In Blog: Factually Speaking

I’ve had the privilege throughout my career of listening to stories. Sometimes these stories are told verbally, and other times they’re told in numbers or survey responses. Regardless of their format, these stories help us learn about each other and the world around us. 

In my work, I call these stories “data,” and they help me understand how programs and policies are helping or hurting folks here in Michigan. I’ll give you a few examples.

When I used to work for a local health department, I would meet with community organizers, local leaders, and youth to assess and address substance use among middle and high school students. Hearing from youth champions was equally as powerful as poring through the Michigan Profile for Healthy Youth data on rates of e-cigarette use. Together, these data helped local coalitions identify strategies to reduce youth substance use in their communities.

In my previous role as a program evaluator, I gathered surveys and conducted in-depth interviews with adults who participated in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). In this work, I sought to understand their experiences participating in programs like SNAP Education or the Gus Schumacher Nutrition Incentive Program — programs that support SNAP households in accessing and preparing healthy foods. I got to hear directly from folks from Detroit to the Upper Peninsula on how necessary these programs were in improving the health and well-being of their families. And, on the flip side, I got to see the very real impacts of federal cuts to SNAP and the elimination of SNAP Education on SNAP households and organizations working to strengthen food security in Michigan.

However, sometimes data doesn’t really need to be collected through surveys and focus groups.

Just six years after I graduated from Oxford High School, a school shooting happened in those very same halls. Four students never made it home.

That number — four — means so much more than any number in a spreadsheet. It represents the devastating impact of gun violence, a forever-changed Detroit suburb, and the absence of protective, public health policy.

After all, data should do more than sit in a report; it should help to inform policy change. And at a time when we’re losing access to invaluable data, it’s imperative that we seek to advance data-informed policy.

Translating data into policy is ultimately what brought me to the Michigan League for Public Policy, and I’m ecstatic to serve as our new Kids Count senior data analyst. Helping to gather and share data through Kids Count in Michigan can help policymakers make sound policy decisions, support local organizations in identifying community needs and program funding, and understand whether we’re truly advancing the health and well-being of children and families in Michigan.

Whether it’s improving mental health, advancing nutrition security, or preventing gun violence, the stakes are high. If there’s a time to dig into the data and tell the stories of policy impact here in Michigan, the time is now — and I’m happy to join a team that’s committed to making that change.