The University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Events Faculty Research Springfield Initiative

Rose to Speak on Root Causes of Poverty in Springfield

On April 30, Fred Rose will discuss his recent work in a talk titled “Addressing the Causes of Concentrated Poverty: The Case of Springfield.”

Rose is a lecturer for the Center for Public Policy and Administration and directs its Springfield Initiative, which provides a bridge between university research and resources and city residents who are working to build a stronger community. Currently Rose is working closely with the Center for Popular Economics and the Springfield-based Partners for a Healthier Community on the Wellspring Initiative, a budding economic and community development project in Springfield. Before coming to CPPA, Rose was the staff director and lead organizer at the Pioneer Valley Project in Springfield.

This is the final lecture in the spring 2012 CPPA Faculty Colloquium series and will be in Thompson 620, from noon to 1 p.m. The talk is free, and brown bag lunches are welcome.

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Creative Economy/Springfield Initiatve Grants Social inequality & justice Springfield Initiative

Wellspring Initiative Keeps Growing

The Wellspring Initiative, the Springfield economic development project led by the Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA) and the Center for Popular Economics (CPE), has received a $12,000 grant from the Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts.

This is the third award the initiative has received so far this academic year. The funding will pay for the research and planning needed to move the initiative from a concept into a reality.

Wellspring is coordinating with the region’s largest employers to identify key areas where the purchase of goods and services could be shifted to new worker-owned businesses in Springfield neighborhoods. These businesses would provide entry-level jobs and valuable skills to unemployed and underemployed city residents. Worker-owned businesses would not only offer inner-city residents the opportunity of steady employment; they would also help revitalize Springfield, one of the poorest cities in the United States.

This winter, Wellspring partners plan to identify the first of three business models to pursue. The Community Foundation grant will support Wellspring’s market research into the type of cooperative businesses that would be most likely to succeed in Springfield.

The Wellspring Initiative was one of 86 projects to receive funding from the Community Foundation in 2011. This award comes through the Community Foundation from the Eugene A. Dexter Charitable Fund administered by Bank of America, Trustee.

CPPA is the hub of interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at UMass Amherst. Its faculty and alumni are effective policy leaders, from the local to the global levels, in addressing topics such as family and care policy, environmental issues, emerging technologies, social inequalities and governance. The CPPA program is the 2011 recipient of the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration’s Social Equity Award, created to honor a public administration, affairs or policy program with a comprehensive approach to integrating social equity into its academic and practical work.

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Creative Economy/Springfield Initiatve Grants Springfield Initiative

CPPA Furthers Economic Development Project in Springfield

The Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst is collaborating with Springfield-based Partners for a Healthier Community on an economic and community development project funded through a two-year $200,000 grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno and representatives from Gov. Deval Patrick’s office were on hand Tuesday, December 13, when CPPA and Partners for a Healthier Community announced the award and officially kicked off the next phase of the project. 

The project, called the Wellspring Initiative, aims to create entry-level jobs and improve living conditions in several Springfield neighborhoods. Wellspring will use the two-year Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant, along with matching local funds, to create a worker-owned company and to establish the infrastructure for a network of additional companies with a cooperative organizational structure.

CPPA lecturer Fred Rose is the UMass project director responsible for coordinating the Wellspring Initiative. He will oversee research about three potential businesses, which will include assessing the economic viability of each business and developing a business plan for each of the three. Rose will work with existing local organizations to ensure strong support for the new cooperatively owned businesses.

“Springfield has had difficulty attracting jobs to the area, and is among the poorest cities in the United States,” said Rose, who served as the staff director and lead organizer at the Pioneer Valley Project before coming to CPPA. “The Wellspring Initiative will create new community-based jobs in inner-city Springfield by tapping into the purchasing power of local anchor institutions like colleges and hospitals, which are the region’s largest employers. Together, these institutions purchase more than $1 billion in goods and services each year, but less than 10 percent of that money is spent within Springfield.”

Wellspring is coordinating with the region’s largest employers to identify key areas where the purchase of goods and services could be shifted to new worker-owned businesses in Springfield neighborhoods. These businesses would provide entry-level jobs and valuable skills to unemployed and underemployed city residents.

“The Wellspring Initiative is offering a creative approach to a deep-rooted problem,” said CPPA Director M.V. Lee Badgett. “We’re excited that CPPA is working closely with institutions and organizations throughout the region to strengthen Springfield’s neighborhoods, institutions and economic outlook.”

Badgett and Rose both recognize the value of collaborating with Partners for a Healthier Community, an organization with a mission to address overall health in Springfield through civic leadership, collaborative partnerships and advocacy. CPPA and Partners for a Healthier Community will also join forces with Western New England University, the Pioneer Valley AFL-CIO, Massachusetts Higher Education Consortium, Michael Kane Consulting, Third Sector New England, the Pioneer Valley Project, Jobs with Justice, and Common Capital (formerly the Western Massachusetts Enterprise Fund).

Partners for a Healthier Community was one of only 12 community-based organizations across the country to receive a Roadmaps to Health grant this fall from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The grants went to coalitions that are addressing community health from a broad perspective, incorporating factors such as education, jobs creation and improving the environment in their efforts to develop and sustain healthy people and strong communities.

CPPA is the hub of interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at UMass Amherst. Its faculty and alumni are effective policy leaders, from the local to the global levels, in addressing topics such as family and care policy, environmental issues, emerging technologies, social inequalities and governance. The CPPA program is the 2011 recipient of the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration’s Social Equity Award, created to honor a public administration, affairs or policy program with a comprehensive approach to integrating social equity into its academic and practical work.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and health care issues facing our country. As the nation’s largest philanthropy devoted exclusively to health and health care, the Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, measureable and timely change. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org.

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Grants Springfield Initiative

Third Sector New England Grant Supports Wellspring Learning Network

The Center for Public Policy and Administration at UMass Amherst has received a $22,200 award from Third Sector New England, a Boston-based organization that supports nonprofits working to solve social problems and promote social justice in communities throughout the region.

The grant will advance capacity building within the Wellspring Initiative, a collaboration that involves UMass Amherst, the Center for Popular Economics, and several other partners focused on new economic development in the city of Springfield.

According to Fred Rose, director of the Wellspring Initiative at UMass, “Third Sector is an important partner in our efforts inSpringfieldbecause their grants provide critical support for organizational development.  As a collaborative that includes academic institutions, for-profits, and area NGO’s, Wellspring benefits enormously from the kind of innovative, multi-organizational capacity building at which Third Sector excels.”

The grant provides funds to create a “learning network” between partners that includes UMass, the Center for Popular Economics, Baystate Health, Providence Health System, Springfield Technical Community College, Western New England University, Massachusetts Higher Education Consortium, the Regional Employment Board, Pioneer Valley Project, Jobs with Justice, GreenWorks, and the Pioneer Valley Labor Council.

“Wellspring represents a diverse group of organizations with different institutional cultures and operating structures,” notes Rose.  “The Third Sector grant supports the time and activities required for us to learn from one another and to create new, collaborative strategies that enhance our work together.”

The Wellspring group was one of nine organizational networks throughoutNew Englandto receive a capacity-building grant this year.

According to Emily Kawano, executive director of the Center for Popular Economics, “We’re able to meet every three or four months with the other learning networks funded this year by Third Sector.  That’s an especially wonderful feature of our partnership with Third Sector—the chance to learn from their years of experience in organizational management and also from the lessons exchanged with the other learning networks funded by Third Sector.”

The Wellspring Initiative is a project of the Center for Public Policy and Administration, the hub for interdisciplinary policy research, teaching and engagement at UMass Amherst.  For additional information about the Wellspring Initiative, please contact Fred Rose at frose@pubpol.umass.edu, or visit www.masspolicy.org.