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Health in a New Key
Community Partnership Grants
Key Community Partnership Grants support expansion of existing and
well-established approaches to addressing health issues through
strength-based community development and the promotion of resilience.
Increasing our capacity to mobilize caring power now
THE COMMUNITY ASSET RESOURCE ENTERPRISE (CARE) PARTNERSHIP
CARE will implement a sustainable asset mobilization process that
improves health status, reduces risky behaviors, and improves
accessibility/sensitivity of local service providers. For the next five
years CARE will focus on developing an effective group of 4-8 local
primary leaders and then pursue a selected number of community health
improvement campaigns. The individuals will represent different
constituencies, interests, and backgrounds from CARE’s diverse community
such as, residents, students participating in community service, or
other community volunteers. These primary leaders will develop a
learning network. They will take advantage of educational opportunities.
They will participate in formal and informal training. As they grow in
strength, they will partner with the community to do a better job of
addressing challenging community conditions like poor youth
decision-making, inefficient/ineffective use of health care resources,
and unintended service barriers of health, education and service
organizations.
CARE’s committed leadership and high degree of civic engagement give
substance to the understanding that all people have strengths, skills or
talents that can and should be used to help others.
For more information contact Bev Tittle-Baker at
bevbaker@aol.com.
Tapping the fiber of the community as the first and most
important asset
ENLACE POR LOS NIÑOS – UNITE FOR THE CHILDREN
Aid to Adoption of Special Kids (AASK) , Creciendo Unidos (Growing
Together) and Arizona Department of Economic Security have developed the
Enlace por los Niños partnership. Its goal is to increase the number of
central Phoenix Hispanic families willing and able to provide foster
and/or adoptive homes for Hispanic children. The effort will build on
the strengths of the Hispanic community and the untapped resources that
such strong families offer children who are displaced geographically and
culturally from their families when under the care of Child Protective
Services. AASK has developed an impressive network of resources for
placement and adoption of children with special needs; Creciendo Unitos
brings a long history of working with the Hispanic community. Together
with DES and community volunteers, their goal is to create 200 new
families capable of welcoming up to 400 children into their homes.
Passion for family is the first and most important asset for leverage
for this program. By creating trust, adaptability and flexibility a new
resonant chord is struck. The child has the strength of the community to
rely upon today. The community has the child’s future to rely upon in
order to stay strong tomorrow.
For more information contact Diane Walker at
dwalker@aask-az.org.
Discovering the gift of strangers
PROMOTORAS DE BIENESTAR (PROMOTERS OF WELL-BEING)
The Arizona Children’s Association, Golden Gate Community Center, Isaac
School District/Mitchell Elementary School and the Neighborhood
Revitalization Project are working together to identify promotoras to
serve as leaders addressing community health priorities. The project
will focus on two health-related issues each year, identifying resources
and community strengths that can be brought to bear on those issues.
The predominately Hispanic community of the program’s geographic scope
will set the issues, priorities and outcomes. The promotoras will be
developed to provide education and leadership on each issue. Their
training and success will be mentored by the Arizona Children’s
Association and Golden Gate Community Center. Both have long and
successful histories of community engagement and development and have
consistently achieved their program goals through collaborative efforts
with other public and private organizations.
This program is driven by the insights and strengths of previously
marginalized community members. Working from the ground up to know what
health issues matter most means developing leadership and accountability
from within and helps us all be a better part of the right solutions.
For more information contact Marc Kellenberger at
mkellenberger@arizonachildren.org.
Changing frequencies from risks to success factors
THE FAMILY HEALTH PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (FHP)
The Maricopa County Department of Public Health and The Alliance for
Innovations in Health Care have partnered together on this project.
Under the FHP banner they will collaborate to measurably improve
maternal and infant outcomes in South Phoenix and Maryvale. First, the
group will map and connect community assets. Next, they will discover
inherent success factors related to positive birth outcomes in the
communities. Finally, the team will provide resilience-based training of
community members and ongoing technical assistance to engage and support
the communities. The communities’ connectors will be key. Already the
Program has identified partners such as Healthy Start, Phoenix Birthing
Project, South Central Clinic, Chicanos por la Causa, Friendly House,
Family Health Center and Women and Infant Departments at four area
hospitals.
In the longer term the project seeks not only to improve birth outcomes
in the area, but also to improve residents’ sense of control over the
local environment, to strengthen networks of support, and to positively
impact health and wellness.
Importantly, the project is evolving from a focus on energy-sapping
risks and “fires” to already-present success factors, and tuning all
players to the same channel. Working together and re-tuning strengthens
the community fabric for the short and long term.
For more information contact Rose Howe at
rosehowe@mail.maricopa.gov.