Sentinel Communities Insights—Impacts of COVID-19 and Pandemic Response on Children and Families: Tampa, Florida
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Report Publish Date: March 2021
This report examines decisions that officials in Tampa, Fla., made during the pandemic about preventing the spread of COVID-19 and reducing its economic effects, as well as the impact those decisions had on children and families.
Primary Takeaways
In Tampa, Fla., Black families disproportionately felt the impact of business closures and loss of income. Many Tampa families struggled to navigate social supports for the first time. And there were concerns about students not being connected to school and social services.
State and local officials clashed over COVID mitigation strategies, with state government pushing to reopen while local officials were more proactive about stopping COVID’s spread.
“The agility of family-and child-serving organizations to meet the evolving needs of families and their swift actions to ensure continuity of services, suggests that the welfare of children and families is a shared community value in the region,” the authors write.
Overview and Objectives
At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation began tracking response and recovery in nine communities that were part of its Sentinel Communities Project, including Tampa, Fla.
In this report, the authors wanted to explore the effect Tampa's pandemic response had on children and families.
Hypothesis or Approach
The authors collected information available through early February 2021.
How This Influences Change
Understanding how local officials responded to the pandemic and how policies affected children and families can help shape future policies and responses to new health threats.
Grant Details
Amount awarded:
$3,400,000
Awarded on: 03/09/2020
Timeframe: 2020-2022
Grant number: 77245
Location: Santa Monica, CA
About Grantee:
Research: Go Deeper
In 2020, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) began tracking the COVID-19 response and recovery efforts of nine communities across the United States with the goal of better understanding how the pandemic, and the local response to it, is impacting health, well-being, and equity in those communities.
Previous reports summarized the pandemic’s early impacts (released July 2020) and the ways cross-sector collaboration has contributed to ongoing response and recovery efforts (released October 2020). In this series of reports, we examine the impact of the pandemic on children and families.
When COVID-19 began rapidly spreading in the U.S., policymakers issued stay-at-home orders, closed businesses, and restricted group gatherings. Schools also moved to remote instruction and many child-care services closed. Since then, response and recovery have been shaped by decisions made by local and state officials with respect to the reopening of businesses, schools, and child-care facilities, and the investments that communities are making to support the safety and well-being of working families and to facilitate remote learning.
In this report, based on information available through early February 2021, we look at decisions the community of Tampa, Fla., has made with respect to its economy and COVID-19 mitigation, and the impacts those decisions are having on children and families and on equity.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, March 2021
Research Team
This study and report was conducted and created by the following people.
- RAND Corporation
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