Greater Cleveland
The Greater Cleveland LGBTQ+ community is set to take a major step forward with the launch of the Greater Cleveland LGBTQ+ Community Needs Assessment in 2023. Led by 麻豆传媒's College of Public Health, this inter-organizational initiative is the first of its kind in the Greater Cleveland area and aims to identify and address the most pressing needs of the LGBTQ+ community. Over 100 local community organizations will be participating in the study, with the LGBT Center of Greater Cleveland serving as the primary community partner.
The study will include a comprehensive community survey, intersectionality focus groups, and key stakeholder interviews, to gather input and feedback from local members of the LGBTQ+ community in Cuyahoga, Lake, Lorain, and Geauga counties. These activities will be inclusive and reflective of the diverse voices and perspectives within the LGBTQ+ community. The results of the study will be used to develop strategies for addressing the identified needs and improving the lives of LGBTQ+ individuals in Greater Cleveland.
The study will cover several critical areas including health and wellness, religion and spirituality, education and literacy, housing, food, and basic needs, business and commerce, safety and law enforcement, and recreation and leisure.
This initiative is an adaptation of a similar survey led by 麻豆传媒's College of Public Health that provided dozens of short- and long-term recommendations to improve the lives of LGBTQ+ people living in Greater Akron in 2022. The recommendations offered were straightforward, such as assisting more LGBTQ+ people in registering to vote, as well as more complex suggestions, such as cultivating a culture of inclusiveness, open-mindedness, empathy, acceptance, and respect both within and outside the LGBTQ+ community.
If you're part of the LGBTQ+ community or an ally, you can help make this study a success in Greater Cleveland by getting involved and providing input. The study team encourages members of the LGBTQ+ community to participate in the subcommittee meetings where surveys, focus groups, and interviews are developed with local input to make sure that the voices of the community are heard and reflected in the study results.
For more information or to get involved, please visit lgbtqohio.org or contact Andrew Snyder at asnyde20@kent.edu. Together, we can work towards creating a better future for the LGBTQ+ community in Greater Cleveland.
To learn more about the assessment process or get involved, please visit .
Additional Resources
Thanks to Our Funders
The Greater Cleveland LGBTQ+ Community Needs Assessment is grateful to the Cleveland Foundation for their support of this important initiative to help cover the costs associated with conducting the needs assessment and disseminating the results to the community.
鈥淭his investment is in clear alignment with our values as it lifts up the voices of the LGBTQ+ community, prioritizes lived experience, and will help inform future investment,鈥 said Andrew Katusin, Cleveland Foundation program officer for grantmaking initiatives. 鈥淎s the community鈥檚 foundation, we believe that understanding the needs of the community, directly informed by the community, is the best source of expertise to guide how we can provide support where it is needed most.鈥
We express our sincere thanks to these sponsors for their invaluable contributions to this project. Without their support, the Greater Cleveland LGBTQ+ Community Needs Assessment would not be possible.
Looking to the Future: GREATER YOUNGSTOWN
This work in Greater Akron and Greater Cleveland has led to an interest in the Greater Youngstown area. Efforts are now underway to expand and adapt the community-based participatory research LGBTQ+ Community Needs Assessment process in Greater Youngstown, focusing on Trumbull, Mahoning, Ashtabula, and Columbiana counties. Leaders and stakeholders are mobilizing a steering committee to expand the work to the greater Youngstown area.
"Expanding this work into Greater Youngstown will give us the opportunity to collect grassroots health data across 12 Northeast Ohio counties, impacting not only local LGBTQ+ communities but helping to build a regional LGBTQ+ public health infrastructure, which is currently lacking," continued Snyder.