Collective Impact
Collective Impact
And the Legacy of a Champion
Happy Birthday Mom! Your best gift I’m sure was the Milwaukee Bucks winning the NBA Championship. I really did cheer for both teams!
As the hot sun scorches the Phoenix landscape, we continue our COVID adapted operations at the Human Services Campus. We distribute water, invite people indoors. We shelter nearly 140 people per night on the floor of a Day Room and a Dining Room, for nearly 16 months now. We are certainly out of “crisis” mode and in a new “norm.”
This coming Sunday marks one year since our champion, Mike McQuaid passed away due to COVID. I still expect him to walk through the door of my office. He would say “you got a minute?” Regardless of what was happening, I would make at least one minute for him, if not 30 or 60 minutes. He would often say, “I’ve been thinking about” or “What if we did…” Always thinking, always strategizing and problem solving. He left us so many gifts. And dang, it still hurts.
Channeling the hurt and sadness into positive energy, working for change and advocating for all people experiencing homelessness continues to be the way I carry on. Taking the high road. Staying focused to the goal. Practicing equanimity.
And I’m thinking about tribalism and environmental justice. Not that they go together, exactly. And by the time I finish writing this I will make a connection.
The NBA Finals drove home for me this idea that tribalism, picking a side, or picking a team, creates opposition between people. When I was telling someone earlier this week that I was cheering for both the Bucks and the Suns, they said, “you can’t do that!” I said, “yes, I can!” It’s not impossible to root for multiple players on both teams. I may still have a preference for one team to win, and that doesn’t mean I can’t be happy for both. When a “fan tribe” becomes so intense that they inflict harm and violence on the opposing fans, it ruins the fun for everyone.
I watched this setting up of opposition for two years through the Campus zoning request to add shelter beds. The entire process of community meetings, voting meetings, and conversations with interested parties was designed with “those for” and “those against.” “Tribes” formed on both sides. People who supported the request became the opposition to those who did not support the request. City meetings registered people to speak “for” or “against.” And then in the end, City staff and elected officials stipulated that we “partner” with the community. So while nothing about a two year process supported partnering, now after a literal battle we figure out how to navigate relationships and find common ground.
In my heart and soul I believe that problem solving comes from working together, not working in opposition. I work from a place of “collective impact,” gathering people to share a common vision and aligning their strengths to positively change processes and systems. And I have seen it be successful.
I am optimistic that real problem solving will be coming soon with the City to create an outdoor cooling center at the Campus. I’m sure it is with good intentions that it was decided to park a City bus 300 feet from the Campus main gate. And to have this bus running from 9 am to 5 pm, inviting people experiencing homelessness on to the bus and to give them water. And to have this bus guarded by two police vehicles, with two to four officers receiving overtime pay. And those police vehicles turned on and running all day. By “running” for the bus and the police vehicles I mean the engines are running, however they are not going anywhere. And the persistent police presence is causing people who are unhoused to leave, to not engage with other services, and to move into other areas of Phoenix.
Yes, homelessness is a public health crisis. Yes, heat is an emergency situation. However in other neighborhoods, the solution wouldn’t be idling vehicles polluting the air while we have alerts for ozone and high pollution. Policies for the unhoused need to be the same as for those who are housed. And, we need housing to end homelessness.
Similar to the posts and chains “solution” of last year, this is a high cost, low impact, insulting, unjust attempt to “help the homeless.” Ask us what we need, and we will tell you. It’s not about the “municipal tribe” versus the “nonprofit/social services tribe.” It has to be about working together to solve homelessness.
About the Human Services Campus
Founded in 2005, the Human Services Campus is a collaborative force of partner organizations united on one campus to end homelessness. Located just west of downtown Phoenix, 16 independent agencies on the Campus see nearly 1,000 individuals every day, offering a holistic range of client services including: reunification with family and friends; mental, physical and dental health; shelter; employment; meals; legal services and housing. Having all of these resources in one location with intra-agency communications makes it more feasible to provide a customized engagement for each client to help end their homelessness. For more information, visit www.keystochangeaz.org.