Grand Rapids Strategic Plan

Grand Rapids, Michigan Includes Sustainability as a Core Part of its Strategic Plan

Project Summary

Upon the arrival of a new city manager, the City of Grand Rapids created a strategic plan. The City Manager solicited feedback from city employees across all departments as well as the City Commission before the City selected sustainability as one of six core City values.

Background

In 2006, Grand Rapids was one of the first cities in the country to create a sustainability plan. In 2010, the City created its first of two five-year sustainability plans. This was used to some extent as a strategic plan for the entire city. When City Manager Mark Washington was hired in October 2018, he launched a project to create a strategic plan. He wanted the plan to be completed by the end of March 2019 so it could inform the FY2020 budget. The budget was adopted in May 2019.

Why should you do a strategic plan?

A strategic plan helps keep a city focused on its goals and priorities. When the plan is put into place, it holds city staff accountable for reaching those goals. During the annual budget process, departments prove how their requests further the priorities outlined in the strategic plan. During the year-end review, departments and employees can be held accountable based on the progress they’ve made toward the goals. This reduces wasteful spending and helps the city provide excellent services to community stakeholders. The plan’s development is done internally by the project team and city employees. Once the team has a good grasp of the plan, it can be submitted to the public for feedback if appropriate.

Implementation

The development of the City of Grand Rapids’ strategic plan began in October 2018 with the support of an external consultant. After the first strategic planning work session with the City Commission, the City Manager determined the process should be led and facilitated internally with the consultant serving an advisory role. In December, the City Manager asked Alison Sutter to serve as the strategic plan project manager in addition to her duties as the City’s sustainability manager. Sutter worked with the City Manager and the City’s executive team to create a project team. The team then developed a process for the strategic plan’s creation and content. The City used strategic plans from Austin, Texas, Grand Valley State University, and Raleigh, N.C., as references when creating its plan.

The first step in the plan’s creation was to identify a focus and feasible scope. For instance, when it comes to sustainability, there are city operations directly controlled by the City and there are community-wide impacts from sources not managed by the City. Staff decided to focus primarily on city operations. They also included strategies in the plan to support or collaborate with community members working on issues the City does not have direct control over but are still important to stakeholders. For example, the City is collaborating with partners on a river restoration project to reconnect the community to the river and continue to improve its water quality.

Next, the City Manager met with staff across all departments and the City Commission to select the City’s six core values. The values identified were accountability, collaboration, customer service, equity, innovation, and sustainability. The project team set an intention to embed these values in the six sections of the plan: governmental excellence, economic prosperity and affordability, engaged and connected community, health and environment, mobility and safe community.

To structure the work, three teams were created: executive, project, and outcome. The executive team included City Manager Washington, six City administrators and the strategic plan project manager. This team received and edited draft reports and made high-level strategic recommendations to the City Manager. The 10-person project team was responsible for the bulk of the work. This group coordinated and led the six outcome teams, reviewed and discussed overlapping concepts, worked to embed the values throughout the entire plan and made recommendations to the executive team. One outcome team was established for each of the plan’s six sections. The outcome teams were cross-departmental and were responsible for drafting the strategies and metrics.

Each outcome team also included one “equity champion.” This person made sure potential disparate impacts were discussed and helped teams identify strategies that would result in more equitable outcomes. A key focus was how strategies could remove and prevent barriers created by systemic and institutional discrimination.

The City Manager reviewed and approved the content of the final draft strategic plan, which then was presented to the City Commission. The Commission adopted the strategic plan in April 2019.

It is important to note the project manager relied heavily on two colleagues, both of whom also served as project leads. One was trained in LEAN process improvement practices and helped establish the framework and timing at the start of the plan creation process. The other one designed the plan. Everyone has different skillsets and expertise. It is important to evaluate what people can do and choose who does what.

The City’s adoption of sustainability and accountability as two of its six core values aligns with its previous sustainability plan. The City’s definition for sustainability is “the ability to be maintained and making decisions with an understanding of how those decisions will impact the environment, people and communities, and finances both today and in the future.” Staff need to consider how their proposed budget items and operational decisions may harm environmental quality, communities, and economic prosperity. Since accountability also is a value, staff need to measure and report on their progress in a transparent manner that allows the City Manager, commissioners, and the public to hold the City responsible for its commitments.

As the City enters the budgeting process for the upcoming fiscal year, all new budgeting requests need to show how they align with the strategic plan.

Funding

The fee for the consultant, who was most heavily used at the beginning of the process, was around $18,000. In addition, nearly 50 staff worked varying hours across the five-month plan development period, with the project manager working almost full time for four months. The project manager also worked closely with the budget team and the City Manager to align the FY2020 budget to the plan’s strategic priorities.

Timeline

The project took five months and was completed shortly before the FY2020 budget was presented and ultimately approved. During the first month, the consultant worked with the executive team to lay a foundation for a process and begin engaging the City Commission. City staff spent the remaining four months developing the plan.

Outcomes and Conclusions

One of the largest impacts of the strategic plan was the identification of the City’s core values. These serve as the foundation for a cultural change in the way the City government is run. All new budget requests must be aligned with at least one of the six strategic priorities. It is important to note that not everything will be accomplished in the first year. Each year, the City will determine which parts it can focus on to achieve the desired outcomes by Fiscal Year 2023. By aligning the budget to the strategic priorities and outcomes, the City is set up for long-term change.

The City uses sustainability as a decision-making framework and tool. It requires all departments to think about how any action or request may impact the environment and the people in the community in addition to the action’s fiscal impacts. This framework continues City leadership’s expectation that sustainability is considered in all decisions, ensuring the city becomes a more resilient, healthier and better place to live.

The health and environment section includes an objective to reduce carbon emissions and increase climate resiliency in Grand Rapids. This will be accomplished by creating carbon reduction goals in the future and integrating those into the appropriate City plans. The City will look at reducing its carbon footprint, assessing the feasibility of going 100% renewable, creating a climate action and adaptation plan, and working to achieve a 40% tree canopy.

The newly created Office of Performance Management, which is housed in the City’s Executive Office, is charged with managing the successful implementation of the strategic plan. The office will create a framework for accountability, ensuring staff measure, track, accomplish and report on the progress of strategies and metrics. The data collected will be reported publicly and will serve as an indicator of the staff’s performance. The City has committed to incorporating performance measures from the strategic plan into all employee evaluations, including the City Manager’s.

The strategic plan was designed to be a living breathing document that will be updated when necessary. In summer 2020, the City expects to update the plan to address items that were missing or unclear. City staff intend for the document to continuously improve, become more concise, advance goals and value achievements.

Challenges

One challenge was the short amount of time allowed for completing the initial plan. The five-month timeline enabled Grand Rapids to use the plan in its upcoming budget cycle but made the project challenging. Because of the time constraint, the City was not able to conduct community engagement. The City will be conducting community engagement for other planning activities that will be incorporated into the strategic plan as it evolves.

Another difficulty the teams encountered while developing the metrics for the plan was that each department had its own system for keeping and tracking data. Going forward, the Performance Management Officer will work closely with the Chief Customer Service and Innovation Officer to improve data collection processes to support meaningful analysis across departments.

Lessons Learned

Alison Sutter, the Sustainability and Performance Management Officer Manager, said

“I am extremely grateful for our City Manager’s vision for a strategic plan to guide our operations as well as his commitment to aligning our fiscal plan to the strategic plan. We are creating a values-led culture laser-focused on accomplishing outcomes from the strategic plan.”

Project Resources

To learn more about this project contact:

Alison Sutter
Sustainability and Performance Management Officer, City of Grand Rapids
asutter@grcity.us
616-456-3689

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