Crossroads
Resource Center Tools for
Community Self Determination
Neighborhood Sustainability Indicators Project (Urban Ecology
Coalition, Minneapolis - 1997 to present)
Coordinated by Crossroads Resource Center
Purposes:
1) To assist Minneapolis neighborhoods/communities that seek to become more
sustainable to develop indicators to assess progress toward their own
sustainability goals.
2) To encourage the City of Minneapolis to adopt resident-defined indicators
of neighborhood sustainability as official neighborhood indicators.
Download your FREE
copy of the Neighborhood Sustainability Indicators Guidebook! [PDF
file]
Click
here to reach Crossroads' Hennepin County Census Data home page
First such effort in the
U.S.! Partners Outcomes What is "Data Poetry?" Next Indicator
Roundtable What Is Sustainable Development? What Are Indicators? Limits to the Usefulness
of Indicators What Are Sustainability
Indicators?
First such effort in the
U.S.! As far as we have been able to learn, the
UEC Sustainability Indicators project is the first effort of its kind in the
country. We appear to be the first U.S. city to invite neighborhood residents to
define their own indicators of neighborhood sustainability for self-assessment
based upon their organization's goals. As of the start of our effort, no city
government had adopted resident-defined indicators for neighborhood
sustainability.
At times, sustainability indicators have been defined by city officials or
professional experts and imposed on neighborhoods from above; or indicators have
been selected at a city or regional level without taking into consideration
specific neighborhood concerns at all; or neighborhood organizations have
measured the success of their own programs without assessing whether the
community itself is getting more sustainable.
Our two neighborhood partners, Seward Neighborhood
Group and Longfellow Community Council, have developed practical sets of 10
"data poetry" indicators in collaboration with our professional staff. These
indicators were defined after addressing the question, "What is our vision of
life in our neighborhood 50-100 years from now?" Also, each indicator integrates
across the "ecology" of issues neighborhoods face day to day.
In the past both of our partners had treated these (e.g., housing, economic
development, public safety and so forth) as separate issues. As a result of this
initiative, both have decided they would like to address these issues in a more
integrated manner. Our indicators are designed to be useful to residents in
developing and implementing long-term neighborhood strategies for
sustainability.
Partners:
Urban Ecology Coalition Crossroads Resource Center
Minnesota Office of Environmental Assistance Dayton Hudson Foundation
Longfellow Community Council Seward Neighborhood Group Mississippi
Corridor Neighborhood Coalition Green Institute - Environment and
Transportation Committee Minneapolis Center for Neighborhoods Lyndale
Neighborhood Association Sustainable Resources Center Neighborhood
Revitalization Program Minneapolis City Planning
Outcomes Working with residents, we selected 104 key indicators of
neighborhood sustainability. These include 10 "Data Poetry" indicators, 25
"Core" indicators, 45 "Background" indicators, and 24 "Deep Sustainability"
indicators. We believe these make an excellent starting set for any community to
consider using, revising them according to local issues, local capacities, and
local needs. In Seward neighborhood, these indicators are being compiled for use
in long-term planning for neighborhood development. Our pioneering indicators
work has informed and inspired similar efforts in Pittsburgh, Oakland, Baltimore,
and Burma.
What is Data Poetry? "Data Poetry" is a term we used for resident-defined indicators
that, like good poems,transformlocal discussions about sustainability,
helping the community move toward a more long term view of sustainability, and
galvanizing effective local action. One excellent example is the Akwesasne
reservation that looks at the balance between the moose and wolf populations.
Since this tribe is highly dependent upon hunting for game, a healthy balance of
moose and wolf means the community is likely to thrive. When things get out of
balance, then disease or pollution may be making life difficult for people as
well as for the animals. To learn more, read Crossroads' Neighborhood
Sustainability Indicators Guidebook.
Next Indicator
Roundtable The Fourth Annual Neighborhood
Sustainability Indicators Roundtable is scheduled for Wednesday, February 15,
2001, in Minneapolis. To read the minutes from previous roundtables, Click here.
What Is Sustainable
Development?
"The long-term social, economic, and environmental health of our community."
-- Sustainable Seattle
Two defining characteristics of sustainability: Interdependent: considers
links among multiple issues Long-term: focuses on more than just the current
generation
"Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability
of future generations to meet their own needs." -- UNCED [Brundtland
report]
"Having your cake and sharing it, too." That is, living well today without
forcing our grandchildren to pick up the tab.
What Are Indicators?
Provide evidence of conditions or problems.
Help us evaluate whether local actions are having the effects desired.
Help us determine where are we are and whether the direction we are headed is
consistent with the goals we set for our community.
Allow us to hold ourselves, public officials, funders and institutions
accountable.
Reporting tool to be used to build consensus on action.
Limits to the Usefulness of
Indicators
Provide a snapshot or glimpse of a larger situation.
Help measure change over time--but don't measure end objectives.
What Are Sustainability
Indicators?
"Urban sustainability indicators can be distinguished from simple environmental,
economic, and social indicators by the fact that they are: integrating, forward
looking, distributional, developed with input from multiple stakeholders in the
community." -- Virginia Maclaren, University of Toronto
Sustainability indicators do not just measure change, but describe the direction
the community is moving in a way people understand.
Setting in motion processes that will help ensure that the goals of the community
will not just be achieved but that they will continue.
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