Wednesday, December 23, 2009

It Takes A City: Strengthening Families

Increasingly, local government leaders recognize that building stronger
families and improving outcomes for their children and young people are
the keys to long-term social and economic sucess.

Increasingly, local government leaders recognize that building stronger
families and improving outcomes for their children and young people are
the keys to long-term social and economic success.

"A community's quality of life can be measured by the opportunities
available to help children and families succeed," says Ron Gonzales,
mayor of San Jose, Calif., the past chair of National League of Cities'
(NLC) Council on Youth, Education, and Families. "Without this
investment, communities face higher costs for public safety and human
services, tighter municipal budgets, reduced potential of the local
workforce and weakened growth of the local economy."

In order to support these efforts, NLC has developed a new initiative to
help young people succeed. The two-part "City Platform for Strengthening
Families and Improving Outcomes for Children and Youth" urges officials
to take specific actions that have proven to strengthen families and
promote sustained progress over time, including recommendations to:

• Bring together leaders from the public, private and nonprofit
sectors as well as parents and other community residents through a
mayor's task force or commission to identify their communities' needs,
opportunities and priorities.

• Promote effective city-school collaboration through regular
meetings between the mayor and city council, school board and school
superintendent that focus on shared priorities and the development of
joint plans of action.

• Directly involve young people by sponsoring a mayor's youth
council, appointing youth to municipal boards and committees, and
holding communitywide youth summits.

• Measure progress over time through a community "scorecard" that
tracks key outcomes and places them within the context of a broader
report on the status of children, youth and families.

The second part of the platform recommends a set of concrete action
steps for communities to undertake in key areas, including early
childhood development; youth development; education and afterschool
programs; health and safety; youth in transition and at risk; family
economic success; and neighborhoods and community.

"This platform provides a blueprint all city leaders can follow,"
Gonzales said.

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