Census 101 Cleveland VOTES 02-19-2020. 1080p
This training seminar covers the importance of the 2020 Census and the Cleveland VOTES initiatives. Presenter Jennifer Lumpkin, Civic Engagement Strategy Manager of Cleveland Neighborhood Progress, detailed the importance of client communication of the Census 2020 and Cleveland VOTES when working with clients. Parole, Probation, and other Post-Incarceration Personnel at local Cuyahoga County halfway houses received Census 2020 Training from Cleveland VOTES, a nonpartisan initiative of Cleveland Neighborhood Progress working to support and evaluate strategic equitable civic engagement of nonprofit entities conducting voter registration and outreach in Northeast Ohio. The 2020 Census training focuses on how local residents will be counted, its funding implications for Cuyahoga County and public safety officials, and framing outreach and education to probationers, parolees and halfway house residents, who are otherwise a part of hard-to-count populations. The City of Cleveland and Cuyahoga County are expected to have considerable under counts due to low household response rates. Educating all residents about the importance of the census and its impact for determining funding for reentry and post-incarceration services will be one of the topics for this workshop. Training hour credits might be available please check with your Training Manager to confirm. If you have any questions, please e-mail Katrice Williams, Program Officer 4, at katrice.williams@jfs.ohio.gov. Katrice Williams is a Program Officer with the Cuyahoga County Office of Reentry, a county agency dedicated to removing the stigma and social burdens that challenge returning citizens and decreasing barriers to reentry for individuals with criminal convictions. ------------------------- Cleveland Neighborhood Progress is leading the revitalization of Cleveland’s neighborhoods. It impacts the community by providing financial support, training and capacity building efforts to community development corporations (CDCs), supporting and performing place making activities to improve residential, commercial and green space properties, and delivering economic opportunity programming to ensure city residents can thrive where they live.
This training seminar covers the importance of the 2020 Census and the Cleveland VOTES initiatives. Presenter Jennifer Lumpkin, Civic Engagement Strategy Manager of Cleveland Neighborhood Progress, detailed the importance of client communication of the Census 2020 and Cleveland VOTES when working with clients. Parole, Probation, and other Post-Incarceration Personnel at local Cuyahoga County halfway houses received Census 2020 Training from Cleveland VOTES, a nonpartisan initiative of Cleveland Neighborhood Progress working to support and evaluate strategic equitable civic engagement of nonprofit entities conducting voter registration and outreach in Northeast Ohio. The 2020 Census training focuses on how local residents will be counted, its funding implications for Cuyahoga County and public safety officials, and framing outreach and education to probationers, parolees and halfway house residents, who are otherwise a part of hard-to-count populations. The City of Cleveland and Cuyahoga County are expected to have considerable under counts due to low household response rates. Educating all residents about the importance of the census and its impact for determining funding for reentry and post-incarceration services will be one of the topics for this workshop. Training hour credits might be available please check with your Training Manager to confirm. If you have any questions, please e-mail Katrice Williams, Program Officer 4, at katrice.williams@jfs.ohio.gov. Katrice Williams is a Program Officer with the Cuyahoga County Office of Reentry, a county agency dedicated to removing the stigma and social burdens that challenge returning citizens and decreasing barriers to reentry for individuals with criminal convictions. ------------------------- Cleveland Neighborhood Progress is leading the revitalization of Cleveland’s neighborhoods. It impacts the community by providing financial support, training and capacity building efforts to community development corporations (CDCs), supporting and performing place making activities to improve residential, commercial and green space properties, and delivering economic opportunity programming to ensure city residents can thrive where they live.