Baby Box, Same Idea, Different Continents - Tackling Poverty
Baby Box, Same
Idea, Different
Continents
TacklingPovertyNZ
Workshop
Queenstown, 29 March
2016
Wendy McGuinness is thrilled to announce that Jennifer Weber, the Chief Education Officer from The Baby Box Co is joining us in Queenstown on Tuesday, 29 March 2016 (tomorrow) at the start of the TacklingPovertyNZ tour. “Jennifer is based in Alberta, Canada and was flying to Australia to meet with officials and staff there. When she heard about the workshop and what the 36 TacklingPovertyNZ participants were doing, she decided to fly over and meet them in person.”
You can learn more about their recommendations in the TacklingPovertyNZ booklet, found here.
Below is an image of the TacklingPovertyNZ booklet and December 2015 participant, Lydia Hollister-Jones, presenting the New Zealand Treasury Chief Executive Gabriel Makhlouf with a baby box at the 3 March 2016 event at the New Zealand Treasury.
“Jennifer has agreed to join the Queenstown Lakes workshop as a speaker and a participant. I have asked Jennifer to share her experiences in Alberta where officials in the province of Alberta have rolled out a pilot scheme of the programme, providing 1,500 baby boxes (see more on this story below).”
Jennifer is also impressed with local initiatives to create a baby box for kiwi babies. “It is interesting to see the boxes sitting next to each other and to appreciate that the gap in baby care is apparent across the world.” Jennifer’s contact details can be found below.
See image and news article at http://ngaitahu.iwi.nz/our_stories/enthusiastic-response-to-pepi-packs/
See image and news article about the Alberta experience at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/baby-box-canada-is-adopting-of-one-of-finlands-smartest-ideas-a6833376.html
About the
Tour
• TacklingPovertyNZ
is the second tour the McGuinness Institute has undertaken.
The first was during 2014 with TalentNZ (where we
visited Auckland, Gisborne, Napier, Hastings, Kaikoura,
Christchurch and Dunedin – ending with a finale in
Wellington). The TacklingPovertyNZ workshop is
connected to the TalentNZ project, in that poverty
often results in wasted talent.
• We learnt from the December 2015 TacklingPovertyNZ workshop in Wellington that poverty is personal and local. It can only be defined by those living in poverty and as such it is difficult to measure and assess. We learnt that a national conversation is needed, which means we need to not only go to local communities to understand what is happening, but also to share nationally what is working or not working.
• At the December 2015 TacklingPovertyNZ workshop, five councils showed a keen interest to engage. Each of these have been asked whether they would like us to organise a one-day workshop in their town, city or region. All five councils responded in the affirmative. These are: Far North District Council, Gisborne District Council, Manawatu District Council, Queenstown Lakes District Council and Rotorua Lakes Council.
• Queenstown Lakes District Council was the first to invite us and offered to be a test case in terms of collaboration and process – an offer that enables the Institute to test the process so that the workshops held in the second part of the year are useful and insightful. We thank Queenstown Lakes District Councillors and in particular Mayor Vanessa van Uden and Councillor Cath Gilmour for making this possible.
• Each one-day workshop will start with a presentation from six of the 36 diverse participants who came together in Wellington to produce the TacklingPovertyNZ booklet (published February 2016).
• The six participants (from the 2015 TacklingPovertyNZ workshop) who will be joining us in Queenstown include Ali Bunge, Monique Francois, Eden Iati, Elizabeth Maddison, Caitlin Papuni-McLellan and Regan Thwaites (left to right).
• At the end of each one-day workshop we will prepare a brief overview discussion paper describing what we found and what we learnt. We will try to map local issues and local solutions – ideally looking for solutions that might help other local communities. This paper will be public and given to the Chief Economist at the New Zealand Treasury. The overarching aim is to contribute to a national conversation on poverty reduction.
About Queenstown Lakes workshop 29
March 2016
This one-day workshop is the
first in a series sparked by the national
TacklingPovertyNZ workshop held in Wellington over
three days in December 2015. This initial workshop was an
initiative of the McGuinness Institute in collaboration with
the New Zealand Treasury. The tour aims to continue the
national conversation on how to tackle poverty in New
Zealand.
Participants will hear from the New Zealand Treasury’s Chief Economist, Dr Girol Karacaoglu, and Dame Diane Robertson, Chair of the Data Futures Partnership Working Group, followed by local speakers. These presentations will provide a broad national and local context for the conversation around how to tackle poverty in New Zealand. The afternoon’s discussions will focus on the challenges and opportunities facing the local community, and participants will then present their proposals for local solutions at a public event in the evening. The workshop will take place at the Queenstown Memorial Centre, 1 Memorial St, Queenstown, from 9.00 am to 5.30 pm. The workshop will culminate in a public presentation by the participants from 6.00 pm to 7.30 pm.
If you are
interested in attending either the workshop or the public
presentation that evening, please register your interest by
emailing qld.tacklingpoverty@qldc.govt.nz.
Special thanks to local collaborators Queenstown Lakes
District Council and Catalyst Trust, and local sponsors The
Rees Hotel and Deco Backpackers.
About the December 2015
workshop
In December 2015, the McGuinness Institute undertook a three-day workshop in collaboration with the New Zealand Treasury. The purpose was to explore ways to reduce poverty in New Zealand. To see the finale presentation, or those of speakers, please watch the Institute’s YouTube TacklingPovertyNZ Playlist. To read the participants recommendations download their booklet (published February 2016) or click here to learn more about the 2015 workshop.
About the McGuinness Institute
The McGuinness Institute is a non-partisan think tank working towards a sustainable future, contributing strategic foresight through evidence-based research and policy analysis. We endeavour to undertake research that is independent, innovative and relevant in an educational, professional and ethical manner.
Links of interest
TacklingPovertyNZ website: www.tacklingpovertynz.org
TalentNZ website: www.talentnz.org
McGuinness
Institute website: www.mcguinnessinstitute.org
Baby Box
Co website: www.babyboxco.com
Baby Box Australia
website: www.the-baby-box-co-australia.myshopify.com
ENDS