WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 03/15

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of March 15, 2021:

In this Edition

  • Upcoming WCC Webinars
  • Reporting
  • Important Announcements
  • WCC Communications Update
  • Additional Resources
  • National Health Outreach Conference

Upcoming WCC Webinars

  • Youth Voice and Leadership

March 16 Webinar of the Status of YAP is moved to Thursday, March 25, 3-4:15 PM:  OOOPS—This webinar was scheduled too closely to the deadline for WCC quarterly reports (March 15) and activities around the Youth Community Health Action Plans/Dolphin Tank presentations for teams that went to the 4-H Healthy Living Summit (March 20). It has been rescheduled for Thursday, March 25 as a 75-minute session.  There are new Youth-Adult Partnership models emerging from the pandemic that will be shared, and a deeper dive will be included for examples of the new ways youth are leading community health change by several LGUs.  Register

  • Professional Development

April 29, 2021,1:00PM ET

Save the date! Our second WCC Professional Development session on Policy, Systems and Environmental (PSE) change

will be on April 29th at 1pm. Look out for more information in the next bulletin and on the portal.

WCC Reporting

  • Year 2 Q1 Reporting Due March 15, 2021
  • Action Required The Q4 report will be due March 15, 2021. The reporting period is December 1, 2021 – February 28, 2021.

Important Announcements

  • Master Volunteer Curriculum
  • Please note that the Master Volunteer Curriculum is now public on the WCC Website. Find it here.

WCC Communications Update

  • We are getting ready to add a new feature to the public website that maps all of our communities and provides a mini profile for each. (An expanded public community profile is planned for launch soon after that.) Please help us out by providing the following for each of your WCC communities
    • Community coalition name
    • Coalition online presence/s (on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, website, etc.)

Please send the above information to Jen GE at JGrizzard@fourhcouncil.edu.

Additional Resources

  • Voices for Healthy Kids Policy Campaign Grant

Please note that this is a two-step application process. Please read through the grant information carefully

Voices for Healthy Kids works around the country to improve or create equitable policies that will make the places kids live, learn and play healthier. Today we announce a call for proposals for the Policy Campaign Opportunity, designed to support advocacy campaigns supporting Voices for Healthy Kids policy priorities with a focus on health equity. We seek to support and drive local, state and tribal policy change efforts that will dramatically improve the health of children with a focus on those experiencing the greatest health disparities including Black, Brown, and Native children or from families from low income.

Short Form Application Timeline

March 15, 2021 Call for Short Form Application
April 5, 2021
5 p.m. Pacific 
 Short Form Application Deadline
April 20, 2021 Notifications

Invited Applicants Timeline

April 20, 2021 Application Available
May 16, 2021
5 p.m. Pacific
 Application Deadline
June 4, 2021 Notification of Award/Decline

Applications must be specific to an individual campaign for public policy change in one state, city, town or tribal nation. Applications should focus on public policy changes to reduce health disparities for children in urban, suburban or rural settings who are Black/African American, Hispanic/Latino, American Indian, and Alaskan Native or from families who have low income. 

Learn more about the Voices for Healthy Kids policy areas and the types of campaigns that will be supported.

Voices for Healthy Kids believes campaigns are most successful through collaboration between community organizations, advocacy groups, coalitions and others. Therefore, the Policy Campaign Grant is a collaborative grant. All applications are expected to be submitted as a joint proposal of two or more organizations, either as lead and subgrantee collaboration or as co-leads. Voices for Healthy Kids values authentic community engagement and equity-building strategies in all aspects of supported campaigns and therefore requires at least one of the organizations in the joint proposal to be representative of or serve the interests of the listed priority populations.

Voices for Healthy Kids has a two-step application process in the online grant management system. First, all interested, eligible applicants must submit a short form application. Then, selected applicants will be invited to submit a full application for consideration in a competitive review process.

Applications can be submitted for $50,000 – $200,000 for a duration of up to 18 months and can support non-lobbying and lobbying activities.

  • Youth in Action Applications

The 4‑H Youth in Action Program recognizes four confident young leaders with diverse backgrounds and unique perspectives in our core pillar areas: agriculture, civic engagement, healthy living and STEM. Each year, Pillar Winners will experience an exciting year of telling their 4‑H story and celebrating their leadership. Winners receive:

  • $5,000 higher education scholarship
  • Promotional video showcasing their 4‑H impact story
  • All-expenses paid trip to Washington, D.C. for National 4‑H Council’s Legacy Awards
  • Networking opportunities with 4‑H celebrities and other prominent alumni
  • Recognition as the official 4‑H youth spokesperson for their pillar

Apply Applications should be submitted no later than 11:59 PM PT on Monday, March 29, 2021.

This program supports the implementation and delivery of mentoring services to youth who are currently abusing or addicted to drugs, youth at risk for abusing drugs, and youth with family members who are currently abusing or addicted to drugs. Mentoring services can be one-to-one, group, peer, or a combination. Funding can be used to support new mentoring matches or continue existing mentoring matches at the time of application. Closing date: March 16, 2021.

  • 2021 National Extension Conference on Volunteerism, April 26-29, 2021

The National Extension Conference on Volunteerism Planning Committee and Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service, encourages those who are interested to save April 26-29, 2021, for the National Extension Conference on Volunteerism “NECV” 2021! Plans are underway for an exciting Extension professional conference with a focus on volunteerism at the Hard Rock Hotel and Conference Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. This conference is ideal for volunteer-focused professionals who are serving within all areas of Extension programs (4-H, ANR, FCS). For information about calls for proposals and registration opening:

Join the NECV 2021 interest list-serv at: http://eepurl.com/gY8Pzz.

Follow developments on Facebook at www.facebook.com/1NECV/

2021 National Health Outreach Conference, May 3-7, 2021

The conference will be held virtually May 3-7, 2021. With the theme of “The Grand Challenge: Building a Healthy Future for All,” there will be sessions related to health equity, effective behavior change messaging, policy system and environmental change, health behavior, and pandemic response programming. Keynote speakers, concurrent and posters sessions will be relevant for professionals who address health, nutrition, youth development, workforce development, and human development. See https://cvent.me/Ygg1N0 for additional details about the conference.

Purpose: To showcase research, best practices and dissemination strategies that will create positive impact on the health of all Americans.
Goals: 

  1. Educate attendees about best practices for translating current research and health-related recommendations to target audiences, especially youth, minority and workforce audiences.
  2. Prepare attendees to translate research using communication practices and approaches to address health issues for target audience.
  3. Explore how to develop successful collaborations of multi-disciplinary partners to effect system, community and individual behavior changes to build population health.