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Prof John Wiseman , Director & Sue West, Research Fellow McCaughey Centre

Developing and using community wellbeing indicators: Learning from Community Indicators Victoria Natstats Conference, Melbourne 20 November 2008. Prof John Wiseman , Director & Sue West, Research Fellow McCaughey Centre

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Prof John Wiseman , Director & Sue West, Research Fellow McCaughey Centre

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  1. Developing and using community wellbeing indicators: Learning from Community Indicators Victoria Natstats Conference, Melbourne 20 November 2008 Prof John Wiseman, Director & Sue West, Research Fellow McCaughey Centre VicHealth Centre for the Promotion of Mental Health and Community Wellbeing University of Melbourne

  2. Overview • What are community wellbeing indicators - and why are they important? • Overview of Community Indicators Victoria • Lessons for development of local community indicator platform development

  3. What are community wellbeing indicators? Community wellbeing indicators are statistical tools for translating broad community goals into clear, tangible and commonly understood outcomes and for assessing and communicating progress in achieving these goals. • Tools for democracy • Tools for evidence based policy making • Tools for reporting and evaluation Basis for new conversations about ‘community’, progress, wellbeing and sustainability

  4. Growing international use of community wellbeing indicators as tools for discussing progress and making policy choices

  5. Community wellbeing indicators in Australia

  6. Local community wellbeing indicators… • Spotlight issues and trends important to local communities • Focus on a small number of headline wellbeing measures - not all local data • Measure community trends and outcomes - not local government performance • Include social, economic, environmental, cultural and governance trends and outcomes

  7. Victorian context and drivers • State and local government support for: • Evidence based policy making • Citizen engagement and community planning • ‘Triple bottom line’ planning and reporting • Wide range of local government indicator initiatives – but patchy, uneven and under resourced • Victorian Community Indicators Project (supported by VicHealth)….Community Indicators Victoria

  8. Community Indicators Victoria Goal: To support the development and use of local community wellbeing indicators as a tool for informed, engaged and integrated community planning and policy making. Partners: VicHealth, ABS, Community organisations (VCOSS) Local government (MAV,VLGA), State Government (all Departments), RMIT, Swinburne Universities Products • Framework of social, economic, environmental, cultural, and governance indicators • Local community wellbeing reports: www.communityindicators.net.au • Toolkits and training packages • Research on development and use of community indicators

  9. www.communityindicators.net.au

  10. CIV community wellbeing framework Five domains (75 indicators): • Healthy, safe and inclusive communities • Dynamic, resilient economies • Sustainable built and natural environment • Culturally rich and vibrant communities • Democratic and engaged communities

  11. Data Sources • Australian Bureau of Statistics • Victorian Government administrative data: eg. Library usage, Crime rates, Water quality • Victorian government surveys: eg. Victorian Population Health Survey, Victorian Child and Adolescence Monitoring Survey; DVC Community Strengthening Survey • Community Indicators Victoria Survey 2007

  12. Community Indicators Victoria Survey 2007 • Purpose: Fill CIV framework data gaps • Telephone household survey: • 24,000 adults. • 300 per Local Government Area • Questions: • Data not currently available at local level: eg. Self assessed health, subjective wellbeing • Data not currently collected: eg. Transport access, Work-life balance, Arts participation, Citizen engagement • Demographics: Age, gender, employment, household type, parental status

  13. Reporting • Place based (Local Government Area level) with some population group data available • Automated reports • Tailer made reports • Wellbeing maps All free and publically available

  14. Automated wellbeing reports

  15. Tailored wellbeing reports

  16. Wellbeing maps Source: CIV, McCaughey Centre, School of Population Health, University of Melbourne

  17. Local community wellbeing in VictoriaFeeling part of the community Source: CIV, McCaughey Centre, School of Population Health, University of Melbourne

  18. Local community wellbeing in Victoria Food stress Source: CIV, McCaughey Centre, School of Population Health, University of Melbourne

  19. Local community wellbeing in Victoria Participation in arts and cultural activities Source: CIV, McCaughey Centre, School of Population Health, University of Melbourne

  20. Local community wellbeing in Victoria Citizen engagement Source: CIV, McCaughey Centre, School of Population Health, University of Melbourne

  21. After 18 months… 150,000 web site hits 1200 registered members • State Government Departments, 64 local governments • 600 + NGOs and companies Workshops and toolkits Research on use and effectiveness Strong positive feedback …But future resourcing remains unclear

  22. Using community indicators to discuss local priorities

  23. Using community indicators to inform Council planning

  24. Using community indicators to report on progress

  25. Lessons from development of CIV 1. Key tasks and steps in development of local community wellbeing indicator systems include: • Clarity of purpose • Agreement on governance and partnership arrangements • Securing adequate and sustainable resources • Development of agreed indicator framework • Design and implementation of effective strategies for • Data collection • Data dissemination • Capacity building • Policy and research linkages

  26. 2. Key partners needed to develop and sustain a local community indicators system • Australian Bureau of Statistics • Local governments and local government peak organisations • State government • Central Agencies • Community and Regional Development Agencies • Departments providing and using data • Commonwealth government • Community organisations and NGO peaks • Universities

  27. 3. Key data collection success factors • Robust, up to date local data • Strong partnership relationship with ABS • Data sharing agreements with State government • Capacity to collect and analyse local survey data • Well managed data warehouse system • High quality project management for data collection, collation and analysis

  28. 4. Key data dissemination success factors • Clear framework and story • Well designed communications strategy • High level web design and web site maintenance skills • Understanding of audiences • Lots of pictures and maps • Clear link to achievement of purpose (citizen engagement, evidence based policy…)

  29. 5. Investment in capacity building is crucial • Online resources • Manuals and toolkits • Workshops and forums • Short courses • Applied research

  30. And most of all… …if local community wellbeing indicators are to be developed and sustained as a public good they need long term commitment from government and key partners… including for infrastructure support, data provision, policy linkages and capacity building.

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