Initiative |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Dade and Monroe Counties, Florida, - Florida Department of
Children & Families, Community Services Planning Center |
X |
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| Erie County - Health Status Indicator Project |
X |
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| Indianapolis, Indiana - Metropolitan Statistical Area - Social
Assets and Vulnerability Indicators Project |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Kansas City Metropolitan Area, Kansas and Missouri - The Status of
Children in Metro Kansas City |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Multnomah County, Oregon - Portland-Multnomah County Benchmarks
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Pierce County, Washington - Pierce County Quality of Life
Benchmarks |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Roanoke Area, Virginia - Vital Signs of the New Century Region
|
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| San Diego County, California - San Diego County Child and Family
Health & Well-being |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Texas - Community Health Information System |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| State-Wide Systems |
| California - California's Children |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| Georgia - Georgia Department of Community Affairs Community
Indicators |
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Georgia - Georgia Policy Council for Children and Family
Connection |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| Illinois - Illinois Project for Local Assessment of Needs |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Massachusetts - Massachusetts Community Health Information Profile
|
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Michigan - Michigan Critical Health Indicators |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| Minnesota - Minnesota Milestones and the Children's Report Card
|
X |
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| New York - New York Touchstones |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
| Rhode Island - Rhode Island Unified Needs Assessment Project |
X |
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
| Vermont - Vermont's Framework for Collaboration |
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
X |
1. Kingsley, G.T., editor (1999). Building and
Operating Neighborhood Indicators Systems Washington, D.C.: The Urban
Institute.
2. This section draws heavily on ideas discussed in
more detail in Brown, B., and Corbett, T. (forthcoming). "Social Indicators and
Public Policy in the Age of Devolution." In Trends in the Well-being of
Children and Youth. Weissberg, R., Weiss, L., Reyes, O., and Walberg, H.
(eds.). Washington, D.C.: Child Welfare League of America.
3. Social indicators have become tools of choice for
some comprehensive community initiatives, where the more traditional evaluation
methodologies are not appropriate. For a detailed discussion see The Aspen
Institute Roundtable on Comprehensive Community Initiatives for Children and
Families. (1998). New Approaches to Evaluating Community Initiatives:
Volume 2, Theory, Measurement, and Analysis. Karen Fullbright Anderson,
Anne Kubisch, and James Connell (eds.). Washington, D.C.: The Aspen
Institute.
4. For a review of this initiative, see Milligan, S.,
Coulton, C., York, P., and Register, R. (1998). "Implementing a Theory of
Change Evaluation in the Cleveland Community-Building Initiative: A Case
Study." In New Approaches to Evaluating Community Initiatives: Volume 2,
Theory, Measurement, and Analysis. Karen Fullbright Anderson, Anne
Kubisch, and James Connell (eds.). Washington, D.C.: The Aspen Institute.
5. For an inventory of these projects, see Child
Trends (2000) Indicators of Child, Youth, and Family Well-being: a Selected
Inventory of Existing Projects. Prepared for the Annie E. Casey Foundation.
Washington, D.C.: Child Trends.