The issues Waikato Vital Signs seeks to define and address will be 'front of mind' for many people during the current challenges. Photo / File
The Waikato Vital Signs project investigates and seeks to improve the social, environmental, cultural and economic wellbeing of the region's communities by 'joining the dots' between statistical information and what matters to local people 'living on the ground'.
The project is coordinated by Momentum Waikato, an independently established community foundation. It is using the Vital Signs strategy and narrative developed in Canada and deployed by community foundations around the world.
The resulting Waikato Vital Signs 2020 Report will be used to inform funding decisions by the region's not-for-profits, charities, government agencies, impact investors, grant-makers and philanthropists.
This is all about making sure the aspirations and concerns you have for your community are factored into the local decisions that resource its social and environmental development.
The next step was to have been 10 two-hour public engagement workshops across the Waikato, to present the data report to local communities and their support sectors, and gather the insights and wisdom that comes from group brainstorming.
Momentum chief executive Kelvyn Eglinton says: "We want to ask local communities what can be done to improve the lives behind the numbers, to amplify their meaning by gathering the stories and viewpoints of real people in real places."
Then the Covid-19 crisis arrived just as those workshops were getting under way, so Momentum has switched to an online survey.
Mr Eglinton says they are pushing ahead because feedback received indicated the very issues Waikato Vital Signs seeks to define and address will be 'front of mind' for many people during the current challenges.
"Home affordability, employment security, training, educational pathways, isolation and connectedness for vulnerable communities, and access to information are even more relevant right now," he says.
"We're hoping that being in our bubbles is a particular opportunity, a good moment in time, to reflect on how we can all work together into the future, to realise A Better Waikato for Everyone, Forever."
Momentum invites Waikato residents to have a look at the data for your district in the Vital Signs Data Map, and then complete the online survey.
Mr Eglinton says it is not a box-ticking exercise that will take five minutes, rather it has just a few questions that ask you for in-depth written answers that unpack your insights. You will be able to save your entries as you go.
"Please take your time and tell us what you really want local funders to know," he says.