Title: STRATEGIES FOR OUTREACH IN NATIVE AND
1STRATEGIES FOR OUTREACH IN NATIVE AND SW BORDER
COMMUNITIES
EITC FUNDERS NETWORK Washington, DC March 3,
2006 Ana Marie Argilagos Annie E. Casey
Foundation aargilagos_at_aecf.org
2The Annie E. Casey Foundation
- Our mission is to build better futures for
those most vulnerable families which are least
likely to succeed without help - Connecting families building strong communities
- Data-based advocacy (Kids Count)
- Fostering public policies human service reforms
-
3Why Work in the SW Border Indian Country?
- Rapidly increasing young populations
- High rates of working poor traditional
anti-poverty strategies are not working - As funders, take advantage of role of convener,
connector catalyst bringing stakeholders to
table around common interests increase
attention to challenges leverage opportunities - Border is bellwether for nation families in
borderlands share similar socio-economic status
as gateway cities
4Confused?
- Which term do you use Latino or Hispanic?
- There is no easy answer
- Usually interchangeable, but geography matters
- Native American, American Indian, AI/AN and
what about Hawaii? - We tend to use Native Community feel includes
all groupings
5Native Families A Primer on Demographics
- Currently 562 recognized tribes in the US 229
are in Alaskavary greatly in size - Census 2000 reports 4.1 million AI/AN in the US
- 64 of all AI/AN reside in urban/suburban areas
- Highest poverty rates 1 in 4 lives below poverty
line - 3 states with largest populations CA, OK AZ
- Places with largest proportions AK, OK, NM
- 3 cities NYC, LA and Phoenix
6How we Worked to Create Momentum?
- Started with the data
- Nationally it is estimated that between 18-25 of
eligible tax payers are not claiming itin Indian
Country the Border it is probably higher - Followed by community consultations
- Reconnaissance, consultation, outreach,
relationship building
7Many Families Dont Receive the Full Value of
Refundable Credits
Top Indian Country Zip Codes for Rapid Refunds
Among EITC Filers
Reservation EITC EITC
RAL Pine Ridge (SD) 844 55 78 Red
Lake (MN) 576 61 76 Rosebud (SD)
125 66 74 Mescalero (NM)
573 48 74 Gila River (AZ)
743 46 74 Blackfeet (MT) 1,532 59 74 BO
RDER TOWNS ARE OFTEN EVEN HIGHER!!!
8The Rational How Does it Benefit Native
Communities?
- New capital stimulates tribal economiesserves as
an economic engine - Reluctance to talk about wealth in financial
terms, but individual asset building strengthens
families - Allows families to accumulate down payments for
homes much faster increase capital for small
businesses - Linking to public benefits
- Reduce leakage to Border towns, pawn shops,
trading posts, car dealers, mobile home dealers,
check cashing services
9What out Work in Native Communities Looks Like
Today
- Partners
- National Urban Indian Family Coalition
- Native Financial Education Coalition
- First Nations Development Institute
- OWEESTA
- National Congress of American Indians
- National American Indian Housing Council
- Tribal colleges communities colleges (Tax Help
NM) - Center for Social Development
- Regional Intermediaries
- Boys Girls Clubs
- IRS hud
10Resources You Can Use
- EITC Workbook
- Building Native Communities
- A Guide to Claiming the EITC
- Instructor Guide and Training
- Tribal Leaders Guide
- Learn more about upcoming EITC resources at
www.oweesta.org/eitc - Native Financial Education Coalition
11EITC Outreach Toolkit Covers
- Overview of EITC
- Explains economic impact to community
- Resources available from IRS and others
- How to set up free tax prep sites
- Linking EITC to asset building
- Public service announcements
- Paycheck and W-2 stuffers
- Sample press releases
- Website
12Tribal Leaders Guide
- Many of the same materials
- Specifically targeted for elected officials
13Promoting the Three As
- Promote AWARENESS Dont let millions of EITC
dollars go unclaimed! - Increase ACCESS to free tax preparation sites
- Find or create alternatives to predatory
providers - Provide financial education about building
preserving ASSETS - Help families use refunds to improve their
financial standings
14Lessons Learned in Indian Country
- In urban areas, use NUIFC member centers
- RELATIONSHIPS are critical gain trust by 1st
working via national or regional intermediaries
they are more used to outsiders - Work with the largest employers usually BIA,
Tribal college or the Tribe itself - Self-employment is BIG! Have a plan
- Have at least 1 site which offers year round
services youll be there if there are problems
15SW Border Families A Primer on Demographics
- 32 Border Counties includes 6.5 million people of
which 1.8 million are children - Border child poverty (37) is twice the national
rate (there are ½ a million poor kids) - 80 of Latino children live in families where
parents - work they are also more likely to live in two
parent families graphic example of working poor - High School drop out rates 3x higher than
non-Latino Whites
16Borderlands Population
17Our Work in the SW Border
- Our Partners
- U-S Mexico Border Philanthropy Partnership (local
community foundations) - Over 60 CBOs in 11 counties
- Champions Elected Officials, United Ways
- Community Colleges
- ASU is our research partners
- Latino Financial Issues Program
- IRS
18Our Work in the SW Border
- Using Data to Generate Excitement
- Latino Financial Preferences Behavior Survey
- In 2005 collected 4,800 surveys (in 2004
established baseline with 2,500) - A bilingual instrument, administered by local CBO
partners - Mean Adjusted Gross Income 11,480
19Factoids
- Working poor, cash strapped families are spending
an increasing amount of funds on family
educational attainment (school expenses) - Calls into question access to a bank account as
a success indicator for FES. Although 67 to
72 own bank accounts (technically banked), 48
use money orders to pay bills (possible reasons
include lack of trust, too many fees, learned
behavior) - High informal borrowing saving 50 of Border
Tax filers have borrowed from or lent to family
members in emergency
20Factoids
- Preparing Latinos as financial consumers 92 of
Border Tax filers have never heard of IDAs - 19 to 30 send remittances to family members not
living with them - Border Filers want to know more about (in order
of importance) Homeownership, IDAs, Auto Loans,
Child Savings Accounts, Microbusinesses and
Credit Cards
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23Lessons Learned in the SW Border
- Bilingual is not enough! Bi-cultural
- RELATIONSHIPS are also critical
- Strong strong CBO infrastructure places where
people already going for help (or just to talk).
Work with CBOs where it fits mission - Use promotoras mobile preparers take services
to the people - For new immigrants, kids are often conduits
- Ditto on self-employment year-round sites
24Families are using Refunds to Build Savings, Buy
Homes, Start Businesses
Individual Development Accounts
Home Ownership Programs
Financial Institutions Savings
Financial Literacy/Credit Repair
Micro Enterprise Workforce
The Hook Free or low cost Tax Preparation