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File #: 160044    Version: 0 Name:
Type: Resolution Status: LAPSED
File created: 1/21/2016 In control: Committee on Public Health and Human Services
On agenda: Final action:
Title: Authorizing the Committee on Public Health and Human Services to hold hearings regarding Social Impact Bonds.
Sponsors: Councilmember Green, Councilmember Bass
Attachments: 1. Signature16004400.pdf
Title
Authorizing the Committee on Public Health and Human Services to hold hearings regarding Social Impact Bonds.

Body
WHEREAS, Social Impact Bonds ("SIB") are a nontraditional method of financing the delivery of social service programs, designed with the intention of accessing private investment and shifting financial risk away from government agencies and nonprofit service providers; and

WHEREAS, Under the SIB model, funding is provided to government-contracted service providers by a mix of foundations and private investors for the purpose of attaining clearly-defined, quantifiable social outcomes; and

WHEREAS, If the goals are achieved, the invested funds are repaid along with a predetermined interest payment or portion of the money not spent on more cost-intensive interventions; yet if the goals are not met, investors absorb the loss and government agencies are protected from risk; and

WHEREAS, The world's first SIB pilot, designed to reduce recidivism in prisoners serving twelve months or less, was announced in 2010 in Peterborough, United Kingdom, and since that time, more than 40 SIB initiatives have been launched, several of them in the United States, including in New York City, Cayuga County, Ohio, and the State of Utah; and

WHEREAS, The SIB concept has been explored or implemented by no fewer than ten state governments along with several county and city governments and has received substantial investment and interest from entities like Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, the Rockefeller Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies and Goldman Sachs; and

WHEREAS, Existing SIBs have targeted a variety of desired social outcomes in addition to reducing recidivism, such as reducing the homeless population, expanding access to early childhood education and prenatal care, and improving the quality of juvenile justice and child welfare programs; and

WHEREAS, Philadelphia has the highest povert...

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