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A Portrait of California Report

Health, Education, and Income in an Age of Austerity

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Join us on May 20th for the launch event for the first-ever Portrait of California Report.

For the first time, a study of critical indices of well-being across California. Health, education, and income data, analyzed across race, ethnicity, gender, nativity, and geography.

The breakfast event will include:

  • Welcome from Sandra R. Hernández, M.D., CEO, The San Francisco Foundation
  • Presentation by the co-directors of the American Human Development Project, Sarah Burd-Sharps and Kristen Lewis
  • Panel discussion including Carla Javits, president of REDF, and David Silver, CEO of College Track

When:
Friday, May 20, 2011
Breakfast: 8:30 a.m.
Program: 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

Where:
The City Club of San Francisco
155 Sansome Street, 10th floor
Directions

Please click here to RSVP for this important event.

We encourage you to share this invitation with other community leaders and organizations.


Message from the Donors of A Portrait of California 2011
We in California are accustomed to looking at indicators on unemployment, poverty, income, education, and more to gauge how we are doing as a state. What we urgently need – and what this unique and timely report provides – is a way to make sense of all these data.

A Portrait of California 2011 offers a nonpartisan, fact-based look at how ordinary people in communities across our great state are faring. It tells us who in California is thriving, and who is merely surviving – and why. The centerpiece of this work, the American Human Development Index, is a composite measure that summarizes with a single number the key ingredients of well-being and access to opportunity. The Index is based on an international methodology pioneered at the United Nations, used in 160 countries, and viewed as the global gold standard for assessing human well-being.

We in the donor consortium were attracted to the holistic human development approach that underlies this work because it offers a way to understand and address health, education, and living standards in the interconnected way that people actually experience them – rather than as separate issues requiring separate solutions. We believe that this report will thus prove tremendously useful not just to the philanthropic world but also to policy-makers, researchers, advocates, and those who deliver social services.

The Portrait presents American Human Development Index scores for different regions, metropolitan areas, and over two hundred neighborhood clusters. Scores are also available for women and men as well as for racial and ethnic groups. Perhaps the most innovative and exciting aspect of the report is the sorting of different parts of the state into the “Five Californias,” each with its own distinct profile. The gaps in well-being within California that this report lays bare are startling.

Given the current budgetary environment in California, there could be no better time for a road-tested tool like this one. We hope it can help all who have a stake in our state’s future to identify the most strategic and pressing areas for intervention, chart new paths to move California forward, and track progress over time.

The California Community Foundation, The California Endowment, the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. William Draper III, The San Francisco Foundation, United Ways of California, the Weingart Foundation

What A Portrait of California Report
When 2011-05-20
from 08:30 am to 10:30 am
Where
The City Club of San Francisco, 155 Sansome Street, 10th Floor, San Francisco
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