Improving Public Health Infrastructure
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Funding Friends of Public Health - in Coos County, Oregon
County public health agencies throughout Oregon are struggling to deliver vital services, especially in rural counties hit hardest by the recession, and the recent loss in dedicated federal timber revenues.
In Coos County, volunteers actually collected spare change for childhood immunizations—just one of the ways a local non-profit group raised close to $10,000 for the county health department. The funds plugged holes in key services and kept Coos County commissioners from handing over public health services to state government.
Now, officials across Oregon and in other parts of the country are paying attention to how this rural coastal county created this non-profit, modeled after Friends of the Library, to educate the general public and raise money for the health department.
When the idea to start a non-profit came to Frances Smith, Coos County Public Health administrator, and Molly Ford, a retired public health educator, it made perfect sense. They called the new organization, for which Ford serves as president, Coos County Friends of Public Health.
“Local service clubs are limited to funding non-profit 501(c)3 organizations,” Smith said. “I’ve been trying to argue that a government-run health department is also a non-profit — it’s a public non-profit.”
Northwest Health Foundation (NWHF) is proud to have helped draft the organization’s by-laws, and to have organized several meetings with board members to help clarify the organization’s goals and complete legal paperwork. The first annual meeting of the Friends was held on January 16, 2008, and by-laws were approved and officers were elected.
NWHF also helped support a local ballot measure initiated by the Friends of Coos County Public Health in 2008. The measure would “impose $450,000 each year for three years to fund operational costs of County Public Health Department beginning in 2009 (which could) cause property taxes to increase more than three percent.”
Although the measure didn’t pass, Coos County Commissioner Kevin Stufflebean was optimistic. “It was supported by more voters than any other ballot initiative last year,” he said.
He tipped his hat to the non-profit. “Had it not been for their help and support we would have been in severe trouble last year.”
“You hear how important healthcare is,” Stufflebean said. “But you don’t hear anybody talking about the public health system, which is an essential backbone to individuals in poverty.”
...read moreGrantees:
Oregon State University, College of Health and Human Sciences
Oregon’s Local Health Departments: Moving Toward Accreditation
2010 - To pilot a technical assistance project using OSU's Extension Services aimed to prepare three counties for national accreditation, and to assess measures of success that could support the feasibility of this model for statewide efforts.
$15000
Conference of Local Health Officials
Disseminating Public Health Capacity Report
2009 - To disseminate findings of the Oregon Public Health Capacity Assessment report to legislators and public health leaders, a report based on the National Association of Count City Health Officials' capacity assessment tool.
$2000
Resource Innovation Group
Climate Change Preparation for the Public Health Sector in Oregon: Phase II
2009 - To partner with the Coalition of Local Health Officials, Department of Human Services, League of Oregon Cities and Association of Oregon Counties to train and empower public health departments and communities to develop climate change strategies.
$12000
Wasco Sherman Public Health Department
Assessment in Wasco-Sherman
2008 - To conduct a public health assessment utilizing an abbreviated APEX-PH (Assessment Protocol for Excellence in Public Health (APEXPH)) instrument.
$4500
Clackamas County Community Health Division
Clackamas County Community Health Department Strategic Plan
2008 - To develop a strategic plan template for Clackamas County Community Health that lays a new foundation for partnership between the Health Department and the diverse geographic communities in the county.
$10000
Deschutes County Health Department
Deschutes County Public Health's Strategic Plan
2008 - To create a compelling and effective long-term vision for the community and to align and update the strategic plan and to look 10-15 years into the future of the Health of our community and project a vision and key strategies for local public health and would be articulated in a strategic plan.
$10000
Resource Innovation Group
Climate Change Capacity Training and Assessment: Phase I
2008 - To assess the level of understanding among local public health officials, identify needs and develop resources to prepare for global warming.
$11000
Tillamook County Public Health
Strategic Planning and Community Dialogue
2008 - To engage a consultant to conduct a strategic planning process.
$4600
OPHD_OSAC
Oregon Statewide Assessment Conference
2008 - To provide local health departments with tools to facilitate their assessment work, strengthen the Oregon State Community Health Assessment Network, and set a precedent for annual statewide assessment meetings.
$9050