A
New Mission
The Community Research Council’s
mission is to become the premier source of independent data analysis
and policy research in the metropolitan region.
CRC will focus its analytic and research
efforts in five key areas of public policy:
• Economic and Community Development
(including asset development, transportation, housing, community
demographic changes and jobs)
• Youth and Education (including schools, child care, after
school programs and child welfare)
• Health (including access to health care, substance abuse
and tobacco control)
• Crime and Public Safety (including policing, corrections
and reentry)
• Urban governance (including government performance and
structure)
CRC will provide foundations, non-profit
agencies and government with the ability to act on data and research,
not just intuition.
CRC’s work in Chattanooga will have
an impact locally, but ramifications nationally. Most Americans
who live in cities live in cities like Chattanooga. Yet, midsize
cities are frequently left out of discussions of metropolitan
or urban policy. In looking at issues in the Chattanooga region,
CRC will tell a story that is relevant to midsize cities and regions
across the country.
Based on a History of Community
Involvement
The Community Research Council began serving
the Chattanooga community as the Metropolitan Council for Community
Services in 1962. The Metropolitan Council was the community’s
first non-governmental health and human services planning agency.
Acting as the planning arm for the local United Way, the Metropolitan
Council was instrumental in the development of numerous community
based efforts to provide services to children and the poor. In
2000, the Metropolitan Council became the Community Research Council.
CRC provided data collection and analysis services to non-profit
organizations and local government. In addition, CRC housed the
Southeast Tennessee Neighborhood Information Service which, in
2004, produced a major study on literacy in Hamilton County.
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