Good Jobs and Livable
Neighborhoods
Background
IWF’s advocacy on behalf of low-income families with other
groups in the state led to the formation of the Good Jobs and Livable
Neighborhoods Coalition in 2002. Because of problems with the economy
and patterns of economic growth in the Milwaukee area, W-2 participants
face more difficulty finding and keeping good jobs. Job creation
in the city, where the majority of the region's poor people live,
has lagged far behind the suburbs. The city’s economic conditions
do not provide for stable full-time employment for wage earners.
As a result, job seekers face a significant shortage of family-supporting
jobs and must travel to suburban centers to find work. Lack of affordable
housing options in suburban areas limits low-income people to living
in the city center. Commuting to work is made more difficult by
an inadequate public transportation system and high gas prices.
The Good Jobs & Livable Neighborhoods Coalition (GJLN) was
designed to improve economic conditions in the city of Milwaukee.
Its goal was to leverage city and county financial support for development
projects so that the projects would benefit the entire community
by providing family-supporting jobs, skill training opportunities,
environmentally-friendly development practices, and resources for
affordable housing. In addition, GJLN also wanted to make sure locally-owned
businesses a real opportunity to compete for development funds.
The Coalition included a broad spectrum of community
partners, including faith-based, labor, environmental, advocacy,
neighborhood, and other progressive groups. Its philosophy centered
around a community
benefits agreement (CBA). A CBA would require developers asking
for public assistance for their projects to meet a series of criteria
in order to receive that assistance including local hiring, job
training, and a commitment to affordable housing. The goal was to
pass local legislation that would ensure that developers would not
receive tax incentives or other public assistance for their developments
in Milwaukee unless they agreed to the CBA conditions.
Good Jobs & Livable Neighborhoods achieved its first major
success in 2005, when they succeeded in passing a community
benefits agreement with the Milwaukee County Board, which ensured
that new development in the Park East area of Milwaukee would include
a CBA. The Park
East Redevelopment Compact (PERC) was the first step in bringing
economic opportunity to the broader community.
Good Jobs & Livable Neighborhoods takes
off
In 2007 Good Jobs
& Livable Neighborhoods became an independent 501©3
organization. It is a respected organization working to secure community
benefits agreements as new developments emerge in other areas of
Milwaukee.
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