Posts Tagged ‘community input’

Over 1 in 10 Alabama children live in extreme poverty

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

The Southern Education Foundation released a report yesterday entitled The Worst of Times: Children in Extreme Poverty in the South and Nation. The report’s findings include:

  • 15.6 percent of children in rural Alabama counties live in extreme poverty
  • 10.8 percent of all Alabama children live in extreme poverty
  • The highest rate of extreme childhood poverty is found in Dallas county, where 28.2 percent of children live in extreme poverty (the lowest, Shelby County, is 3.2 percent)

Any household living at or below 50% of the federal poverty line income is classified as living in extreme poverty. For a family of 4, that would mean living on less than $10,975 a year.


Below – Extreme Child Poverty Rates in Small-Population Counties by State: 2008


The report highlights some troubling nationwide trends in extreme poverty since the recession started. Notably, “the recession has expanded the number of children in extreme poverty by approximately 26 percent — adding almost 1.5 million children in extreme poverty across the nation since 2008,” and “school districts with the largest reported percentages of extremely poor children appear to have the least money to educate these children in the schools.”

Finally, the report notes, “Local, state or federal policies in education fail to specifically address the needs of the nation’s poorest children.”

The Alabama State Commission to Reduce Poverty is examining these issues and is seeking community-based solutions to end the extreme poverty in our state.

Eat, pray, grow: hunger, faith, and community gardens

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

APP hosted Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread: A Hunger and Food Security Workshop last Thursday at Capitol Heights Baptist Church in Montgomery. Over 50 attendees came together to break bread and to share information, new ideas and strategies for fighting hunger in the Montgomery area.

We heard from local hunger relief programs (Montgomery Area Food Bank, Angel Food Ministries, Montgomery FBC Caring Center), community gardening experts (Montevallo Seed to Table, Jones Valley Urban Farm) and DHR representatives (Food Assistance Program, JOBS Employment Program) about ways to get fresh, healthy, and delicious food to our friends and neighbors.

DHR representatives Patricia Huffman, Margaret Green and Mary Lois Monroe explain the benefits available from family assistance programs, as well as the challenges of accessing these resources.

One of the best ways you can address the interrelated issues of hunger, rising food costs and malnutrition in your own neighborhood is to start a community garden. See this Slate article for suggestions on how to get started, as well as our Resource page on Community Gardening.

Edwin Marty of Jones Valley Urban Farm and Leanne Read of Montevallo Seed to Table talk gardening.

Thank you to Pastor Warren Culvert and Capitol Heights Baptist Church for graciously hosting the event; Ama Shambulia, director of West End Community Gardens for catering our delicious, fresh, and and local vegetarian lunch; Trevor Jaggers at Starbucks Vestavia and Tina Gilliland at Starbucks Hoover for food and coffee donations.

For more resources from the event, see our Montgomery Hunger Resource Guide.

Posted by Robyn Hyden

Is your heart really in the right place?

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Yesterday’s Wall Street Journal reported on well-intentioned programs that do more harm than good  (“Doing Bad by Doing Good”).

It recounted tales of projects gone wrong – unfinished toilets in Peru, stilettos and winter coats sent to post-tsunami Indonesia and waterless urinals in Chicago’s City Hall.

We see some of the same issues in Alabama – we have huge hearts, and those of us lucky enough to have extra time, energy and/or money to give want to use those resources to improve the quality of life for those in need.  And sometimes, despite the best of intentions, we see the Alabama equivalent of unfinished toilets that end up as a safety hazard.  And then it doesn’t matter if your heart is in the right place.

So what can you do?

Kent Keith, the CEO, Greenleaf Center for Servant Leadership, a nonprofit organization that trains and advises groups and individuals on practical and ethical ways of helping others says that “before you help people, you have to ask them, ‘What do you need? What do you want?’”

Beyond Good Intentions, an organization focused on educating about more innovative and effective approaches to service, recommends the following approaches:

  • Throw away your assumptions about what you think people need.
  • Ask recipients what they think might work.
  • Focus on ideas that may be more effective than the obvious project.
  • Be willing to be anonymous.

I often say that isn’t about fixing problems or doing things for communities in need. It is about working with communities.

What have you done to develop reciprocal, mutually beneficial relationships with the communities you serve?  Please tell us – we need to hear about these successes.

Posted by Kristina Scott

Appearances can be deceiving.

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

APP’s staff, VISTA volunteers and student workers took a trip yesterday to Greensboro to meet with folks at and HEROProject M.

When we first arrived in Greensboro, it looked like a pretty typical Black Belt town – a Main Street with lots of empty storefronts, a Confederate War memorial and beautiful old homes. It still looks like Walker Evans and James Agee memorialized it in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.

Greensboro Main Street

Greensboro Main Street

But appearances can be deceiving.

My first surprise was what the HERO storefront looks like. It is a super cool modern façade built by Auburn Rural Studio architecture students with a combination of new and reclaimed materials.

HERO Storefront

HERO Storefront

My next surprise was how many hipsters there were. Almost everyone I met said they were “from Brooklyn.” Since they didn’t have Brooklyn accents, I quickly figured out that meant they live(d) in one of the borough’s artsy enclaves.

We visited the HERO offices and toured some of the homes built by the Rural Studio students and the HERO/Habitat for Humanity volunteers. Then we went for lunch at Mustang Oil, the local gas station/lunch spot. I have to tell you that this city girl never thought I would be eating lunch (a delicious shrimp po boy and sweet potato fries) in a gas station.  Life is an adventure!

We did some more sightseeing after lunch and then went to Pie Lab for pie and coffee before we headed back home. Pie Lab is intended to be a “third place” between work and home where the community can come together for dialogue and creative interaction. My pie (cranberry and sweet potato) was yummy, and the Higher Grounds Magic City Blend coffee came straight from a French press.

Team APP at the Pie Lab

Team APP at the Pie Lab

The folks I met in Greensboro – especially Pam Dorr - have done an amazing job of bringing attention and resources to this impoverished community. Clearly the creative class sees Greensboro as an opportunity to hone their design skills while doing good.

Is that sufficient? Who are they doing good for? Themselves? The local residents?

We met two young female architects from Auburn who are almost done with their thesis project : a mobile concession stand for the local sports park, which has baseball, football and rodeo fields. These students designed the concession stand with a roof that opens so that the counter is open on three sides. It’s mobile too. This unusual design came about because they talked to the women who volunteer to sell snacks. The volunteers said that they wanted to see their kids play on the fields. Thus the mobile, retracting roof concession stand was born! (I wish I had a picture, but we visited in the midst of a thunderstorm.)

One of my guiding principles is that better results are achieved through collaboration with community members. But I didn’t hear much about community input. In fact, I didn’t hear the word charrette once (which was a little surprising). Maybe there are meaningful opportunities for community input – but they don’t seem to be woven into the fabric of the work. I hope is it another case of appearances being deceiving.

Posted by Kristina Scott