Title: Who are we
1Who are we?
- The Oregon Progress Boards Quest for Relevance
- Presentation to the
- Oregon Progress Board
- By Rita Conrad, Acting Executive Director
- September 20, 2005
2Oregon Progress Board
- How it got started
- What was relevant then
- What it has accomplished
- What is relevant now
- Current challenges
- Looking ahead
31989
- Oregon was in a deep recession.
- New governor asked business leaders for a plan to
turn the economy around. - Oregon Progress Board was created to facilitate
plan development and monitor progress.
4Statute
- An independent Oregon Progress Board is needed
to - Encourage the discussion and understanding of
critical global and national trends that will
affect Oregon in the coming decades - Submit to Oregonians a strategy that describes
and explains a vision for Oregon's economic,
social and environmental progress for 20 years
into the future - Submit to the Legislative Assembly goals for
Oregon's progress, including measurable
indicators of the achievement of those goals - Assist state agencies and their partners in
developing performance measures that provide
linkages to the measurable indicators of
achievement .
ORS 285A.150
5The Boards planning process resulted in Oregon
Shines with Oregon Benchmarks.
6OS Strategy for changing course
7Oregon Partners
- State government
- Local governments
- Business
- Not-for-profits
- Foundations
- Citizens
8State government partners
- Governors Office
- Department of Administrative Services
- Budget and Management (BAM)
- Legislative Leadership
- Ways and Means
- Legislative Fiscal Office (LFO)
- State Agencies
9Oregon partners make it happen.
10Alignment requires buy-in.
11Strategic Vision Was buy-in adequate?
Oregon Partners 15,000 ft view
12Policy work - resource alignment
Oregon Partners 15,000 ft view
13Performance Management - needs buy-in at all
levels
Oregon Partners 15,000 ft view
14Board accomplishments
15Board Products Services
- Oregon Shines
- 1989 focused on economy
- 1997 update focused on economy, community and
environment - Oregon Benchmarks
- 90 quality of life vital signs
- Measure progress towards Oregon Shines goals
- Inquiries from every state and around the world
- Performance Measurement
- Guidelines for agency budget instructions
- Mandatory agency trainings
16Awards
- Corporation for Enterprise Development
- Financial World Magazine
- Ford Foundation
- Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
University - Partners for Livable Communities
- National Governors' Association
17Legislation Using Oregon Benchmarks
- Workforce Quality Council (1991 House Bill 3133)
- Education Act for the 21st Century (1991 House
Bill 3565) - Key Industries (1991 Senate Bill 997 1995
Senate Bill 309 sunset 1999) - State Agency Performance Measurement and Budget
Policy (ORS 291.100) - The Oregon Commission on Children and Families
(1993 House Bill 2004) - Reorganized Services to Children and Families
(1999 Senate Bill 555)
18Planning and Management
- Local Governments and Foundations
- Human Investment Partnership (1991)
- Budget Development Policies (1992, 1994, 1996)
- Clarifying Oregons Fiscal Choices (1994)
- Social Support Investment Work Group (1997)
- State Agency Performance Management (1993, 2001)
19New Programs and Organizations
- Oregon Option (1994)
- Community Partnership Team (1991)
- Community-based Strategic Planning
- Livable Communities (1994)
- Statewide Performance Measure Association (2005)
20What is relevant now?
21OS strategy is still relevant.
22Who would argue with thesegoals for Oregon?
- Quality jobs for all Oregonians
- Engaged, caring and safe communities
- Healthy, sustainable surroundings
233 Oregon Shines Goals7 Benchmark Categories
- Quality jobs for all Oregonians
- Economy (17)
- Education (12)
- Engaged, caring and safe communities
- Civic engagement (9)
- Social support (22)
- Public safety (7)
- Healthy, sustainable surroundings
- Community development (7)
- Environment (16)
24There are 90 of them.
- ECONOMY Rural employment, trade, new business,
job growth, professional services, economic
diversification, research development, venture
capital, cost of doing business, regulatory
burden, income, wages, income disparity, working
poor, unemployment, exports, foreign language - EDUCATION ready to learn, 3rd 8th grade
reading and math, CIM, dropouts, HS and college
completion, adult literacy, computer/Internet
usage, labor force skills training - CIVIC ENGAGEMENT volunteering, voting, feeling
of community, understanding taxes, taxes per
income, public management quality, SP bond
rating, arts, libraries - SOCIAL SUPPORT teen pregnancy, prenatal care,
infant mortality, immunizations, HIV, smoking,
premature death, perceived health status, child
care slots and affordability, teen substance
abuse, child abuse, elder abuse, alcohol and drug
use while pregnant, poverty, health insurance,
homelessness, child support, hunger, seniors
living independently, working disabled, disabled
living in poverty - PUBLIC SAFETY overall crime, juvenile arrests,
students carrying weapons, adult and juvenile
recidivism, emergency preparedness - COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT traffic congestion,
drinking water, commuting, vehicle miles
traveled, road and bridge condition, home
ownership, affordable housing - ENVIRONMENT air quality, CO2 emissions, wetlands
gain/loss, stream water quality, in-stream flow
rights, agricultural lands, forest lands, timber
harvest, municipal waste disposal, hazard
substance cleanup, freshwater/marine/terrestrial
species health, natural habitat, invasive
species, state park acreage
25Benchmark Alignment in State Government
26Trends
Where are we headed?
Oregon Shines (30,000 ft)
Benchmarks
OS Goals
Did we change course?
Where do we want to be headed?
OS Strategy
How do we change course?
Past Progress Board involvement
Policy Analysis
Where are we?
Oregon Partners (15,000 ft)
Performance Measures
Policy Goals
Where do we want to go?
How did we do?
Programs Initiatives
How do we get there?
27Progress Board challenges
- Pressure for operations over policy
- Greater focus on performance management
- Lesser focus on trend analysis, strategic
visioning and resource alignment - Reducing push-back, achieving buy-in
- Dwindling resources
- From a staff of 4 FTE in the past
- To a staff of 1.75 FTE now
28Trends
Oregon Shines (30,000 ft)
Where are we headed?
Benchmarks
OS Goals
Did we change course?
Where do we want to be headed?
Current Progress Board involvement with state
government focus
OS Strategy
How do we change course?
Policy Analysis
Where are we?
Performance Measures
Policy Goals
Oregon Partners (15,000 ft)
Where do we want to go?
How did we do?
Programs Initiatives
How do we get there?
29Oregon Shines
Trends
Where are we headed?
Benchmarks
OS Goals
Did we change course?
Where do we want to be headed?
OS Strategy
How do we change course?
Policy analysis and resource alignment Are the
right ships headed in the right direction?
Policy Analysis
Where are we?
Performance Measures
Policy Goals
Oregon Partners
Where do we want to go?
How did we do?
Programs Initiatives
How do we get there?
30Oregon Shines
Trends
Where are we headed?
Benchmarks
OS Goals
Did we change course?
Where do we want to be headed?
OS Strategy
How do we change course?
Performance managementAre the ships running
well?
Policy Analysis
Where are we?
Performance Measures
Policy Goals
Oregon Partners
Where do we want to go?
How did we do?
Programs Initiatives
How do we get there?
31Potential Board Roles, 2007-09
- Facilitator
- Help state government partners concur on higher
goals/functions - Help Oregonians articulate an updated strategic
vision (OSIII) - Honest broker of information
- Custom packets to Governors Office, BAM LFO
showing how agencies are contributing to shared
goals/functions - Benchmark performance reports
- County Data Books
- Consultant to partners outside of state
government - Local governments
- Non-governmental organizations
32Proposed roadmap for 2005-07
- Front burner
- Performance infrastructure
- Benchmark publications and reports
- Custom packets for legislators, policy advisors
and analysts - On the radar screen Visioning
- Map existing visioning efforts
- Identify partners, build coalitions
- Portion of each Board meeting
- Greater board member involvement
- Active committees, task forces
- Fewer board meetings
33Proposed Committee Structure
34Proposed Meeting Schedule
- Quarterly Board meetings
- 2005 - complete as planned (one more meeting in
November) - 2006 quarterly (March, June, September,
December) - First Tuesday
- Monthly committee meetings?
- First meeting set goals and work plan
35Committee Volunteers
36- Rita Conrad
- Acting Executive Director
- 503-378-3202 direct
- Rita.R.Conrad_at_state.or.us
- www.oregon.gov/DAS/OPB