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Arts & Culture: Outreach to Underserved Populations
Challenge: A museum would like to broaden its suburban visitor base to include
more underserved families lower income families living in areas with limited
access to cultural opportunities. Your job is to design an outreach program that
will entice this target market to visit the museum and document the process for a
grant report.
Approach: Select the applicable component(s) of CVI. Lower income families
are likely to cluster in communities with lower Economic Potential. Similarly,
limited access to cultural opportunities corresponds to low Community Amenities
scores.
Level I CVI Solution: Begin by visually comparing the Standard Maps of
Community Amenities (red map) and Economic Potential (green map). You may
wish to print them so you can view them side-by-side. Identify low scores outside
the City of Chicago by focusing on the light colors on the maps. Note that
southern Cook County appears to have several areas with low scores in both
categories (close-ups of southern Cook County from the standard component
maps are reproduced, below). Select an appropriate community or group of
communities in which to focus your outreach efforts.
Subscriber-Level Solution: Because this part of the example deals with
community-level custom maps, the CVI user must first become an MCIC
subscriber. Click Subscribe on the left hand side of the page and then click the
Become a Subscriber bar. Fill in your information and click the Submit button at
the bottom of the page. There is no charge to become an MCIC subscriber.
Use Custom Maps/Reports to obtain CVI scores and component maps for the
communities you have selected. Add or subtract surrounding tracts, as
appropriate, to create a custom area that fits the profile of the target population
and covers a geographic area that makes sense for your program. For example,
if your program will involve high-touch recruiting activities, you may wish to
concentrate on a single municipality to focus efforts on a relatively small number
of people. On the other hand, if you need thousands of participants, select
several communities with low scores in both categories. Subtracting any
individual tracts with high Economic Potential and Community Amenities scores
will help focus your outreach efforts even further.
The Economic Potential and Community Amenities maps for your custom
area(s), paired with corresponding Score Cards that include benchmark scores
for the City of Chicago, Suburban Cook, and five collar counties, will help you
target outreach and advertising in those areas most likely to have residents in the
target population and will also provide documentation of your selection process
for the grant report.
MCIC Member Solution: As an MCIC member, you can also ask MCIC for
expanded data tables for each targeted area. These expanded tables, available
exclusively to MCIC members, include scores for each of the indicators in each
of the sub-indices that make up the three components of CVI.
Using the expanded Economic Potential data tables, the museum can assess
aggregate income per square mile, shelter cost burden, home ownership rates,
educational attainment, and number of wage earners per square mile to
document the economic status of the target population. Using expanded tables
for Community Amenities, the museum can determine what kinds of community
institutions (libraries, houses of worship, places of higher-education) and Arts,
Culture, Leisure, and Amusement opportunities exist in the target community to
help identify potential outreach and advertising partners and to focus special
access programs.
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