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PBNYC Voting Outreach and Platform: Design Challenge #15

Open sonyabea opened 6 years ago

sonyabea commented 6 years ago

What problem are we trying to solve?

Last spring, during Cycle 6 vote week for Participatory Budgeting, NYCET texted 35k people to let them know about voting. 80% were people of color, and 79% of the people who responded were people of color. So, we did alright at getting people of color to respond to us. BUT, when we crossed who we texted made it through the platform and actually voted.... it was only 45% people of color. So .. there is something about the process that is not encouraging PoC to vote, even though they’re responding to our outreach at almost the same rate as white people. Programmatically, what we are doing is just not texting white people and doing twice as many total people, to make up the difference. But, we’d like to do a deep dive (while the system is live) and have folks analyze and look into design reasons why people might be dropping off.

Who will benefit (directly and indirectly) from this project?

Participatory Budgeting equity and members of marginalized communities who want to have a say in how our city's budget is spent.

Where can we find any research/data available/articles?

What is Participatory Budgeting?

Participatory Budgeting is a democratic process in which community members directly decide how to spend part of a public budget. It’s grassroots democracy at its best. It helps make budget decisions clear and accessible. It gives real power to people who have never before been involved in the political process. And it results in better budget decisions—because who better knows the needs of our community than the people who live there?

More than 1,500 cities across the world have adopted Participatory Budgeting (or PB), like Chicago, Boston, and Greensboro. To find more information on how the concept has worked elsewhere, visit Participatory Budgeting Project.

Through Participatory Budgeting, community members – like you – directly decide how to spend at least $1,000,000 of the public budget in participating Council Districts. Share your ideas on the map for capital projects. Community members can propose and vote on projects like improvements to schools, parks, libraries, public housing, and other public or community spaces. After you submit your idea on this Idea Collection Map, your idea will be given to community volunteers, called Budget Delegates. Budget Delegates work in your district to turn ideas into real proposals for a ballot, with input from city agencies. These proposals will be up for a community-wide vote in the spring. How does it work?

Council Members choose to join Participatory Budgeting New York City (PBNYC), giving at least $1 million from their budget for the whole community to participate in decision-making. It’s a yearlong process of public meetings, to ensure that people have the time and resources to make informed decisions. Community members discuss local needs and develop proposals to meet these needs. Through a public vote, residents then decide which proposals to fund.

This year, you can vote for as many as five of your favorite PBNYC project proposals on your district ballot. Each participating Council Member guarantees funding for the projects that receive the most votes, until their PB funding runs out.

There’s a PBNYC Citywide Committee — made up of individuals, community organizations, and Council Members — which helps guide the process and supports PB across the city. The Committee proposes rules for the process each year, which are formalized into a Rule Book adopted by the City Council. Check out this year’s Rule Book to learn more about our goals, guidelines, and eligibility criteria. What kind of projects can be funded?

Community members can propose projects like improvements to schools, parks, libraries, public housing, and other public or community spaces with the use of certain “discretionary funds.”

Discretionary funds are money that a City Council Member allocates. There are two types of discretionary funds. Expense funds are used to pay for salaries and services. Capital funds are used to pay for physical infrastructure — “bricks and mortar” projects, like the construction, renovation or repair of city-owned property.

For the time being, PBNYC only deals with capital money. More info: https://council.nyc.gov/pb/ Scripts we used for Outreach: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1YnB6BHFYfFWzQAtAWUwaMgh_uA9qzGQU--GlN6JeHeQ/edit?usp=sharing

Voting Platform: https://pbnyc2018.d21.me/

Shared Google Doc / Where we could put report: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1uN6IYSt9gnkMq-v9KmNBtvq3e3emHXeMJJPTnZLZJwk/edit?usp=sharing

What help is needed at this time?

Smart designers

What are the next steps (validation, research, coding, design)?

We would like to create a report on recommended improvements to the online voting platform and SMS outreach program to improve participation by communities of color.

How can we contact you outside of Github(list social media or places you're present)?

sonya@nycet.org

Project management

Checklist for NEW ideas :baby:

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Checklist for ACTIVE projects :fire:

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If you get stuck at any point, feel free to reach out to the leadership team with an email to steering@progressivehacknight.org or come find an organizer at a HackNight. We're here to help bring great ideas to life!