Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service

Your neighborhood. Your News.

Milwaukee NNSnewsMilwaukee NNSSearch
Subscribe to NNS today!
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • Arts and Recreation
    • Community
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Health and Wellness
    • Housing
    • Public Safety
    • NNS Spotlight
    • Special Report
  • Posts From Community
    • Submit a Story
  • Community Voices
  • How To
  • Multimedia
    • NNS Local Video
    • Photos
    • NNS on Lake Effect
    • NNS WGLB 1560 Radio
  • Subscribe
  • Donate
  • About
    • Staff
    • Partners
    • News 414
    • The neighborhoods we cover
Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service

Diederich College of Communication, Marquette University


Language: English English Spanish Spanish

You are here: Home / News / Community / SDC’s new research arm focuses on poverty and racism

SDC’s new research arm focuses on poverty and racism

December 29, 2022 by PrincessSafiya Byers 4 Comments

Share this...
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Pin on Pinterest
Pinterest
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Linkedin
Photo of George Hinton and Jennifer Harris
George Hinton and Jennifer Harris hope the SDC’s Institute on Poverty & Systemic Racism will help influence policy change. (Photos provided by Social Development Commission

After realizing that the work it has been doing is not the work it was created for, the Social Development Commission, or SDC, started working to restructure itself. 

The first step in the organization’s restructuring is taking a new approach to its research arm with the Institute on Poverty & Systemic Racism.  

According to Wisconsin statute, the SDC was created to “study, analyze and recommend solutions for the major social, economic and cultural problems which affect people residing or working within the local government unit.” 

But over the years, the commission started focusing on meeting the immediate needs of the community. 

“We were told straight out that we weren’t doing what we were supposed to be doing,” said George Hinton, the CEO of the Social Development Commission. “And so, the board went into a strategic planning session and heard historically what we were supposed to do, and we concluded that we’re doing little to nothing that was supposed to be done as a commission. SDC has got the weird name Social Development Commission because in fact, it is the commission on poverty.”

Through the institute, the SDC hopes to get back to its roots and influence policy change. 

“We understand that the transactional services we are known for are vital to our community, so we won’t stop them,” Hinton said. “But we are shifting energy to focus on research that can create transformational change.”

The SDC offers career, education, emergency and financial services such as G.E.D classes and emergency rent assistance, among services. 

The institute’s first project, Dismantling Racism Invigorating Equity Together, will examine the impact of structural racism on Milwaukee’s African American community.

According to Jennifer Harris, the institute’s research and policy manager, the project has been three years in the making and is the result of ongoing conversations between it and its academic collaborators at Marquette, the Medical College of Wisconsin and UWM regarding solutions to the traumatic stress commonly found among urban residents in Milwaukee and other cities

“Our goal with this study is to gather data that illustrates the challenges and needs faced by Milwaukee’s African American community, particularly in impoverished neighborhoods,” said Harris, who will oversee the institute. “Ultimately, the data we collect will be used to evaluate how our programming here at the SDC is meeting the African American community’s needs in addition to informing elected leaders how changes to public policy can address challenges faced in the community.”

The project will survey residents of Milwaukee’s inner city to gather information about individual life experiences, their health status and their living environment. African Americans ages 18 and older who live in Milwaukee are welcome to inquire about participating in the research study. Participants will be reimbursed for their time.

“You can’t take the person out of the context of their lived experience when treating them,” said Terri deRoon-Cassini, a professor in the Division of Trauma & Acute Care Surgery in the Department of Surgery at the Medical College of Wisconsin and principal investigator on the new study, in a news release. “Not everyone has the same lived experience. If we’re going to achieve equity in health outcomes, we need to understand the different environments and different experiences that everyone has in life and the impact those differences have on people and their health.” 

Harris and Hinton hope that the work of the institute will be a beacon for change in Milwaukee and surrounding cities. 

“We’re taking the engineer’s approach to problems in the city by breaking them down to the root,” Hinton said. “So rather than giving someone services when they’re released from prison, we want to make sure they never end up there in the first place.” 

Because there are other research institutes in the city, the group said it hopes to complement what’s already being done in that sphere. 

“We aren’t creating new research, we’re going to be taking research from around the world – it’s already been done – and bringing it to Milwaukee,” said Harris. “So, we don’t have to start from scratch. We just validate that the model fits into what we see. People are doing much better in certain areas across the world than we’re doing in the United States so we can pull that in and start using that to build models for us.” 


For more information

For more information on the Institute on Poverty & Systemic Racism or its first project, you can look here. 

If you’d like to participate in the study, you can follow opportunities on SDC’s social media. 

Share this...
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Pin on Pinterest
Pinterest
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Linkedin

Filed Under: Community, Health and Wellness

About PrincessSafiya Byers

Facebook | More stories from PrincessSafiya

Princess Safiya Byers was born and raised in Milwaukee, and is a 2020 graduate of Marquette University, majoring in Journalism and Africana Studies. Her commitment to her community has led her to nonprofit work with local youth and families. She’s also interned with the Milwaukee Community Journal and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and joins Milwaukee NNS as a Report for America Staff Reporter looking to serve democracy by covering issues important to the community.

Comments

  1. Katie Pritchard says

    December 30, 2022 at 8:58 am

    It will be wonderful to watch SDC restore its role as a trusted research source and knowledgeable policy advocate. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Martha Collins says

      January 1, 2023 at 3:50 pm

      Absolutely! I am excited and look forward to learning more about the institute.

      Reply
  2. Quinton Cotton, PhD, MSSA says

    January 1, 2023 at 2:14 pm

    I agree, Dr Pritchard. Policy transformation and community capacity building are urgently needed and SDC restoring its role as a policy leader is critical to addressing the root causes of poverty and offering realistic solutions. The Milwaukee Black Grassroots Network for Health Equity stands ready to bolster the work of the institute.

    Reply
  3. Michael Komba says

    January 12, 2023 at 9:56 am

    Sounds like interesting and important research. The problem I see, (full disclosure, I am white) is that SDC has a horrible history of causing harm. Ten years ago, SDC was the W-2 “welfare-to-work” intake and assessment agency. While they had this government contract, there was a massive increase in the number of low-income parents and other caregivers who faced wrongful denials when they applied for W-2 job training and emergency assistance. SDC lost this contract due to their negligence but still holds other contracts with the state, including lead-paint abatement for older homes and rental assistance. As with their W-2 contract, SDC seems more interested in obtaining funding than actually providing services.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement

Recent News

FoodRight gives kids an early start on making healthy meals

New building, same mission for Outreach Community Health Centers

NNS Spotlight: How one Milwaukee couple works to ensure students succeed in school

Advertisement
Give today to support our mission. Donate to Milwaukee NNS.
Advertisement

News

  • Arts and Recreation
  • Economic Development
  • Education
  • Health and Wellness
  • Housing
  • Public Safety
  • NNS Spotlight
  • Special Reports

Engage with us

  • Posts from Community
  • Community Voices
  • Submit a Story

About NNS

  • Milwaukee NNS Staff
  • Partners
  • News414
  • The neighborhoods we cover
  • Careers
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise

Connect with us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS feed

Communities

Contact

mailing address
Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
Diederich College of Communication
Marquette University
1131 W. Wisconsin Ave.
Johnston Hall 430
Milwaukee, WI 53233

email
info@milwaukeenns.org

phone & fax
PHONE: 414.604.6397 FAX: 414.288.6494


Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service is a project of Diederich College of Communication and Marquette University.
© 2020 Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service. Terms of use.
1131 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee WI 53233 • info@milwaukeenns.org

Copyright © 2023 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in