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LAC Meeting

Lived Advisory Council Meeting Notes

Main Topics Discussed

1. Review & Expansion of NORC (Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities) Data Points

a) Further Data Sources Suggested: 

2. NORC Maps: Technical Understanding & Interpretation

a) Legend & Granularity Issues: 

b) Challenges Raised: 

i. Population data may obscure distinct cultural or practical differences in “real” communities (e.g., Isle Madame, River Bourgeois). 

ii. Need for consideration of population density and rurality. 

3. Layering Service Asset Maps onto NORC Data

a) Proposed Approach: 

b) Data Collection in Progress: 

i. Team of social work research assistants actively mapping & layering these assets. 

ii. Solange’s recent Cheticamp fieldwork (public observations) to be shared as an example.  

4. Measurement of Social Capital & Informal Networks

a) Key Issue: Strong emphasis on the invisible role of informal, neighborly help and local social capital in supporting older adults.

b) Challenge: Formal mapping and quantification of such networks is complex, but seen as integral to community health/aging in place.

c) Ideas: Investigating possible social capital indicators; learning from “healthy neighborhoods” models in BC and local senior safety network pilots.

Action Items

1. Service Mapping
2. Data Collection & Integration
3. Community Outreach Model Brainstorm

Develop different engagement strategies: 

4. Investigate Social Capital Measurement
5. Community Outreach and Engagement Strategy

a) Consent, Trust, and Buy-in: 

i. Worry about “invading” communities without suitable permission or buy-in. 

ii. Discussion questioned whether application approach or municipality involvement was best. 

iii. Recognized necessity of trusted local intermediaries (e.g., community organization contacts, known “influencers” like Celeste for Richmond County). 

iv. Acknowledged diversity in community leadership structures; not all communities have formal or informal leaders. 

b) Reaching the Most Isolated: 

i. Strategies such as targeted outreach (door-to-door), leveraging local media (e.g., Telile TV), informal sign-up at clubs, and working with existing points of trust were discussed. 

ii. Caution: groups most in need may not be the most organized or vocal, so strategies may need to differ depending on local capacity and connectivity.