RUPRI describes CIM as follows:
The Community Issues Management (CIM) Collaborative provides a mechanism for engaging stakeholders in identifying, analyzing and prioritizing issues that impact their community and region. This collaboration is comprised of an engaged learning community and unique Internet-based decision support tools. These tools include a suite of applications that enable decision makers to conduct place-based analyses and generate maps and dynamic reports.
The bottom line for CMCA is that we could enter data into this system about the services we provide, specifically by census tract, neighborhood, or zip+4 code, overlay those services on vital statistics like poverty, crime, childbirth, education levels, household income, etc and look at a map that in a glance would tell us whether we're working in the right places and focusing on the right outcomes. Further, we could add other social service programs and see if there are gaps in our community that need to be addressed. The City or State could add their own criteria and determine if the money they are pouring into social services is having any effect over time. In fact, they could select a range of issues and say "we want to focus our resources on x, y, and z issues" and then specifically track progress on those issues to target their funds and hold service providers accountable, collectively, for that progress. It's kind of a complicated concept that I'm constantly re-wrapping my brain around but it seems like it would be an incredibly helpful tool for an organization that wants to ensure that its services are meeting its goals. You'll hear more about this from me as we look more deeply into the availability of this tool and implications for our service area. In the meantime, you can read the overview here.
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