IBM Report On Rochester Poverty
IBM Report On Rochester Poverty
IBM Report On Rochester Poverty
Contents
1. Executive summary
2. Introduction
A. The Smarter Cities Challenge
B. The challenge
3. Context, findings, overview and roadmap
A. Context and findings
B. Overview of recommendations
C. Roadmap
4. Recommendations
Recommendation 1: Align services
Recommendation 2: Shift to outcome-based metrics
Recommendation 3: Introduce an incentives program
Recommendation 4: Create a governance framework
Recommendation 5: Implement a Change Management Plan
Recommendation 6: Develop unified eligibility criteria
Recommendation 7: Create the Urban Village
Recommendation 8: Foster neighborhood healing
Recommendation 9: Leverage neighborhood leadership
Recommendation 10: Launch a social-engagement program
Recommendation 11: Manage data as an asset
Recommendation 12: Design for proactive and preventive actions
Recommendation 13: Establish a single view of the person
5. Conclusion
6. Appendix
A. Acknowledgments
B. Team biographies
C. Cause-and-effect diagram
D. Design principles and capabilities
E. Extension of Recommendation 2: Shift to outcome-based metrics
F. References
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1. Executive summary
Introduction
The City of Rochester, New York, USA, was one of 16 cities selected
to receive a Smarter Cities Challenge grant from IBM in 2015 as part
of IBMs citizenship efforts to build a Smarter Planet. During three
weeks in October 2015, a team of five IBM experts worked to deliver
recommendations on a key challenge identified by Mayor Lovely
Warren and her senior leadership team:
Recommendations
Poverty presents a complex ecosystem, so the team recommends
a holistic approach when implementing the roadmap. Multiple,
concurrent interventions will be required to help individuals achieve
self-sufficiency.
To support adoption of the roadmap and the execution of each
initiative, the City should use a change management framework
to track progress, celebrate success and build sustained momentum
for a long-term commitment to reducing poverty.
Rochester, USA
Conclusion
Current programs that exist within the RMAPI have addressed some
of the circumstances that create poverty but more work must be
done if sustainable change is to be achieved. The City of Rochester
must recognize that the complexity of poverty requires multiple and
concurrent interventions. The City will need to make fundamental changes
to how programs are established and measured, how participants
engage with providers and how accountability is managed. The City
also needs to use the valuable resources it already has, such as data
and the power of the community, to begin the transformation and
improvement it seeks.
Highlights
2. Introduction
A. The Smarter Cities Challenge
Instrumented
Interconnected
Intelligent
Rochester, USA
B. The challenge
3. Context, findings,
overview and roadmap
A. Context and findings
1.3 Eligibility
A challenging regulatory environment with inconsistent determination
rules makes it even more challenging for providers to coordinate services.
With numerous government entities and NGOs using diverse baselines
for what constitutes program candidacy, persons in need are
frequently placed on eligibility cliffs.
The gap between the federal poverty level and the actual level of
self-sufficiency required for an individual to no longer need public
assistance is significant. The result of this disparity is a continued
struggle for children and families trying to improve their situation,
as they are unable to access the chain of services they need to
reach self-sustainment.
Rochester, USA
Median
household
income
$20,000
$38,040
Number of households
$61,720
$100,065
10
Rochester, USA
While providers gather, store and use data relating to the individuals
they help, this data typically is not gathered or applied intentionally
across providers to realize collective impact. This gap is problematic
as the data being recorded can be extremely powerful. The Rochester
school systems comprehensive view of students is a clear example
of the power that data-driven insights can create. With information
including attendance, food, transportation and grade performance,
schools can start identifying trends in student behavior by observing
what programs are working and start conversations on declining
performance early.
B. Overview of recommendations
The IBM team has identified a range of initiatives and actions that the
City of Rochester should undertake to reduce and prevent poverty.
The initiatives and actions that comprise these recommendations are
instrumental in realizing the systemic improvements needed to create
a stairway out of poverty and an environment that promotes and
fosters self-sufficiency (see Appendix C).
Outcome-based metrics
se
te
C o or d
Outcome-based
metrics
Data hub
Preventative and
proactive actions
ata
Social-engagement
program
ed
i na
es
ag
Incentives
ic
er
ev
rv
Unified eligibility
criteria
Alignment
of services
Single
view of the
person
Governance
Neighborhood
healing
Communications
plan
E l ev
Urban Village
a te c o m mu nity
Neighborhood
leadership
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12
Rochester, USA
Data as an asset
Governance framework
Implementing a governance framework is critical to ensuring
collaboration and accountability across Rochester. The diverse
range of active participants addressing poverty is a strength for
the City, but a framework that provides clarity and direction to
participants can help enhance the Citys efforts. It also allows
the City to track progress and maintain continued focus.
Alignment of services
Provider networks, funding sources and government agencies need
to align their services and coordinate delivery to help ensure those
in poverty conveniently receive the services that will help them most.
By implementing the no wrong door approach, providers can offer
people in need a single point of contact to identify, coordinate and
monitor the services they require.
Social-engagement program
Rochester should develop and implement a social media platform
that encourages and uses community engagement to establish
a foundation for change. This platform will help the City generate
feedback that can be applied during future program development,
amending current programs or validating current approaches.
To support the platform, Rochester should also implement an
innovation pipeline to channel ideas from the community into
the design and review of programs.
Incentives program
The cultural transformation required of service providers, the
community and people in need to help ensure that collaborative
and coordinated efforts succeed are significant. The City of
Rochester should implement an incentives program to help
encourage this transformation and should refer to trials in other
cities, such as New York10, that have demonstrated success.
C. Roadmap
Align services
Shift to outcome-based metrics
Create a governance framework
Implement a Change Management Plan
Leverage neighborhood leadership
Manage data as an asset
Establish a single view of the person
Immediate (6 months)
Introduce an incentives program
Develop unified eligibility criteria
Create the Urban Village
Foster neighborhood healing
Launch a social-engagement program
Design for proactive and preventive actions
3 5 years
Measure Learn Improve Persist Measure
5 15 years
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Rochester, USA
Recommendation
Actions
Short term (0 3 months)
Align services
Assess effectiveness of
engagement approach
Review technology solutions
to assist with engagement
Introduce an
incentives program
Create a
governance
framework
Implement
a Change
Management Plan
Develop a multi-phased
communications plan
Develop unified
eligibility criteria
Create the
Urban Village
Execute plan
Monitor progress and milestones
Measure and report outcomes
Recommendation
15
Actions
Short term (0 3 months)
Foster
neighborhood
healing
Implement home-ownership
scheme
Monitor and measure impact
as a leading indicator
Leverage
neighborhood
leadership
Staged implementation of
neighborhood leadership program
10
Launch a socialengagement
program
11
Manage data as
an asset
12
Design for
proactive and
preventive actions
13
Establish a single
view of the person
4. Recommendations
Recommendation 1: Align services
The City needs to work across the provider network, funding sources and government agencies to broadly implement coordinated services.
These coordinated services are essential to helping people in need climb out of poverty and achieve self-sustainment.
Scope and expected outcomes
Scope
The City will need to align programs and services that focus on delivery to individuals in need. Currently, as people in need interact with the system,
they engage with a number of different service providers that are each focused on their specific program.
This approach places an additional burden on the individual who must engage with multiple providers and explain their circumstances to different
individuals each time. It also makes it difficult for agencies to deliver consistent and coordinated services. Furthermore, it adds to the challenge of
developing a relationship of trust and understanding between the service providers and the person in need.
The IBM team discussed a single point of entry in a number of interviews with key stakeholders. This approach would allow a person to
seek service from one location and have all of their needs understood and addressed. In order for an approach like this to be effective, however,
entry point providers would need to fully understand all available services and the needs those services address not just the services of
their organization.
With a single point of entry, providers would be able to support the organizational design concept no wrong door. In this model, there are multiple
entry points into the system. With no wrong door, it doesnt matter who an individual reaches when seeking help he or she is still able to access
the required assistance.
In this scenario, providers would assess individuals to determine the services they need and are eligible to receive. A provider operating as the
services coordinator would help develop a plan and generate referrals when additional service providers are necessary.
Service delivery representatives from all providers would form a multidisciplinary team that collaborates to deliver services in a coordinated and
effective manner (see Figure 6). The team would work together to establish the program, as well as throughout the individuals journey.
The team would monitor individual progress to determine if a service is effective and follow up with individuals to see if results are sustainable. Ideally,
teams would have access to a technology system that provides a single view of the individual (see Recommendation 13), but that is not required for
implementing this recommendation.
Technology could significantly help the City align its services and offer providers the person-centric view they need. The IBM team recommends
both a near- and immediate-term solution for technology enablement, along with a long-term solution that scales for size and completeness.
Generally, providers face challenges to afford, implement and sustain technical solutions, such as computers, infrastructure, modern applications,
databases, user training and support staff. As a result, these organizations are buried in paper and unable to analyze valuable data that would help
them in their work.
The near-term technical solution would provide nonprofits with an easy-to-use, cloud-based application built specifically for service coordination.
Capabilities would help organizations manage information related to contracts, programs, individuals and families. This would include program
enrollment, progress tracking, outcome management and operational reporting.
To support data sharing, this solution would provide data extracts in standard formats. Delivering this solution in a cloud-based model reduces
the infrastructure footprint, minimizes the maintenance burden and reduces the overall funding requirement.
A long-term solution to address the broader RMAPI user population (providers, schools, government organizations and NGOs) requires a robust
set of integrated functionality supported by a common, shared database. Features of this solution include the following:
Person-centric application
Mobility
Master data management
Content management system
System interfaces
Data security
Role-based user access
Audit tracking and reporting
Data warehouse
Operational reporting
Analytics and predictive analytics
Document management
Disaster recovery and performance
For a definition of these capabilities and design principles, please refer to Appendix D.
Expected outcomes
Needs of individuals are addressed no matter where they enter the system.
Services are consistently determined, planned and delivered holistically.
Programs demonstrate their alignment and effectiveness for the individual.
Fewer individuals and families fall back into poverty.
Fewer individuals and families enter into poverty.
Cost of inaction
The RMAPI will help reduce poverty across the Crescent, but data indicates that poverty levels will continue to rise. Without significant action,
the population of those in poverty by 2028 will exceed the population of those with jobs.
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18
Rochester, USA
Owner: RMAPI
Stakeholders:
Funders
Service providers
Education
City
County
Governance structure
Stakeholder representatives
Community subject matter experts (SMEs)
Consultants
Technical infrastructure
Cost estimate:
Short term: Low
Long term: Medium
Dependencies
Short term:
Expand pockets of collaboration through analysis and replication of existing models
(such as Jordan Health, Baden Street).
Equip nonprofits with readily available technology solutions to enable limited service
coordination and data sharing capabilities
Implement a pilot or proof of concept of short-term solutions to evaluate and adjust
prior to launching the complete recommendation
Long term:
Implement a fully integrated collaboration model and enable a technology system
across service providers, funders and government
Priority
High
Identify
Identify target
individual(s) through
triage, intake and/or
predictive analysis
Establish and verify
individual identity and
social context
Assess
Segment and stratify
based on priority,
complexity and risk
(PCR) through evidencebased assessment(s)
Assess to address
key drivers of health,
nutrition, safety, housing,
education, justice and
jobs to determine levels
of vulnerability
Plan
Manage
Establish
multidisciplinary team
Identify optimal
personal outcomes
and key performance
indicators (KPIs) for
measuring success
Measure
Measure personal,
agency, provider and
program success
based on KPIs
Predict future needs,
identify new service
plans and best practice
interventions
Analyze resource
utilization
Manage provider
network
Provide/provision
programs and services.
Common intake
and outreach
Assessment
framework, PCR
Service planning
workspace
Outcome management
workspace
Outcome analytics
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Rochester, USA
Owner: RMAPI
Stakeholders:
Funders
Service providers
City
County
State
Dependencies
Short term:
Identify all key stakeholders and communicate context and intention
Establish working council
Collate current measures of performance and circulate to working council
Engage external party to facilitate working council sessions
Schedule working council sessions
Discuss current metrics and explore outcome-based metrics
Confirm funders will refer to outcome-based metrics for resource allocation
Medium term:
Agree on the metrics to measure, then determine how to measure those metrics
Agree on intervals for reporting, allocating the more difficult metrics to measure
to a later stage
Long term:
Establish a timeline and forum to share performance information and knowledge
Begin tracking and reporting new metrics
Maintain working group forum to review, revise and update as required
Priority
High
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Rochester, USA
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Owner: RMAPI
Stakeholders:
City
State
Service providers
Funders
Persons in need
Dependencies
Short term:
Engage with key stakeholders to share context and objectives for incentives program
Identify options for nonfinancial awards
Agree on nonfinancial incentives and targets for those incentives
Agree on, communicate and initiate incentives program
Medium term:
Identify potential financial incentives
Determine design for financial incentives, including operation and monitoring
Determine funding sources for incentive payment
Communicate incentive targets and eligibility requirements
Long term:
Monitor and report achievement
Celebrate successes
Review and revise incentives program as required
Priority
High
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Rochester, USA
Short term:
Confirm governance framework
Define roles and responsibilities for each governing body (board, steering committee
and working council)
Define terms of reference for each body
Medium term:
Identify members to nominate for each role
Review nominations and appoint
Communicate governance framework to stakeholders and community
Long term:
Initiate meetings
Priority
High
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Rochester, USA
Working
council
Steering
committee
Independent
expert board
Working
council
Working
council
Communications plan
Advertising and communications resources
Short term:
Develop a multi-phased communications plan
Implement Phase 1 of the plan and monitor for impact
Review and align Phase 2 communications
Implement Phase 2
Long term:
Ongoing phases of the communications plan released through the RMAPI schedule
Priority status
High
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Rochester, USA
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Stakeholders:
City of Rochester
State government
Dependencies
Short term:
Complete an assessment of the eligibility criteria to establish a unified measure
Approach county, state and federal governments to seek a waiver for existing programs
Develop a measurement system to track the long-term cost impact of the waivers
Long term:
Annually report the net effect of the waiver initiative to relevant government bodies
Priority status
Medium
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Rochester, USA
Stakeholders:
Neighborhoods
RCSD and Regional Transit Service (RTS)
Business community
Cost estimate:
Planning: Low (leveraging existing programs)
Execution: High (capital intensive)
Dependencies
Short term:
Establish a joint planning forum with RCSD, RTS, the business community and
neighborhood leadership
Identify the areas/neighborhoods to transform and the anticipated time frames
(leverage the Focused Investment Strategy19)
Priority status
High
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Rochester, USA
Stakeholders:
Neighborhood
City of Rochester
Dependencies
Short term:
Establish a working council composed of both property and business experts
to validate the market opportunity
Investigate the viability of a government mortgage guarantee scheme or a similar/
equivalent approach
Based on the findings of the working council, implement strategies and actions
recommended
Long term:
Monitor and report rental amounts and home ownership over the course
of implementation
Priority status
Medium
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Rochester, USA
External program
Stakeholder:
City of Rochester
Dependencies
Short term:
Evaluate program options
Review existing successful programs, such as the Family Independence Initiative,
and the recommendations noted above to develop pilot program
Implement pilot program
Medium term:
Review pilot program with input from the community, social services organizations
and businesses
Plan a rollout strategy for the neighborhood leadership program, incorporating the
accepted recommendations from the review
Long term:
Extend the pilot neighborhood program, reflecting the recommendations from
the community review
Priority status
Medium
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Rochester, USA
Stakeholders:
City of Rochester
Not-for-profit sector
Communications specialist
Independent board members
Neighborhood leadership program
Social platform for community engagement
Short term:
Evaluate potential (cloud-based) social platforms
Establish a neighborhood leadership working group
Medium term:
Implement the social-engagement platform
Implement the innovation pipeline
Launch the social-engagement platform
Long term:
Review innovation pipeline quarterly for continuous value creation
Communicate initiatives in pipeline, progress updates and upcoming initiatives
to maintain community engagement
Priority status
Medium
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Rochester, USA
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Rochester, USA
Owner: Mayor
People
Data governance team
Funding plan for enabling technology and tools
Stakeholders:
All the agencies and providers participating in the Data Hub
Citizens of the city
Technology
To be determined based on a strategic plan, which needs to be built after
initial steps in the first six months
Cost estimate:
Cost of resources: Low
Cost of technology: Medium (subject to solution being implemented)
Dependencies
Short term:
Design initial set of offerings, such as child care, health care and job training
programs, for targeted population
Data Hub members agree on and establish poverty prevention metrics
Medium term to long term:
Test outcomes from the initial set of offerings to learn from the data
Perform a fit-gap analysis to identify constraints of poverty-prevention processes
Create new policies focused on prevention
Develop a funding plan to help prevent poverty in addition to plans that
address existing poverty
Executive leaders
from participating
organizations
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Data stewards
for various
data domains
CDO
Data analysts
from participating
organizations
Data standards
Master data
Data rules
Data policies
Data quality
Transactional data
Analytics
Operations
Data models
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Rochester, USA
Form Data
Hub team
Inventory
access to
existing
data sets
Define the
business
questions
Establish a
target scope
for data
Build the
data set for
the Data Hub
Run the
analysis
Evaluate results
of the analysis
Study the
insights gained
Define gaps,
challenges seen
in POC
Implement
the actions
Figure 11: Proof of concept to evaluate data and put it into action for next steps
System of engagement
Single view of
the person
System of record
System of insights
(analytical insights)
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Rochester, USA
Owner: Mayor
People
Data governance team
Funding plan for enabling technology and tools
Define roles and processes for proactive tracking of and follow-ups
with individuals
Stakeholders:
All the agencies and providers participating in the Data Hub
Citizens of the city
Technology
To be determined based on a strategic plan, which needs to be built after
initial steps in the first six months
Cost estimate:
Investment to develop plan: Low
Investment in technology and programs: Low to high
Dependencies
Short term:
Design initial set of offerings, such as child care, health care and job training
programs, for targeted population
Data Hub members agree on and establish poverty prevention metrics
Medium term to long term:
Test outcomes from the initial set of offerings to learn from the data
Perform a fit-gap analysis to identify constraints of poverty-prevention
processes
Create new policies focused on prevention
Develop a funding plan to help prevent poverty in addition to plans that
address existing poverty
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Rochester, USA
Owner: Mayor
People
To be determined after Data Hub proof of concept and other initial steps in the
first six months
Stakeholders:
All the agencies and providers participating in the Data Hub
Citizens of the city
Technology
Master data management (MDM)
Business intelligence (BI)
Analytics solutions
Data integration solutions
Data quality/hygiene solutions
Data warehousing and dashboards
Cost estimate: High
Dependencies
Short term:
Bring existing data sets together to reflect a person-centric model
Define the critical set of questions for data analysis based on the RMAPI objectives
Medium term:
Develop strategy, requirements and plans to enable a person-centric model
for social services systems
Long term
Review strategy and make changes as required to position for upcoming
challenges and opportunities
Review and utilize new technology
Adapt systems and processes
C o o rd i n a t i o n
og
ies
Pr
lic
Child/Adult
ram
tion
Co
ica
lla b
un
or
at
io
om
Po
Healthcare
providers
Pla ns
Nonprofit
agencies
Nonprofit service
providers
Schools and
colleges
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Rochester, USA
Capabilities
Coordinated
Person-centric
Proactive
Power of communities
Power of information
Design
Process
Coordinated services based on individual needs
Figure 14: Design for an effective system that delivers a single view
of the person
Enablers
Single, unique authoritative record of person
Simplified data model
Data-quality processes and tools
Common outcome-based measurements
Data standards, policies and rules
Analytical dashboard
5. Conclusion
Rochester faces a significant challenge as a growing portion of its
population experiences poverty. With some of the worst poverty
statistics in the country, the City must act with urgency to transform
its approach across processes, people and tools in order to achieve
the goals outlined by the RMAPI.
One challenge the City faces is that its system of social programs and
support is fragmented. While these programs provide an extensive
range of services, there are overlaps and gaps in service delivery
and outcomes. These overlaps create inefficiency and unnecessary
expenses. At the same time, gaps cause services to be disjointed
and inevitably lead to people becoming lost in the system or simply
choosing to opt out.
Another challenge for the City is that its current provider system is
program-oriented rather than outcome-focused. This compounds
the issue of fragmentation, as good outcomes for the program do
not necessarily result in good outcomes for people. This creates a
cycle in which activities and services are designed to react to issues
that arise, rather than developing strategies to prevent issues from
arising in the first place.
Rochester should consider the unrealized potential of its communities
and how they can create a system of social support. There is a big
opportunity for the City to engage its communities and neighborhoods
and explore idea generation, collaboration and broader networks that
could contribute to reducing poverty. Elevating the community through
healing, engagement and development activities can lead to benefits
for all citizens.
Achieving many of these shifts depends on the Citys ability to unlock
insights from the wealth of data it has available. Participants funding
and delivering anti-poverty initiatives must change how they collate,
access and maintain data, and they must treat this data as an asset.
Being able to access reliable, accurate data across programs and
services will help create insights that drive better decisions and
preventive actions to help reduce poverty.
6. Appendix
A. Acknowledgments
Leadership
Community
City/County
Todd Baxter
Trisha Chan
Marlene Bessette
Chief Ciminelli
Assemblyman Morelle
Carolyn Boyce
Luticha Doucette
Fran Weisberg
Shawn Burr
Vinny Esposito
Bill Carpenter
Henry Fitts
Richard Christopher
Greg Luna
Education
Eric Logan
Adele Bovard
Derrick Coley
Neal Martin
Kate Cerulli
Trilby DeJung
Brenda Massie
Nathan Dederick
Brian DiNitto
Dana Miller
Hassan Enavati
Pierre Dorancy
Laura Plunket
Anne Kress
Karen Elam
Kelly Reed
Cynthia Elliott
Dennis Read
Patricia Malgerie
Jason Gogniat
Raul Salinas
Roosevelt Mareus
Janice Harbin
Ken Sayres
Gloria Morgan
Brie Harrison
Robert Scanlon
Bill Rotenberg
Nelson Leenhouts
Loretta Scott
Anthony Smith
Patricia Leo
Gregory Sheldon
Wendy Welling
Jennifer Leonard
Tony Sutera
Nicole Malec
Amy Ventura
John Mooney
James Norman
Wade Norwood
Ron Rizzo
Kimberly Russell
Greg Soehner
Paul Speranza
Ron Thomas
Nick Weatherbee
Patricia Uttaro
Miguel Velazquez
Pastor Washington
Colleen Wegman
Danny Wegman
Bridget Wiefling
Joe Wesley
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B. Team biographies
Alice Sidhu
Andrew Bewick
General Manager
Defense
Australia
Andrew Bewick has been the General Manager, Defense, for IBM
since 2010, responsible for the commercial relationship of IBM with
the Australian Department of Defence. This has been a period of
extensive transformation at the Department of Defence as they move
to a fifth-generation fighting force. Prior to his role in the Defense
account, Bewick held a range of management roles focused largely
on the federal government, including information management,
networking and infrastructure support.
In 1988, Bewick was commissioned as an Officer in the Royal
Australian Navy. He served for twelve years in a variety of operational
roles, including an operational deployment to the Persian Gulf in 1996.
He was subsequently appointed to the role of Military Escort Officer
to the Minister for Defence in 1997.
Bewick holds two degrees from the University of New South Wales, a
Bachelors degree in engineering and a Masters degree in engineering
science. He is married to Lea, and they have three children.
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Rochester, USA
Sunita Menon
Walter Szyperski
Sunita Menon is the IBM Executive and Global Leader of the client
master data management division. In this role, she leads the strategy,
governance and analytics for client master data. She designed and
implemented the current global data governance structure and
leadership model that helps enable IBM to provide an aggregated
view of the client for operational processes to drive client analytics
and insights.
Menon joined IBM India as the Country Manager, Market Intelligence, in
1995 after several sales and marketing roles in the Indian IT industry.
For IBM India, she led efforts behind demand generation, marketing
analytic engines, market research and CRM processes. For the last
17 years, Menon has held management and leadership roles at the
IBM Corporate Headquarters divisions in the USA. She leads
cross-cultural and global teams focused on transforming enterprise
processes, deriving business insights from analytics and simplifying
IBM enterprise data domains for customer, product, price and
business intelligence.
Menon holds a Bachelors degree in economics from Bangalore University,
India, and an Executive MBA from University of Connecticut, USA. She
has received several recognition and professional achievement awards,
including a Best People Manager Award for her role in the CIO division.
Menon mentors IBM professionals in career development planning.
She participates in diversity and business resource groups in IBM, as
well as in her community, helping to promote cultural awareness and
digital literacy. She enjoys singing, reading and philosophical musings.
Menon lives in Stamford, Connecticut, with her husband and two children.
Walter Szyperski is the Service Area Lead for the IBM Oracle CX and
Cram capabilities in the public sector. He manages a large and growing
team of consulting professionals dedicated to the sales and delivery
of technology innovations and business solutions to federal, state, local
and healthcare clients. Szyperski also serves as the delivery executive
for client transformation programs across the United States.
Szyperski is an Information Technology Executive with more than
26 years of experience helping public and private sector organizations
transform their processes, organizational structure and technology
in order to become a more effective, efficient and customer- and
citizen-centric business operation.
Szyperski earned his Bachelor of Science degree in information
systems management from Buffalo State College and is a certified
Project Management Professional.
Martin Laird
Senior Program Manager
IBM Corporate Citizenship
and Corporate Affairs
USA
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C. Cause-and-effect diagram
This cause-and-effect diagram illustrates how these recommendations work together and support the Citys social services system.
The ultimate goal of the RMAPI is to improve peoples lives, reduce poverty and reduce the costs associated with poverty. Solid arrows
in this diagram indicate direct impact, while dashed arrows connect instances of secondary impact.
This is a first-iteration diagram that could be developed into a more comprehensive mathematical model to help create a more complete
understanding of how the recommendations and social services system work together.
Single view
of the person
Alignment of
services
Reduces people
missing applicable
services
Urban Village
Increases
collaboration
between providers
Improves insights
informing future
program design
Data as an asset
Increases the
efficiency of the
various programs
Reduces public
spending on poverty
initatives
Outcome-based
metrics
Proactive and
preventive actions
Incentives program
Unified eligibility
criteria
Reduces the
number of people
entering poverty
Improves the
alignment of
activities for the
person in need
through a holistic
care plan
Governance
framework
Change
Management Plan
Ensures consistent
delivery
Improves economic
outcomes for the
community
Engages the
community and
aligns activities
Social-engagement
program
Improves the
effectiveness of
programs through
neighborhood
support
Neighborhood
leadership
Neighborhood
healing
Increases community
prosperity
54
Rochester, USA
Description
Accountability
Ownership of role, responsibility and measurability for services, collaboration and outcomes
Harnessing the data available to analyze program effectiveness, target new programs and identify patterns
to proactively support individuals from falling into poverty
Using a scripted set of questions that branch directionally based on responses, and applying the rules of
determination (for example, 165% of poverty level for child care), a holistic set of services is identified across
local, state and federal programs
Providing a record (trail) of the data a user is accessing in the system on individuals and their cases
Case management
Encompassing the elements of an individual (for example, identity, relationships, needs, eligibility, programs,
referrals and outcomes) to effectively coordinate services
Collaboration
Organizations (government, nongovernmental, nonprofits, individuals and families) working together effectively
Community engagement
Localizing services and building a safe, affordable environment for families to raise their children
Contract management
Funding sources, both government organizations and NGOs, establish contracts with service providers
to create and maintain programs (for example, day care, job training, emergency family assistance, youth
activities and so on)
Cultural sensitivity
Acknowledging and taking into account the cultural factors that influence the need for and success of
certain programs
Data-driven
A data-rich solution that helps the RMAPI participants address reactive measures while moving toward
preventive models
Data governance
Managing the policies, standards and methods for sharing data across organizations and systems
Document management
The ability to digitize paper forms and evidence, then link them electronically into a single case file
Safety, medical and emergency needs solution is considered mission critical and requires appropriate
system redundancy and the right service levels to ensure system performance
Eligibility
Determining which programs and services an individual is able to receive income level is typically a key factor
Evidence-based
Tools and technology that are pre-built to deliver required capabilities commercial off-the-shelf (COTS)
software is often categorized as fit for purpose
Geographic approach
Aligning providers and their services to accommodate individuals within walking distance or reasonable
public transportation
55
Design principle
Description
Informed consent
Giving authorization to share personal information with organizations that provide services
Integrated model
Harmonizing the processes, rules and data required to deliver consistent, successful services
Establishing a golden record for an individual to help ensure effective service delivery when sharing data
from multiple source systems
Mobility
The ability to work in either a connected or disconnected mode when out in the field using mobile devices
(tablets and laptops)
No wrong door
No matter which service provider an individual contacts in the system, a holistic set of services is identified
(assessed) and initiated (referred)
Operational reporting
Standardized reports related to contract performance, operational effectiveness and measureable outcomes
Outcome management
Identifying and tracking a series of outcomes with the ultimate goal of climbing out of poverty and achieving
self-sustainment (approximately 275% to 330% of the poverty level) when aligned, these outcomes
should be measured against the success of their associated programs and service providers
Person-centric application
Establishing the individual as the focal point from which data is collected, to whom services are provided
and for whom outcomes are measured
Predictive
Identify new or existing programs and services to help children and families from entering or reentering poverty
Provider management
A way to identify the best provider choice for an individual (for example, child care near job location),
referring those services and monitoring progress against corresponding outcomes
Repeatable
Scalability
A system that can grow technically and functionally to accommodate the user community and those being served
System interfaces
Trusted system
Embedding security, such as role-based user access, in a system so that users access only the data
needed to perform their job
56
Rochester, USA
E. Extension of Recommendation 2:
Shift to outcome-based metrics
Outcomes
Increased employability
Increased probability of employment
Increased ability to retain job/longer job duration
Increased earnings or consumption
Improved technical
competencies in a
specfic trade
Outputs
Activities
Type of
intervention/
support
Improved psychosocial
characteristics
Improved decision-making skills
Improved communication
and teamwork skills
Increased self-management,
self-esteem
Improved physical and
mental health
Literacy or numeracy
skills training
57
The City has rich data available that will help it develop a clear snapshot
of each of its programs, how programs are measured and what metrics
they report. Success depends on completion of Recommendation 11
to an extent but should not prevent the City from getting started on
driving toward an outcome-based approach. The working council
proposed in Recommendation 2 should build flexibility into its plans
to allow for course correction and refinements as time goes on.
The cultural shift necessary will pose a greater challenge to the City.
Transitioning to outcome-based metrics will require all funders and service
providers to revise current practices that are well understood by staff
performing the day-to-day functions. This change will cause anxiety for
both staff and organizations, as it creates a different level of accountability.
Implementation considerations
This shift to outcome-based metrics will be challenging both technically
and culturally, but there are good resources in place to help. The City
can leverage the learning and experience of others, such as the building
industry and sciences31, to accelerate their transition.
Impacts:
Outcomes:
Outputs:
110 housing units
built. Tenants move
in, loan repayed to
bank or CDFI
Input:
Loan to build 110
units of affordable
housing
Monitorable
indicators of
well-being improve
for tenants; that is,
proportion of people
with decreases
Living standards
improve,
neighbourhoods
become safer,
residents enjoy
better health,
students achieve
more in school
and are more
likely to graduate
58
Rochester, USA
F. References
1 Doherty, E.J. Benchmarking Rochesters Poverty: A 2015
Update and Deeper Analysis of Poverty in the City of Rochester.
Rochester Area Community Foundation and ACT Rochester.
http://roc.democratandchronicle.com/assets/pdf/A222339018.PDF
2 Effects of Poverty, Hunger and Homelessness on
Children and Youth. American Psychological Association.
www.apa.org/pi/families/poverty.aspx
3 We Will Treat Every Child Like One of Our Own: An Action
Plan for the Rochester City School District, 2014-2016.
www.rcsdk12.org/cms/lib04/NY01001156/Centricity/
Domain/8/ActionPlan_ExecSummary.pdf
4 Crime in the United States 2013. Uniform Crime Reports,
Federal Bureau of Investigation. www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/
ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2013/crime-in-the-u.s.-2013/tables/
table-8/table-8-state-cuts/table_8_offenses_known_to_law_
enforcement_new_york_by_city_2013.xls
5 DeNavas-Walt, C., Proctor, B.D., and Smith, J.C. Income,
Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States:
2012. Current Population Reports. US Census Bureau, page 4,
September 2013. www.census.gov/prod/2013pubs/p60-245.pdf
6 IBM and P-TECH. IBM. www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/
presskit/42300.wss
7 Henslin, J.M. Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach Core
Concepts. 6th Edition, Pearson, 2014.
8 Stern, S.M., Poverty Dynamics: 2001-2003. US Census Bureau,
May 15, 2008. www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/publications/
dynamics01/PovertyDynamics.pdf
9 The Poverty Line A False Target. Family Independence
Initiative. September 6, 2015. www.fii.org/blog/the-povertyline-a-false-target/#footnote
10 Riccio, J., Dechausay, N., Miller, C., Nuez, S., Verma, N., and Yang,
E. Conditional Cash Transfers in New York City: The Continuing
Story of the Opportunity NYCFamily RewardsDemonstration.
MDRC, September 2013. www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/
Conditional_Cash_Transfers_FR_0.pdf
59
General references
Rochester-Monroe Anti-Poverty Initiative at United Way of
Greater Rochester. Progress Report: A Roadmap for Change.
September 2015. United Way. www.uwrochester.org/pdf/
RMAPIProgressReportOctober2015.pdf
Mindspace: Influencing behaviour through public policy. Institute
for Government. www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/sites/default/
files/publications/MINDSPACE.pdf
Gordon, J. Bosses offered $12,000 incentives to hire long-term
unemployed. The Age, October 22, 2015. www.theage.com.au/
victoria/bosses-offered-12000-incentives-to-hire-longtermunemployed-20151022-gkfzq9.html
Levinsohn, J. The World Banks Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper
Approach: Good Marketing or Good Policy? United Nations, G-24
Discussion Paper Series, No. 21, April 2003. http://unctad.org/en/
Docs/gdsmdpbg2420032_en.pdf
Waddington, H. and Snilstveit, B. Measuring policy effectiveness
through impact evaluation. Child Poverty Insights, Social and
Economic Policy, UNICEF Policy and Practice, January 2010.
www.unicef.org/socialpolicy/files/Insights_jan2010_ENG(2).pdf
International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie). www.3ieimpact.org
Counting What Counts How Outcome Metrics Have Changed
the Game. Forbes Business, September 10, 2012. www.forbes.com/
sites/sap/2012/09/10/counting-what-counts-how-outcomemetrics-have-changed-the-game
Adult Further Education. Consultation: Outcome based success
measures. Department for Business, Innovation & Skills, August 12,
2014. www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/
attachment_data/file/342871/bis-14-543-consultation-outcomebased-success-measures-for-adult-further-education-v15.pdf