It is easy to let one number or statistic define your community. Like the number of Fortune 500 headquarters located in your city, the number of owner-occupied single-family homes, the number of excelling schools, the crime rate, the sales tax figures for retail stores and restaurants, or… the poverty rate.
These are all important measures of a community’s vitality and market competitiveness, but I consider that HOW a community deals with these numbers is as important as the number itself.
As a human service planner, I focus on many of the numbers mentioned above, but especially the poverty rate. As of the 2010 Census (3-year American Community Survey) in Tempe: one out of five individuals live in poverty; 13% of families; one out of four children 18 years or younger; over 6% of seniors over 65 years. In Arizona, unemployment is at a stubborn 8.7% (Jan 2012), though down from 9.9% (Jan 2011); and foreclosure fillings in Maricopa County are 3485 (Jan 2012), but better than a year ago at 6779.
These numbers, by themselves, can be unsettling. They can be used to generate calls for action and alarm decision makers. They can be used to define Tempe as a less attractive place to live, start a business, and be a part of community.
Yet, it is important to look beyond these statistics and focus on how the Tempe community responds to the challenges that these numbers represent. I maintain that Tempe is one of the best places to live in Arizona because we are a caring community that confronts the challenges in front of us. We do not hide from our challenges, but rather use them as a means to inspire action and change.
Here are three examples of Tempeans rolling up their sleeves and helping others in need:

Volunteers hard at work
On March 3, over 300 volunteers from neighborhoods, places of faith, large and small businesses, civic groups, and alumni from Tempe Leadership converged on Woods Elementary School, Clark Park and other parts of the community. With paintbrushes, rakes, and hammers these volunteers gave up a Saturday morning to partner with the Tempe Elementary School District and the City of Tempe to improve the look and feel of public facilities. Organizations like Tempe Leadership do not like to sit around and let our schools and parks become eyesores, they work with experts, create partnerships, and make our public spaces better.
On February 24 and 25, Tempe Community Action Agency (TCAA) held the annual Empty Bowls event. This fundraiser brings the education community together with one of Tempe’s largest food pantries to raise money through the selling of hand crafted bowl, planting pots and custom jewelry. Each bowl sold (with a bowl of soup to represent all a hungry or homeless person may have all day), generated needed funds that go to TCAA and the United Food Bank so they can feed the hungry in our community. Organizations like TCAA cannot simply wait for food drives to come in; they use business enterprise to generate the money needed to put food on the table.
As you are mailing in your tax forms this April 15th, hundreds of Tempe volunteers have been hard at work since January at Tempe Community Council’s (TCC) Financial Stability Initiative. Students from the ASU’s WP Carey School of Accountancy, retired professionals and community volunteers help over 1000 low-income families and individuals every year by filing taxes for free and helping them qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit. Clients are also helped with financial literacy classes and savings bonds to help them stabilize, budget and move toward self-sufficiency. Although the Financial Stability Initiative has been called a “best practice” and been modeled for other communities around Arizona, TCC isn’t done. We now work with children and their parents to teach the value of budgeting and money management.
Tempe is a community with tremendous opportunity. People in need know that they have a chance to succeed in Tempe. By living in Tempe, their children have a shot at success by a getting a quality education, living in a safe neighborhood, and connecting with neighbors who care. “Tempe is a great community. Not just because of the amazing nonprofits and community organizations, but because of our residents. The people of Tempe care about their neighbors and look after each other”, says Kate Hanley, TCC Executive Director
People from all around, regardless of economic status; know that Tempe is a truly caring community that cannot be define or measured by one statistic.
- Jayson S. Matthews