Gibson County Community Foundation Announces Free Public Workshop
The Gibson County Community Foundation is announcing a FREE public workshop, The Poverty Simulation on Tuesday, April 18th from 9:00 am to 12:00 noon at Oakland City University, Johnson Center, 705 N Franklin St, Oakland City, Indiana. Complimentary lunch will be provided following the workshop, so registration is required to attend. Please follow this link to register no later than Monday, April 10th: https://tinyurl.com/5btxkz6y.
Poverty is a reality for many individuals and families. But unless you’ve experienced poverty, it’s difficult to truly understand the implications. The Poverty Simulation is an experience designed to help participants begin to understand what it might be like to live in a typical low-income family trying to survive from month to month. It’s a simulation, not a game. The object is to sensitize participants to the realities faced by low-income citizens.
After receiving a Community Leadership Planning Grant from Lilly Endowment, Inc. as part of its seventh phase of the Giving Indiana Funds for Tomorrow initiative (GIFT VII), the Gibson County Community Foundation conducted an active stakeholder engagement process including data and document review, community leader forums, and issue-specific stakeholder meetings. As a result, the “cycle of poverty” was selected as a top priority to address with GIFT VII Implementation Grant funds to align with existing work in the community. Community leaders discussed the need to increase education, access to financial capital, and connections of those living in poverty to help disrupt the cycle of poverty.
With the guidance of Nikki Lasher, Director of Family Health Services with Tri-Cap, participants will assume roles of families facing poverty. Each participant will have distinctive identities and will encounter different hardships while being tasked to provide basic necessities and shelter for their “families”. During the simulation, each “family” will visit different tables that represent community resources and services offered to families in daily life. The Poverty Simulation is recommended for any individual wishing to increase their understanding of poverty, inspire local change, promote poverty awareness, and transform perspectives. Due to the realistic portrayals of the experience, it is recommended for those aged 17 or older.










