Potter County Forum



















  Sponsored and Facilitated by:
Potter County Office
Texas Cooperative Extension
The Texas A&M University System
Potter County Forum

Introduction
This report presents the results of the Potter County Forum conducted March 22, 2004 in Amarillo, TX. This Forum is part of the Potter County Futures Forum coordinated by the Potter County Extension Office. Such events are being held in every Texas county as part of the Texas Community Futures Forum, a state-wide needs assessment sponsored and facilitated by Texas Cooperative Extension.

Texas Community Futures Forum
County-level involvement in the Texas Community Futures Forum began in January 1999, with Texans from all segments of the population participating. Citizens in every county were asked to study, discuss and define their communities' current and future needs. Because the populations of Texas counties vary widely, within the framework of the Futures Forum a "community" may be a neighborhood, town, county or region.

Texas Cooperative Extension facilitated the partnering of county government, state agencies, organizations, businesses and other groups to gather information about local needs and issues, and then helped organize action teams to address them. This was an ambitious undertaking. It was also a unique opportunity for many groups to work together in meeting the needs of Texans in the 21st Century.

The 2004 Texas Community Futures Forum process builds off of the previous effort to once again gather information about local needs and issues in all 254 counties. This information will be shared with all of Extension's partners and used as the basis for Extension's long-range outreach education plan for 2005-2008. Extension educational programs, which are available to all Texas residents, will be developed in response to community needs and in conjunction with participating partners.

The products and benefits of this process will be many. All of the issues identified locally will be posted on the Internet for county government, state agencies and other organizations and groups to review and use in developing their own strategic plans. The results from all counties will also be compiled and analyzed in light of trend data to create a comprehensive report. This report will be available to all partners in the Texas Community Futures Forum and to others on request. The information will help all groups to more directly focus their activities and resources; it also will reveal areas of common interest in which partnering groups can work together to solve community problems.

Participants in the Potter County Forum
On March 22, 2004, 52 individuals attended the Potter County Forum. They represent a cross-section of county residents, public agencies and businesses in the area. This forum was facilitated by the following individual(s): Leon J. Church, Sue P. Church. Other(s) supporting this effort included: Sue P. Church, Carollee Waters, Alby Peters, Jim Allison, Don Nicholson, Letecia Goodrich, Tom Benton, Beverly Benton, Leon J. Church.

Purpose of the Potter County Forum
The purpose of the Forum was to solicit and prioritize citizens' opinions about the most important needs and concerns in Potter County. A modified Nominal Group Technique was used to conduct the forum.

The County Forum Agenda
Introductions and Overview: The Forum began with a general session to review the overall agenda, discuss the facilitation process and rules, and pose the question to be considered. Participants were then divided into 6 small groups.

Small Group Session: Participants were asked to respond to the following question:

What are the critical issues facing people in our county over the next five years?

Participants recorded their responses on paper. These items were displayed for all small group participants to see. Items were then grouped and edited by participants to eliminate duplicates and combine similarities. In the last step of the small group session, each person was allocated ten votes (represented by adhesive dots) to be used among the items he or she believed to be the most important. The outcome was a group consensus for the relative importance of the items. The top-ranked items from each small group were reported in the large group session. All items generated in small groups are in appendix 1.

Large Group Session: First, duplicate and similar statements from the 6 group(s) were edited to eliminate redundancies. Using the voting procedure described above, participants then voted for the items they considered most important.

A final step in the process gave the participants an opportunity to identify entities in the county which are best positioned to work on the issues identified. Participants were asked to respond to the following question:

Which entities (agencies, organizations, community groups, etc.) are positioned to best address these issues?

Information from this step was recorded for each of the top-ranked issues. Results of this part of the process are provided below. Priority Needs in Potter County Identified by Participants in the County Forum
The following table reports the final rank of items generated by the Potter County Forum.

Table 1: Critical Issues and Entities Identified in Potter County, March 22, 2004.

Rank (Vote) Description Entities/Organizations Involved
58 Behavioral Related Health Issues (Obesity, Smoking, Teen Pregnancy, drug & alcohol, lack of physical activity, Sexual Behavior) Amarillo Department of Health Texas Department of Health Veterans Administration Hospitals WIC Texas Tech School of Medicine Worth the Weight Youth Organizations Smoke Free Amarillo ISD Region 16 Amarillo Council of Alcohol Ministerial Alliance
46 Water: Quality, Quanity, Rights Extension High Plains Water District City of Amarillo Water Department CREET Master Gardeners Enviromental Quality Commission Panhandle Water Planning Group
38 Aging and Elderly Amarillo Agency on Aging Food Bank Alzheimers Association Senior Ambassador Coalition R.S.V.P. Extension Meals on Wheels Jan Werner Texas Depart of Human Services Young Lawyers of Amarillo
36 Affordable Health Care - Including Medication Amarillo Dept. of Health, Tx Department of Health, Amarillo Veterans Adm., Baptist St. Anthony, Northwest Texas Hospital, Texas Tech School of Medicine and Pharmacy, Texas Legislature Amarillo ISD Region 16 Extension After School Programs Home Schooling Association Youth Programs Big Brothers/Big Sisters Churches Campfire Organization Maverick Organization
32 Financial Literacy Consumer Credit Counseling Extension Banks Schools Better Business Bureau Chamber of Commerce
29 Jobs and Job Training PRPC Amarillo College Texas Work Force Tech Prep
22 Educational Outreach (Parenting, Financial Literacy, Early Childhood, Job Opportunities) Amarillo ISD Region 16 Extension After School Programs Home Schooling Association Youth Programs Big Brothers/Big Sisters Churches Campfire Organization Maverick Organization
19 Quality After School Programs
18 Housing
17 Crime
14 Community Development and Funding
14 Agricultural Literacy & Loss of Agricultural Lands
13 Transportation Needs
13 Character Development
9 Minority Education
8 Parenting
0 Reasonable cost of Energy

Note: Items are the actual and unaltered responses submitted by the participants. Any discrepancy between an item listed here and the same item in the small group listing (see appendices) is due to editing by participants in the general session. The numbers in the Rank column represents the number of votes participants gave to the corresponding item. Higher numbers denote greater importance.

Future Plans for the Potter County Community Futures Forum
The Futures Forum process gives residents of Potter County the opportunity to identify critical issues that affect them, their families, and their communities. Many local and area agencies and organizations want input from local residents to better focus their activities and resources. Working together, such groups can plan individual, joint or coordinated actions to effectively address a county's or community's critical needs.

Appendix

Appendix 1. Small Group Issues

Note: Small group results are reported here as they were submitted; they have not been edited or changed in compiling this report.

Items Identified by Participants of Small Group(s), Potter County Forum, March 22, 2004.

Small
Group
#
Vote Description
1 12 Rising cost of health insurance/health care and the growing number of uninsured individuals.
1 12 Drug/Alcohol abuse and the effect on the family
1 10 The growing concern for a safe and plentiful water supply
1 9 Growing numbers of chilren who are victims of abuse, neglect, and sexual assualt. Teen pregancies
1 9 Responsible parenting
1 4 Budget constraints: city level, county level, to address increased crime
1 4 Disadvantaged services available (donations_
1 4 Handicapped transportation for elderly
1 4 Youth and young adult: managing your money
1 3 Lost cost caregiver respite
1 3 The growing incidence of lack of respect for authority - whether it be the law, teachers, or parents. The disregaard for laws/rules, thus an increase in violence and lack of civility.
1 3 Families in crisis due to: homelessness, unelployment, unafforadable health care, substance abuse
1 2 After hour public transportation to allow people to get to work
1 1 Housing costs, taxes
1 1 Access to healthcare for low income elderly
2 12 Behavior related health issues: obesity, lack of physical activity, tobacco use, nutrition, drug/alcohol dependence, responsible sexual behavior
2 10 Teen pregnancy: abstinence, sex education, abortion
2 10 Education: quality funding
2 8 Respect
2 7 Public transportation; amount, availability, type, different clients, cost
2 7 Water: quality, quantity
2 7 Water: ownership/sale/community use
2 7 Youth: prevention programs
2 5 Mental health: affordable services, depression, anxety, anger management
2 2 Access to health care: cost, availability, women, children
2 2 Parenting
2 1 Infrastructure replacement of improvement
2 1 Employment: Higher paying jobs
3 12 Health issues in include: Teen pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease among teen and elderly, inadequate health care for children, hungary children
3 12 Need for education of professionals and lay people of issues facing our elders. Include care giver support.
3 11 Water usage and conservation education
3 10 Increase law enforcement: drug abuse, Elder abuse, fraud, mail theft
3 9 Housing options for the elderly: affordability, safety, choice, repairs
3 8 A single-source payment health care system for all citizens including medication
3 7 City growth: improved streets, more water/sewer mains, other utility expansion
3 6 Public education funding
3 4 Education assistance for single parents
3 4 Good paying jobs
3 3 Establish a primary focus on 'Issues' rather than 'party affiliation in political electioneering
3 1 Affordable housing for lower income families
4 14 Develop quality after school programs that address: high school drop out, pursue college, reduce gang involvement, career/mentoring, employment training, volunteerisml
4 11 Alcohol and drug abuse prevention
4 10 Affordable health care access
4 9 Minority education
4 8 Aging Communiites, volunteers/neighborhoods, assistance, prescription drugs
4 6 Employment and career training
4 6 Obesity prevention
4 6 Teenage pregnancy prevention and management
4 5 Educational outreach, early childhood
4 3 Transportation system
4 3 Rural Development:keeping, encouraging, enabling young people to stay in their community
4 2 Drugs: ways to educate on the issues involving the use
4 1 Water conservation, seriscaping education, water quality
4 1 Better jobs for youth other than fast food
4 1 Decrease number of homeless through promotion of job training
4 1 Community preparedness, security, Pantex
5 14 Improve job market through workforce training, skills for obtaining and maintaining employment, work ethics (adoption of Character Counts curriculum in adult settings
5 8 Prevention of childhood obesity through education
5 8 Water rights and availability in the Panhandle
5 8 Community wide water conservation programs
5 7 Financial planning: education, retirement, savings, property ownership for all ages
5 7 Healthcare navigator education
5 7 Diabetes self management education and awareness
5 7 Nutrition education for youth transitioning from parent's home to own home
5 4 Trash
5 4 Educate the public on agricultural issues that will affect their lives
5 2 Drugs
5 1 Loss of farm land
5 1 Our schools money
5 1 High property taxes
6 9 Life application skills
6 9 Health Care: Affordable, funding for indigent
6 6 Energy: variety of sources at reasonable cost
6 6 Aging population health care
6 6 Innovative public education initatives: new technologies
6 4 Crime reduction programs
6 4 Community wide beautification programs
6 3 Education outreach: parenting skills, financial literacy, early childhood education, job opportunities
6 3 Technical worker training, develop programs
6 2 obesity in young children and young adults