Pubdate: Fri, 23 Oct 2009 Source: Leduc Representative (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Osprey Media Contact: http://www.leducrep.com/feedback1/LetterToEditor.aspx Website: http://www.leducrep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2265 Author: Alexandra Pope DRUGS, POVERTY NEED CO-ORDINATED EFFORT Community groups have to work together to find solutions for complex problems like unemployment, drug addiction and homelessness - that was the consensus at a workshop hosted by City of Leduc Family and Community Support Services (FCSS) Oct. 15. About 20 people representing a handful of local support agencies, including the Leduc Foundation, Leduc Alliance Church, Peace Lutheran Church and the LINX Connect Centre, attended the workshop by the Tamarack Institute for Community Engagement to hear tips for moving forward on complicated issues. Tabitha White, research and social development co-ordinator with Leduc FCSS, said as the city prepares to conduct a social needs assessment next year, it was important to bring groups together to identify problems and come up with a strategy. "You need a co-ordinated community effort to move forward on those issues," she said. White said assessments have been completed in the past, but the documents were never released to the general public. This time, FCSS has created a steering committee to involve people from all levels of the community. "The hope is that with all the experts around the table and feedback from stakeholders and residents, we'll be able to move forward on some of those complex community issues," she said. The workshop, facilitated by Mark Cabaj, focused on how to identify complex problems - issues that don't have one clear cause and solution. Cabaj said most social helping agencies are operating under a paradigm that tries to oversimplify problems. In order to get grant funding, a group often has to be able to demonstrate that a project will have a certain outcome, but just because one aspect of a problem has been addressed doesn't mean the whole issue goes away, he said. "We can't keep up by treating complex issues like simple issues on steroids by throwing a million different single-purpose programs at them," he said. "If we fail to treat them as complex issues, we won't move the needle, or could even have counterproductive outcomes." Cabaj said issues that seem to stand alone - for example, the rising prevalence of illegal drug use in Leduc - are usually related to other "big picture" issues. In a group exercise, the workshop participants demonstrated that drug use can be connected to myriad other social problems that could also be seen to stand alone, for example family dysfunction, job loss, mental health issues and lack of skills training. "It's very difficult to make significant and durable change with just a couple of those root causes," Cabaj said. "It's the orchestration of moving on multiple causes that really makes a difference." Grant McDowell, pastor at the Leduc Alliance Church, said it can be difficult to get ideas off the ground when the people who stand to benefit most from them aren't at the table. "Sometimes we just don't follow through," he said. "There are good ideas and they just get shelved because there isn't enough gut-level ownership to move forward." Cabaj said communities have to create a shared civic space where agencies and individuals can pool their collective observations, ideas and expertise. "It's not that any one organization is particularly wrong on their own, it's that no one organization is particularly right," he said. Cabaj said instead of fearing tension, conflict and disagreement, groups should view it as productive. He gave the example of a man who loses his car keys on the darkest side of the parking lot but only searches for them in the light. "We are encouraged to ignore stress and discomfort, told to be predictable and show measurable outcomes (but) we can handle complexity," he said. "We can handle the dark side of the parking lot." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr