Pages tagged "Coalition Building"
Our County, Our Climate Action
This project summarizes an 18-month campaign started by the Miami Climate Alliance. Throughout a series of six workshops hosted by Catalyst Miami, Miami-Dade County staff and some of our community partners discussed best practices for public participation.
Check out the digital booklet below, or scroll down on this page to learn more and give us feedback!
Local government can integrate the group's recommendations into policy and practice to improve engagement. It must strive to address the legacies of exclusion, while creating shared accountability and a culture of transparency. This will be particularly important while implementing Miami-Dade County's Climate Action Strategy to cut planet-warming pollution.
Watch the video below for an overview of the campaign's process and outcomes.
All the recommendations here and in the full report relate to the main takeaway: Community leadership is essential to achieve climate justice.
When residents are given the resources and opportunities to work together on their neighborhoods’ challenges, they design more effective solutions and the process itself helps to build community power for decades to come.
There is an appetite for this approach to resilience policy- and practice-making in Miami-Dade County. Key decision-makers must do more to facilitate the community-centered processes that residents are ready and willing to propel to achieve true resilience.
Expand the sections below to learn more about each aspect of this community-determined framework.
Leave us feedback using the form on this page!
Inform
Public participation goal |
Provide the community with reliable and relevant information. |
Outcome(s) |
Access or Exclusion |
Community empowerment goal |
Consistently improve access to information on resources, planning, and decisions. |
Recommended approaches* *Examples here were suggested with the Miami-Dade County Climate Action Strategy in mind. See the full report for key context and strategies. |
|
Consult
Public participation goal |
Gather input from the community on analysis and/or decisions. |
Outcome(s) |
Listening or Tokenization |
Community empowerment goal |
Listen to community concerns, acknowledge aspirations, and provide feedback. |
Recommended approaches* *Examples here were suggested with the Miami-Dade County Climate Action Strategy in mind. See the full report for key context and strategies. |
|
Involve
Public participation goal |
Work with the community to integrate local needs and assets during planning. |
Outcome(s) |
Voice or Pacification |
Community empowerment goal |
Give voice to new insights or perspectives that may shift planning, decisions, or analysis. |
Recommended approaches* *Examples here were suggested with the Miami-Dade County Climate Action Strategy in mind. See the full report for key context and strategies. |
|
Collaborate
Public participation goal |
Partner with and ensure community capacity to play a role in each aspect of decisions and/or planning processes. |
Outcome(s) |
Delegated Power or Marginalization |
Community empowerment goal |
Delegate power and resources to build the leadership of disproportionately impacted, under-resourced communities. |
Recommended approaches* *Examples here were suggested with the Miami-Dade County Climate Action Strategy in mind. See the full report for key context and strategies. |
|
Empower
Public participation goal |
Advance equity by deferring final say on decisions or planning priorities to the community. |
Outcome(s) |
Collective Power or Concentrated Privilege |
Community empowerment goal |
Unlock collective power and transformative solutions by centering community leadership. |
Recommended approaches* *Examples here were suggested with the Miami-Dade County Climate Action Strategy in mind. See the full report for key context and strategies. |
|
Get Involved & Learn More
Please leave your feedback by using the form on this page! You can use this same form to sign up for email and text updates from Catalyst Miami.
Become a member of the Miami Climate Alliance at miamiclimatealliance.org.
Helpful Links:
Contributors
Miami-Dade County Partners
James Murley, Chief Resilience Officer
Kimberly Brown, Director of Resilience Planning and Implementation
Karina Castillo, Resilience Coordinator
Galen Treur, Resilience Coordinator for Strategic Outcomes
Jane Gilbert, Chief Heat Officer
These recommendations were developed by partners with backgrounds in local government, community organizing, academic research, resilience policy, community economic development, intersectional climate justice action, public outreach and engagement. This project was supported by the Energy Justice Working Group of the Miami Climate Alliance and the American Cities Climate Challenge Justice40 Capacity Building Fund.
Send feedback
Climate, Health and Heat Equity: A Learning Tour of Miami-Dade County
Miami-Dade County in Florida is a leader in addressing urban heat island effect and extreme heat, which causes more deaths than any other weather-related hazard. At the 2022 Grantmakers in Health conference, a learning tour through Miami — the Dade County Street Response Clinic, local parks, worksites, and public space — focused on the intersections of climate, heat, and health equity from the perspective of community leaders. Catalyst Miami, Florida Clinicians for Climate Action, We Count!, the South Florida Housing Link Collaborative, the Solar and Energy Loan Fund, and the County’s Chief Heat Officer highlighted their work to address extreme heat and displacement due to climate gentrification while sharing about the unique history and culture of the county.
Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation: Results from a South Florida pilot study in two communities
With increasing urgency of local and regional climate adaptation, there is a growing need for governments to identify and respond effectively to the concerns of communities they serve and to align investments. Researchers designed and piloted a novel hyperlocal method for urban adaptation planning combining two social science tools that have been widely but separately used to foster community engagement and strategize solutions. Not-for-profit community partners Catalyst Miami and the Cleo Institute facilitated multi-session online workshops with participants from two communities in South Florida with whom they have well-established relationships and in which socio-economic conditions and climate risks represent notable vulnerabilities. The workshops first employed photovoice to elicit individual narratives about climate change impacts; participants then followed a design thinking protocol to critically evaluate the leading concerns they identified and propose adaptation solutions. Geospatial mapping and data tools were provided for participants to gain additional tools and further knowledge. Local planning and resilience officials attended some or all of the workshops as observers and interlocutors, dialoguing with participants. Comparative analysis revealed differences in risk awareness and primary concerns between communities, and further demonstrated that concerns and solutions proposed by members of at-risk neighborhoods do not always align with geospatial data that often drives infrastructure adaptation planning in the region, suggesting that more widespread use of community engaged methods could enhance government climate adaptation responses for local communities.
Shared Accountability Framework and Guide for 100% Clean and Renewable Energy
Implementing a community-wide clean energy transition is an ambitious, long-term undertaking that requires leadership and collaboration. Neither municipal government nor community leaders can succeed on
their own. These documents that Catalyst Miami and partners contributed to help community leaders and municipal staff collaborate to establish and manage a task force, committee, or group to manage a long-term accountability process.
Read the accountability framework for community implementation of 100% clean energy goals.
Read the shared accountability guide.
Tipping Point: The Past, Present, and Future of Catalyst Miami
This in-depth case study examines Catalyst Miami's work over two decades, evolving to meet the needs of Miami-Dade County's low-wealth communities. The case study was developed for the Kresge Foundation’s Next Generation Human Services Initiative in collaboration with Harvard Business School.
Public Land for Public Good
Catalyst Miami is part of a 30+ organization coalition urging local elected officials to utilize vacant public land for affordable development.
Resilient 305 Strategy
This strategy is greater Miami's strategy to address resilience challenges prioritized through inter-governmental and community collaboration as part of The Rockefeller Foundation's 100 Resilient Cities. Catalyst Miami served on the steering committee and remains deeply involved in implementing this work.
Resilience, for us, means providing the opportunity for every person and every community to bounce back after large-scale flooding events, hurricanes, or economic hardships, and to not only survive, but thrive in the face of sea level rise, expensive housing, challenging traffic, and uncertain labor markets.
Recommendations from South Florida Climate Change Equity Solutions Summit
These are the recommendations to help shape the update of the Southeast Florida Regional Climate Action Plan, or RCAP 2.0, with special concerns for under-resourced communities in Miami-‐Dade, Broward, Monroe, and Palm Beach Counties. The four counties and their municipalities will use the RCAP 2.0 for the next four years as their guide to reduce the region’s climate change pollution and build resilient communities. The recommendations that emerged from the summit offer strategies for county and city leaders, advocacy groups and residents in underserved areas to strengthen capacity, leadership and resilience in overburdened communities at the front lines of climate change effects.
Prosperity Miami Initiative
The Prosperity Miami (PM) pilot initiative - a collaboration of Catalyst Miami, New Florida Majority, and South Florida Voices for Working Families - was an effort to build on the philosophy and practices of the groups mentioned above. Working collaboratively across organizations to blend services and community organizing rather than through a singular organization, the partners sought to meet the bottom-line needs of individuals, while also moving them into political organizing for broader social change. This paper highlights the lessons learned from this attempt at social innovation and provides implications for future similar collaborative efforts.
Social Justice Table: Year 2 Report
The Miami Social Justice Table was a 4-year exercise in building networks of organizations across Miami working on different angles related to lessening poverty and increasing rights and access for under-resourced communities and populations. Network members regularly shared information to support each other in having a bigger collective impact together. This paper highlights the research completed in the second year of the initiative and was written by the University of Miami.