Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)

Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)

非营利组织管理

Dallas,Texas 1,764 位关注者

Breaking Intergenerational Poverty in Dallas

关于我们

The Problem: Among major cities, Dallas has the third highest rate of child poverty in the nation. Today, one out of every three of our children grows up in poverty. This impairs cognitive and physical development, incites risky behaviors, and creates lasting health challenges. Consequently, chances for economic mobility in our region are slim -- and the odds that today’s children in poverty will grow up to be parents of children in poverty are high. CPAL exists because the level of child poverty in Dallas is morally unacceptable and economically unsustainable. CPAL’s North Star Goal: Reduce Child Poverty by 50% over the next 20 years The Approach: Key drivers of success (basic needs, education, jobs, family/neighborhood prosperity, etc) are symbiotically entwined. There is no single silver-bullet that will move large numbers of children to future economic security, especially within the timeframe of two decades or less. Instead it will require action from multiple angles, using data as a guide to identify our biggest opportunities for progress and to highlight the most impactful strategies to prioritize for scale. CPAL acts as a data backbone committed to breaking intergenerational poverty and improving economic mobility across our region. For the first time in Dallas’ history, the chief executives of our largest government agencies (T.C. Broadnax – City of Dallas, Clay Jenkins - Dallas County, Michael Hinojosa - DISD, Gary Thomas - DART, Fred Cerise - Parkland, Laurie Larrea - Workforce Solutions, Joe May - DCCCD, Rene Hall – Dallas Police Department, Chris Durovich – Children’s Health) have been meeting together on an ongoing basis. Collectively representing $9B+ in annual budget authority, this group of leaders has chosen reducing child poverty as their common agenda and CPAL is keeping data at the center of the conversation.

网站
https://www.childpovertyactionlab.org
所属行业
非营利组织管理
规模
11-50 人
总部
Dallas,Texas
类型
非营利机构
创立
2018

地点

Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)员工

动态

  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看IDEO.org的公司主页,图片

    105,021 位关注者

    When you were a teen, how did you learn about sexual health? Who did you trust? For many young people today, sex-ed is defined by misinformation, stigma, and a lack of open conversations. In partnership with?Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)'s Trust Her?initiative, we flipped the script on the dreaded “talk” and transformed the conversation around sexual health into a team-oriented and approachable experience. Through a mobile pop-up that meets teens and their parents where they already are—farmers' markets, street fairs, and community events—we created a space where curiosity and education thrive. Learn More: https://lnkd.in/gYsCD-Pf #sexualhealth #teenhealth #herchoice #sexed

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  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看United Way of Tarrant County的公司主页,图片

    4,456 位关注者

    Congratulations to our Community Doula graduates! ?? Last month, UWTC and our partners at Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL) and Paradigm Doulas celebrated an inspiring group of women and men who completed their certification training and are already supporting moms and families across Tarrant County! These dedicated doulas make a real difference—helping to ensure healthier pregnancies, births and postpartum care. With every mom they support, we’re building a stronger, healthier community. Thank you to everyone who supported this journey! Together, we’re expanding access to compassionate care and tackling disparities in maternal health one family at a time. Help us reach even more families in need! Thanks to a $1M matching gift, every dollar you donate doubles our impact. Join us in transforming maternal health by giving today: https://bit.ly/4cdqy8Z Check out photos from the graduation here: https://bit.ly/4fa3Ukj #CommunityDoulas #GetUnited #UWTarrant Photos by Rachel DeLira

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  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    "While violent crime in Dallas is down more than 9% this year and homicides have dropped more than 27% from this time in 2023, more teens are dying of gun violence. As of Sept. 30,?26 teen homicides had occurred in 2024, compared to 23 at the same time last year. “A tragic percentage of the year’s homicides have been kids,” Alan Cohen, co-chair of the Mayor’s Task Force on Safe Communities, told me. “Every death is a tragedy, but it is particularly destabilizing to the entire community when it’s a young person.” The News’?homicide project makes clear, Cohen said, that the work against violent crime is not even close to being done, especially when this many kids are dying... During outgoing police Chief Eddie García’s time in Dallas, he never wavered from his belief public safety is a tripod of suppression, intervention and prevention. Dallas does pretty well on the first two, he said in our last interview before he headed to a new job in Austin. “Where we fall short — and it’s not just in Dallas — is in prevention.”... García described CPAL’s Cohen as his “right-hand guy” on the prevention portion of violent crime reduction. In turn, Cohen emphasized everyone — City Hall, Dallas ISD and community nonprofits — has leaned into potential solutions. Investing in disinvested neighborhoods where?violence concentrates in small pockets?is the starting point. “We know the ZIP codes in our city that are overrepresented in the two places we don’t want them overrepresented — Incarceration and victimization,” García said. “That’s where the dollars need to go.” https://lnkd.in/gk3pJv2h

    More teens are dying of gun violence in Dallas. Here’s how we stop the killing, trauma

    More teens are dying of gun violence in Dallas. Here’s how we stop the killing, trauma

    dallasnews.com

  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看Alan C.的档案,图片

    'A new report from Child Poverty Action Lab reveals that nearly half of Dallas residents spent more than 30 percent of their income on housing, with senior renters and single parents comprising the bulk of these cost-burdened residents. How did we get here? The most obvious answer is that building isn’t keeping pace with the growth of these income buckets. Dallas is increasing the number of units constructed, up from 61,900 in the 2000s to 71,000?in the 2012. But the rub is this: The city’s population grew by 10,000 people in the 2000s, and by about 100,000 the following decade. New construction didn’t keep pace. Since 2010, only 9 percent of the new rental units in the city of Dallas have been deed-restricted affordable homes. The demand for those affordable homes continues to increase, along with rents. (Deed-restricted means it has restrictions on who can occupy it and how it can be used to ensure it remains affordable.) Dallas ranks fourth out of the 12th largest cities for total affordable units per 1,000 residents. Still, only 17 percent of that deed-restricted stock is in high-opportunity neighborhoods, where a majority of the residents make at or above the city’s median income. Those high-opportunity neighborhoods often have better access to good schools, well-paying jobs, and resources. Because of this, Dallas ranks nearly last when it comes to how many rental units it has in high-opportunity areas. But it’s not just an issue of supply and demand. Wages have not risen apace with the growth of rental costs. The city’s AMI is still below the county and region’s, at $63,985. Wages have grown since 2012, but the median Dallas household still earns up to nearly $20,000 less than a similar household elsewhere in the county or the region. But a gap of 39,919 affordable units for households below 50 percent AMI doesn’t mean that there are nearly 40,000 families without a place to live, Flores says. It means these households are forced to economize in ways households that make more money do not. It also means they face more competition for available units. “We actually have presently a sufficient number of rental units—if we’re not considering price,” Flores says. “So if we pretend every rental unit is free, then every renter household in the city of Dallas could access a rental unit. The problem, where we say we have a shortage, is when we start to organize that supply by price point.”' https://lnkd.in/gdiek5UJ

    Dallas' Rental Housing Gap Continues to Grow

    Dallas' Rental Housing Gap Continues to Grow

    https://www.dmagazine.com

  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看Alan C.的档案,图片

    Along with Ashley Flores, CPAL's Chief of Housing, I am pleased to share with you the?2024 Rental Housing Needs Assessment for the City of Dallas.? This 143-page report is our second annual attempt to focus on the gaps between supply and demand in the Dallas rental market, as well as the broader demographic and economic forces shaping the housing ecosystem.? Here are just a few of the primary findings in this year’s report... --The City of Dallas currently has a gap of 39,919 rental units affordable to households earning at or below 50% of the Area Median Income (AMI), which was $48,700 for a family of four in 2022. This means there are 65 affordable units for every 100 households at or below 50% AMI. --Driven by an anticipated loss of 54,000 unrestricted affordable housing units (a 98% decrease),?we forecast the gap to grow to 76,073 units by 2035. This means there will be 24 affordable units for every 100 households at or below 50% AMI. The demand-supply gap is also projected to affect households up to 100% AMI – for example, by 2035, there will be 66 affordable units for every 100 households at or below 80% AMI and 94 affordable units for every 100 households at or below 100% AMI Rents have grown faster than wages: --Despite improvements over time in educational attainment and wage growth within the City of Dallas, the median rent is unaffordable for 71% of residents. Forty-nine percent of all renters in the City of Dallas are housing cost-burdened (meaning they spend more than 30% of their income on housing), but some groups are disproportionately affected: 69% of senior renters, 79% of single parents with children, 56% of Black renters, and 51% of Hispanic/Latino renters are housing cost-burdened. --Although all workers have seen nominal wage growth, the top three most common job types in DFW have median wages below $45,000. Due to inflation, wage growth has not necessarily translated into improved purchasing power, and residual income (income after paying rent) is thin for low-income households. --Wage growth has also been uneven: from 2012 to 2022, median income for Hispanic/Latino households grew the most (28%), while for Black households, it grew the least (8%), when adjusted for inflation. For those interested in digging deeper, we'd also like to draw your attention to some nuanced insights: --Residents with bachelor's and graduate degrees cannot always afford rent in Dallas: the median resident with a bachelor's degree ($69,789) cannot afford the median rent of a 2- or 3-bedroom rental unit. (see more on degree attainment, page 110) --Housing production has not kept pace with population and job growth in North Texas. For example, from?2012-2022, Dallas County added 41 new housing units for every 100 new jobs.?(See breakdown by county, page 106).

  • 查看Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)的公司主页,图片

    1,764 位关注者

    In this past weekend's DMN Metro section, Sharon Grigsby highlights a big healthcare win -- access to birth control for community college students -- that took years of navigating bureaucratic challenges. It simply could not have gotten done without tremendous leadership and genuine partnership from many within Parkland Health and Dallas College.?See link below to access the full article. https://lnkd.in/gVu-pyVc

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  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看Ben Leal的档案,图片

    President @ The Addy Foundation

    The Addy Foundation loves collaboration among our partner organizations; it creates a lasting impact, is efficient, and ignites new ways of thinking. Today, we saw this in action with agencies The Addy Foundation supports. I was so proud of Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL), TrustHER Hub, Dallas College, and Parkland Health working together to improve health access for all with a new mobile health clinic that will provide family planning services and other medical resources directly to our community where they are. I am proud we could play a small part in bringing their vision into reality. #healthcareaccess #familyplanning Congratulations to all these amazing folks/organizations!

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  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看Dallas Housing Coalition的公司主页,图片

    1,553 位关注者

    Discover the Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL) new tool mapping the risk of displacement in Dallas and Tarrant counties - made possible by Charles Schwab. By analyzing five key housing metrics, including evictions and property values, it highlights vulnerable areas. Use it to inform your work and share with colleagues. Link: https://bit.ly/44GEJBi #DallasHousingCoalition

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  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看Benefits Data Trust的公司主页,图片

    6,470 位关注者

    In The Dallas Morning News today, Leah Waters discusses how BDT is working with the City of Dallas Office of Community Care to reduce barriers to participation in public benefit programs and improve economic stability for families citywide. “We are excited to see our longstanding partners at City Hall and BDT working together to leverage data and proactively deliver available benefits to Dallas families.” - Alan C., CEO of Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL) https://hubs.li/Q02nXxsJ0 #dataforgood #foodassistance #healthcare #humanservices #governmentinnovation #CityofDallas

    Dallas partners with nonprofit to help residents access nutrition, health care programs

    Dallas partners with nonprofit to help residents access nutrition, health care programs

    dallasnews.com

  • Child Poverty Action Lab (CPAL)转发了

    查看Alan C.的档案,图片

    'The City of Dallas is teaming up with?a?national nonprofit,?Benefits Data Trust,?to?ensure that seniors, children?and other eligible city residents?will have?access?to?programs?that?provide critical resources like?nutrition, healthcare?and other?support families need... The collaboration between the city and BDT is rooted in BDT’s work with the Child Poverty Action?Lab,a?nonprofit organization dedicated to fighting and ending childhood poverty in Dallas.? “One of the most powerful and achievable strategies Dallas can pursue to support children is helping working families access the hundreds of millions of dollars that go underutilized each year in the form of benefits ranging from food stamps or tax credits,” said Alan Cohen, chief executive officer of CPAL. “We are excited to see our longstanding partners at City Hall and BDT working together to leverage data and proactively deliver available benefits to Dallas families.”?' https://lnkd.in/gUsPEVtf

    New Partnership Aims to Make Benefits Enrollment Easier for Eligible Dallas Families

    New Partnership Aims to Make Benefits Enrollment Easier for Eligible Dallas Families

    content.govdelivery.com

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