WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 03/08

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The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of March 8, 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

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

  • 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.

The Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP) is a multi-year initiative aimed at reducing the morbidity and mortality of substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorder (OUD), in high risk rural communities. This notice announces the opportunity to apply for funding under RCORP-Implementation. Closing date: March 12, 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/

  • Youth PhotoVoice Panel at the Leadership Summit for Healthy Communities Do you work with youth who would be interested in talking about how their culture, community, and environments influence the choices they make? Maybe they want to put a spotlight on health or social justice issues that concern them! This year, youth have an opportunity to be panelists during the Youth PhotoVoice Panel at the Leadership Summit for Healthy Communities + Youth Edition. PhotoVoice applications are being accepted for any young person interested in participating. You may be more familiar with the Youth Summit. This year, it is combining with the Leadership Summit to help foster relationships and collaboration among youth and community coalitions. Only a few entries will be selected to be a part of the panel, but all entries will be featured during the Summit! To find out more, or to submit an abstract, click on the project link below. Submission Deadline: March 12, 2021.
    Youth Edition PhotoVoice

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.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 3/01

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The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of March 1, 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
    • Promising Practices to Elevate WCC Youth-Adult Partnerships- A Status Report

March 16, 2021, 1:00-2:00 PM ET

Youth-adult partnerships are a cornerstone for WCC success, and many action plans for engaging youth have been derailed due to COVID.  However, YAP models of youth engagement are emerging, and educators have found workarounds to get youth inspired.  Join the webinar and peer discussion on March 16 at 1 PM to learn about the status of WCC YAP in Wave 2 Year 2, what are these promising practices, and see an evidence-based rubric to help you assess the strength of your youth-adult partnerships. 

Register

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

  • Peer Perspectives: Creating PSE Change
    • Please note that the recording of the Peer Perspectives: Creating PSE Change webinar is now available on the WCC portal. Find it here.
  • Master Volunteer Curriculum
  • Please note that the Master Volunteer Curriculum is now public on the WCC Website. Find it here.
  • Quarterly PI Call
    • If you were unable to attend the February 19th PI Call, a recording of the meeting can be found on the portal 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

  • 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.

The Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP) is a multi-year initiative aimed at reducing the morbidity and mortality of substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorder (OUD), in high risk rural communities. This notice announces the opportunity to apply for funding under RCORP-Implementation. Closing date: March 12, 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/

  • Youth PhotoVoice Panel at the Leadership Summit for Healthy Communities Do you work with youth who would be interested in talking about how their culture, community, and environments influence the choices they make? Maybe they want to put a spotlight on health or social justice issues that concern them! This year, youth have an opportunity to be panelists during the Youth PhotoVoice Panel at the Leadership Summit for Healthy Communities + Youth Edition. PhotoVoice applications are being accepted for any young person interested in participating. You may be more familiar with the Youth Summit. This year, it is combining with the Leadership Summit to help foster relationships and collaboration among youth and community coalitions. Only a few entries will be selected to be a part of the panel, but all entries will be featured during the Summit! To find out more, or to submit an abstract, click on the project link below. Submission Deadline: March 12, 2021.
    Youth Edition PhotoVoice

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.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 2/8

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

The purpose of the Weekly Bulletin is to provide you with WCC grant specific information as well as some useful tools and resources that might be helpful to your work.

  1. WCC Grant Information – grant specific information such as reporting deadlines, important calls, etc. will continue to be top of the bulletin.
  2. Action Required – anytime there is an action required related to an item in the bulletin, we will indicate that in the heading.
  3. News, Research, and Resources from the Field – This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities. If there are any grant expectations related to an included resource, those will be clearly communicated to you through a webinar, training, PI Call, etc.

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of February 8, 2021:

In this Edition

  • WCC Core Team Changes
  • Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021
  • Year 2 Q1 Reporting Due March 15, 2021
  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • National Health Outreach Conference
  • WCC Communications Toolkit
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Attention WCC Core Team Changes

  • We regret to inform you that Shay McNeil is no longer an Associate of National 4-H Council. Until a new Account Manager is assigned please forward any questions you would have sent to Shay to Nanya, at nchiejine@fourhcouncil.edu. Thank you for your continued leadership.

Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021

  • Quarterly PI Calls are an opportunity to disseminate information and updates related to the WCC grant. The next Quarterly PI Call will be Friday, February 19, 2021 from 1:30 – 3:00 PM ET. We will be meeting via Zoom. PIs should refer to the Outlook Calendar invite from Shay McNeil for the link and password to connect to the meeting. An agenda for the meeting will be provided closer to the next call.

Quarterly PI Call Schedule:

  • February 19, 2021
  • May 21, 2021
  • August 20, 2021

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.

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Action Required National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021

Here are the latest updates on the virtual National 4-H Summit for Healthy Living, February 12-15, 2021.  The working schedule is here https://4-h.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/National-Youth-Summit-on-Healthy-Living-2021-Tentative-Agenda.pdf. Reminder: attendance at the Summit is a deliverable for WCC Communities (attending either the past 2020 or upcoming 2021 Summit). Keynote speaker is Kazi Mannan, a remarkable immigrant restaurateur whose give back to the hungry in Washington DC is an inspiring story. Youth in Action winners will lead off the afternoon openings on Saturday and Sunday, and there will be a career panel kick-off speaker on Monday. The final agenda will detail all speakers.

TRACK INFORMATION:  There are six tracks available plus an adult professional development track: food insecurity, nutrition, substance abuse, physical activity, mental health and health equity. Everyone in a state/community group does not have to stay in the same track but once a track has been designated for each individual, they must stay in that track for the workshops and career panel.  Please look at the workshops planned for your probable track and read the descriptions in the Google drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xfplGi9-vRO4Dcv2uOqXsEwQbsjSd9fi?usp=sharing.

  • 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.

Professional Development

  • Peer Perspectives: Creating PSE Change

February 25, 2021, 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET

Policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) change are powerful tools for expanding impact, fostering culture change, and sustaining progress. PSE change takes time and can look different in every community. Communities across the country have helped light the way, creating practices and patterns that help make PSE change more doable than ever. Join us to hear how WCC peers are scaling impact through PSE and participate in small group discussion for how your states/communities take action. Learn more:

WCC Blog: Understanding Policy, Systems and Environmental Change

Register

  • 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/

National Health Outreach Conference

  • 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.

The NHOC will provide 10 scholarships covering the full registration cost to assist those interested in attending the 2021 Virtual NHOC. Scholarships will be awarded in the amount of $250 each to cover the early-bird registration fee, deadline is February 12, 2021. Recipients will be provided a secure code to enter upon registering for the conference.

  • CALL FOR PROPOSALS

Proposals are now being accepted for the 2021 National Health Outreach Conference (NHOC). At this time the NHOC planning team is particularly interested in presentations that focus on COVID-19; particularly adaptations of learning environments, use of technology to disseminate and distribute education, and engaging learners. Limited number of proposals will be accepted as these will be added to the sessions that were chosen for the May 2020 NHOC that was cancelled.
Deadline: February 12, 2021

Interested individuals and teams are invited to submit proposals for plenary, breakout and poster sessions that address the conference’s theme in the following topic/theme areas:

  • Effective Messaging to Targeted Audiences
  • Health Behavior Change
  • Health Equity
  • Interagency Partnerships & Collaborations
  • Evaluation of Health/PSE Interventions
  • Social & Economic Impact on Health

All proposals will be peer-reviewed. Submit proposals HERE.
Review submission guidelines HERE.

WCC Communications

  • Updates to the WCC Communications Toolkit

Take a moment to peruse the updated communications toolkit on the WCC Portal: https://portal.wellconnectedcommunities.org/communications-toolkit/

Some items of interest are an updated PPT template, virtual backgrounds for all your online meeting needs, and a full ZIP file of WCC logos for every use. Also included in the update are the current Brand, Logo and Positioning Guidelines. The new positioning–or a brief statement of the what, why and how of the initiative–has been updated on all the templates and materials available in the toolkit, as well.

News, Research, and Resources from the Field:

This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities.

  • From eXtension
  • Introducing SEED: An Evidence-Based Method for Engaging Communities. February 10th, 2 PM – 3 PM ET. The SEED Method is a multi-stakeholder approach to engaging communities in research, problem solving, and action planning. Developed at Virginia Commonwealth University, SEED provides a framework for collaborative research and action planning that can be scaled up or down depending on project resources and goals. Typically, projects are led by stakeholders in partnership with researchers and implemented by diverse community stakeholders. The SEED Method has been used to develop research agendas on specific health topics and to develop community action plans addressing community-identified health priorities. This webinar will introduce participants to the SEED Method. Learning outcomes include: understanding the roles of community members and stakeholders, reviewing the processes and outcomes of the SEED Method, and becoming familiar with SEED Method steps and tools. Learn More & Register Here. 
  • Impact Collaborative Innovation Facilitator Training
    March 9th & 11th, 2021

Are you someone who is always looking for new ways to improve?  Do you like adopting innovative ideas and helping others along the way? Would you like to be a leader that helps teams design cutting edge programs/projects that make real impact? If so, please consider joining our Innovation Facilitator team!

Our Innovation Facilitator training provides you with a new way of looking at innovation.  Once trained, you are an invaluable asset in helping teams develop projects or programs more quickly, and connect them with national resources. You will use our innovation incubator process to bring fresh ideas aligned with institutional goals to every team you work with. Learn More

From The Daily Yonder

By Olivia Weeks
For rural families, there is a 35% gap between childcare supply and potential need, compared to a 29% gap in urban areas.
Read more

From RWJF

Throughout 2020, Culture of Health Prize winning communities used collaboration data-informed strategies to tackle the coronavirus and America’s reckoning with racial justice. Different communities, states apart, but they share the same story: A focus on health equity is more important than ever to ensure everyone in America has a fair and just opportunity for health and well-being.

Read more about what we’re learning >

  • Webinar Upcoming Webinar on Federal Resources for Creative Community Development

On Tuesday, February 9 at 4 p.m. ET, the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, the National Alliance of Community Economic Development Associations, and Metris Arts Consulting are offering a free web seminar on Federal Resources for Creative Community Development. This seminar is designed to help gain access to federal funds and harness the power of arts and culture for community development. The seminar will feature the new Creative Placemaking Public Resources Guide and will discuss a curated selection of federal funding sources that can be used to advance equitable community development, examples of initiatives that have transformed community development through create partnerships, and practical tips on accessing federal grant programs. To view the complete session details and register, click here.

  • From Roger Rennekamp, National Extension Health Director, ECOP
  • COVID-19 Vaccine Education Toolkits for Cooperative Extension
    Overcoming hesitancy to receive the new COVID-19 vaccines is a growing issue across the U.S. despite more 400,000 deaths resulting from virus to date. According to a recent report published by the Kaiser Family Foundation, rural residents are among the most vaccine hesitant groups with seven in ten rural residents expressing at least some reluctance to receive the vaccine. But as trusted members of the communities they serve, Cooperative Extension…Learn More
  • APLU President Endorses Extension’s Involvement in Vaccination Education

On January 19, Association of Public and Land Grant Universities (APLU) President Peter McPherson sent a letter to land grant university presidents outlining how the Cooperative Extension System can help build confidence in the new COVID-19 vaccines and increase their uptake. According the McPherson, “the vaccines can only be effective, however, if the public understands their efficacy and gets the vaccinations. As institutions rooted in knowledge…Learn More

  • COVID Vaccinations for Food & Agriculture Essential Workers – Webinar

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will offer a webinar on the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccines for food and agriculture workers including information about vaccine safety and confidence and recommendations for vaccine prioritization. Preregistration is required. Panelists include: Dr. Janell Routh —Medical Officer, COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force, CDC Dr. Michelle Colby…Learn More
 

  • Vaccine Hesitancy in Rural America

A recent report published by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) provides information gathered in surveys and focus groups concerning public opinion about COVID-19 vaccination in rural areas. “With the pandemic’s toll hitting rural communities hard, the findings from are a cause for concern. Rural residents are among the most vaccine hesitant groups, along with…Learn More
 

  • Consider Hosting a Public Health Associate – Apply by February 16

Managed by CDC’s Center for State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial Support , the Public Health Associate Program (PHAP) is a training program for early-career public health professionals who have a recent college degree and an interest in public service and public health. Throughout the two-year program, associates complete a comprehensive training curriculum and work at a host organization to gain hands-on experience…Learn More

From the Urban Institute

By Alanna McCargo, Jung Hyun Choi, and Edward Golding May 2019

Homeownership is an important wealth-building source and a foundation for economic stability. Owning a home can provide a stable place to live and remove significant economic uncertainty in the form of fixed housing costs. These benefits are well documented, yet there is persistent inequality in access and attainment of homeownership across racial lines and less wealth accumulation for black households through homeownership. The continually depressed black homeownership rate and overall wealth gap have reached alarming levels. The black homeownership rate has persistently lagged behind that of white families, a gap that has widened since the Great Recession.

  • Funding Opportunity Food and Agriculture Service Learning Program

The Food and Agriculture Service Learning program increases knowledge of agricultural sciences and improves the nutritional health of children. The program focuses on increasing the capacity for food, garden, and nutrition education within host organizations, such as school cafeterias and classrooms, while fostering community engagement between farms and school systems. This initiative is part of a broader effort to increase access to school meals for low-income children and greatly improve meal quality. For more information, read the Food and Agriculture Service Learning funding opportunity.

  • Funding Opportunity Children, Youth, and Families at Risk Sustainable Community Projects

The Children, Youth, and Families at Risk (CYFAR) program improves the quality and quantity of comprehensive community-based programs for at-risk children, youth, and families supported by the Cooperative Extension System. The CYFAR program mission is to marshal resources of the Land-Grant and Cooperative Extension Systems to develop and deliver educational programs that equip limited-resource families and youth, who are at-risk for not meeting basic human needs, with the skills they need to lead positive, productive, contributing lives. For more information, read the CYFAR funding opportunity.

From RWJF

Nearly 40 million people in the United States are at risk of losing their homes in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.

No one should have to choose between paying rent and putting food on the table and protecting the health of themselves, their families, and their communities.

A new RWJF policy brief makes evidence-based recommendations for the Biden-Harris Administration and 117th Congress to ensure people do not lose their homes during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond and build transformational change that guarantees housing as a human right and public good that advances racial and economic equity.

Read the recommendations to promote stable housing >

As the nation faces an unprecedented health crisis, it is more important than ever to have health information at the local level. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 500 Cities is expanding to PLACES, a first-of-its-kind effort to release health information covering the entire United States down to the city, county, and census tract level, including rural areas, small and midsize cities.

The PLACES project includes 27 different health measures, including mental and physical health, access to health insurance and preventive screenings, for every county, city, and census tract in the U.S. The chronic disease measures focus on health outcomes, unhealthy behaviors, and prevention practices that have a substantial impact on how well and long people live. Created by the CDC in 2016 to provide city and census tract-level health data for the 500 largest cities, the 500 Cities project expanded to PLACES, providing data for the entire country with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 2/1

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

The purpose of the Weekly Bulletin is to provide you with WCC grant specific information as well as some useful tools and resources that might be helpful to your work.

  1. WCC Grant Information – grant specific information such as reporting deadlines, important calls, etc. will continue to be top of the bulletin.
  2. Action Required – anytime there is an action required related to an item in the bulletin, we will indicate that in the heading.
  3. News, Research, and Resources from the Field – This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities. If there are any grant expectations related to an included resource, those will be clearly communicated to you through a webinar, training, PI Call, etc. We’ve also added a News, Research, Resource, or Funding Opportunity designation to assist you in quickly finding the information that is most relevant to you.

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of February 1, 2021:

In this Edition

  • Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021
  • Year 2 Q1 Reporting Due March 15, 2021
  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • National Health Outreach Conference
  • WCC Communications Toolkit
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021

  • Quarterly PI Calls are an opportunity to disseminate information and updates related to the WCC grant. The next Quarterly PI Call will be Friday, February 19, 2021 from 1:30 – 3:00 PM ET. We will be meeting via Zoom. PIs should refer to the Outlook Calendar invite from Shay McNeil for the link and password to connect to the meeting. An agenda for the meeting will be provided closer to the next call.

Quarterly PI Call Schedule:

  • February 19, 2021
  • May 21, 2021
  • August 20, 2021

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.

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Action Required National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021

Here are the latest updates on the virtual National 4-H Summit for Healthy Living, February 12-15, 2021.  The working schedule is here https://4-h.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/National-Youth-Summit-on-Healthy-Living-2021-Tentative-Agenda.pdf. Reminder: attendance at the Summit is a deliverable for WCC Communities (attending either the past 2020 or upcoming 2021 Summit). Keynote speaker is Kazi Mannan, a remarkable immigrant restaurateur whose give back to the hungry in Washington DC is an inspiring story. Youth in Action winners will lead off the afternoon openings on Saturday and Sunday, and there will be a career panel kick-off speaker on Monday. The final agenda will detail all speakers.

  • Next step after registering (Registration closed January 29, 2021) – TRACK SELECTIONS
    • Summit workshops and career panels will be grouped into tracks. Delegates will pre-select their track of interest.
    • Each registered delegate will be emailed information to select their track preferences. This email can be expected within five business days of registration.
    • All track preferences must be submitted by February 5, 2021.

TRACK INFORMATION:  There are six tracks available plus an adult professional development track: food insecurity, nutrition, substance abuse, physical activity, mental health and health equity. Everyone in a state/community group does not have to stay in the same track but once a track has been designated for each individual, they must stay in that track for the workshops and career panel.  Please look at the workshops planned for your probable track and read the descriptions in the Google drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xfplGi9-vRO4Dcv2uOqXsEwQbsjSd9fi?usp=sharing.

  • 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.

Professional Development

  • Peer Perspectives: Creating PSE Change

February 25, 2021, 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET

Policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) change are powerful tools for expanding impact, fostering culture change, and sustaining progress. PSE change takes time and can look different in every community. Communities across the country have helped light the way, creating practices and patterns that help make PSE change more doable than ever. Join us to hear how WCC peers are scaling impact through PSE and participate in small group discussion for how your states/communities take action. Learn more:

WCC Blog: Understanding Policy, Systems and Environmental Change

Register

  • 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/

National Health Outreach Conference

  • 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.

The NHOC will provide 10 scholarships covering the full registration cost to assist those interested in attending the 2021 Virtual NHOC. Scholarships will be awarded in the amount of $250 each to cover the early-bird registration fee, deadline is February 12, 2021. Recipients will be provided a secure code to enter upon registering for the conference.

  • CALL FOR PROPOSALS

Proposals are now being accepted for the 2021 National Health Outreach Conference (NHOC). At this time the NHOC planning team is particularly interested in presentations that focus on COVID-19; particularly adaptations of learning environments, use of technology to disseminate and distribute education, and engaging learners. Limited number of proposals will be accepted as these will be added to the sessions that were chosen for the May 2020 NHOC that was cancelled.
Deadline: February 12, 2021

Interested individuals and teams are invited to submit proposals for plenary, breakout and poster sessions that address the conference’s theme in the following topic/theme areas:

  • Effective Messaging to Targeted Audiences
  • Health Behavior Change
  • Health Equity
  • Interagency Partnerships & Collaborations
  • Evaluation of Health/PSE Interventions
  • Social & Economic Impact on Health

All proposals will be peer-reviewed. Submit proposals HERE.
Review submission guidelines HERE.

WCC Communications

  • Updates to the WCC Communications Toolkit

Take a moment to peruse the updated communications toolkit on the WCC Portal: https://portal.wellconnectedcommunities.org/communications-toolkit/

Some items of interest are an updated PPT template, virtual backgrounds for all your online meeting needs, and a full ZIP file of WCC logos for every use. Also included in the update are the current Brand, Logo and Positioning Guidelines. The new positioning–or a brief statement of the what, why and how of the initiative–has been updated on all the templates and materials available in the toolkit, as well.

Coming Soon! A WCC overview PPT, WCC overview factsheet, WCC Q&As, and more.

News, Research, and Resources from the Field:

This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities.

  • NEW From eXtension
  • Introducing SEED: An Evidence-Based Method for Engaging Communities. February 10th, 2 PM – 3 PM ET. The SEED Method is a multi-stakeholder approach to engaging communities in research, problem solving, and action planning. Developed at Virginia Commonwealth University, SEED provides a framework for collaborative research and action planning that can be scaled up or down depending on project resources and goals. Typically, projects are led by stakeholders in partnership with researchers and implemented by diverse community stakeholders. The SEED Method has been used to develop research agendas on specific health topics and to develop community action plans addressing community-identified health priorities. This webinar will introduce participants to the SEED Method. Learning outcomes include: understanding the roles of community members and stakeholders, reviewing the processes and outcomes of the SEED Method, and becoming familiar with SEED Method steps and tools. Learn More & Register Here. 
  • Asset Based Community Recovery – Add Your Voice!
    February 3rd, 2021, 11 AM – 1 PM ET

The resilience and recovery of individuals and communities depends on social connection and working together. Using the Tamarack Institute’s Asset-based Community Recovery Framework, this workshop challenges us to consider how COVID-19 has disrupted our communities, what has emerged, and what has been revealed by recognizing gifts, fostering connections, and telling stories…Learn More 

  • Impact Collaborative Innovation Facilitator Training
    March 9th & 11th, 2021

Are you someone who is always looking for new ways to improve?  Do you like adopting innovative ideas and helping others along the way? Would you like to be a leader that helps teams design cutting edge programs/projects that make real impact? If so, please consider joining our Innovation Facilitator team!

Our Innovation Facilitator training provides you with a new way of looking at innovation.  Once trained, you are an invaluable asset in helping teams develop projects or programs more quickly, and connect them with national resources. You will use our innovation incubator process to bring fresh ideas aligned with institutional goals to every team you work with. Learn More

From The Daily Yonder

By Olivia Weeks
For rural families, there is a 35% gap between childcare supply and potential need, compared to a 29% gap in urban areas.
Read more

From RWJF

Throughout 2020, Culture of Health Prize winning communities used collaboration data-informed strategies to tackle the coronavirus and America’s reckoning with racial justice. Different communities, states apart, but they share the same story: A focus on health equity is more important than ever to ensure everyone in America has a fair and just opportunity for health and well-being.

Read more about what we’re learning >

  • NEW Webinar Upcoming Webinar on Federal Resources for Creative Community Development

On Tuesday, February 9 at 4 p.m. ET, the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, the National Alliance of Community Economic Development Associations, and Metris Arts Consulting are offering a free web seminar on Federal Resources for Creative Community Development. This seminar is designed to help gain access to federal funds and harness the power of arts and culture for community development. The seminar will feature the new Creative Placemaking Public Resources Guide and will discuss a curated selection of federal funding sources that can be used to advance equitable community development, examples of initiatives that have transformed community development through create partnerships, and practical tips on accessing federal grant programs. To view the complete session details and register, click here.

  • From Roger Rennekamp, National Extension Health Director, ECOP
  • COVID-19 Vaccine Education Toolkits for Cooperative Extension
    Overcoming hesitancy to receive the new COVID-19 vaccines is a growing issue across the U.S. despite more 400,000 deaths resulting from virus to date. According to a recent report published by the Kaiser Family Foundation, rural residents are among the most vaccine hesitant groups with seven in ten rural residents expressing at least some reluctance to receive the vaccine. But as trusted members of the communities they serve, Cooperative Extension…Learn More
  • The Role of Critical Health Literacy in Addressing Social Determinants of Health
    Roger Rennekamp, National Extension Health Director, ECOPThe Roundtable on Health Literacy of the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine is sponsoring a workshop on the Role of Critical Health Literacy in Addressing Social Determinants of Health on Wednesday, January 27 from 3:00 – 4:30 PM. The social determinants of health are the conditions in which people are born, grow, work, live, and age, and the systems that shape the conditions of daily life…Learn More
  • APLU President Endorses Extension’s Involvement in Vaccination Education

On January 19, Association of Public and Land Grant Universities (APLU) President Peter McPherson sent a letter to land grant university presidents outlining how the Cooperative Extension System can help build confidence in the new COVID-19 vaccines and increase their uptake. According the McPherson, “the vaccines can only be effective, however, if the public understands their efficacy and gets the vaccinations. As institutions rooted in knowledge…Learn More

  • COVID Vaccinations for Food & Agriculture Essential Workers – Webinar

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will offer a webinar on the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccines for food and agriculture workers including information about vaccine safety and confidence and recommendations for vaccine prioritization. Preregistration is required. Panelists include: Dr. Janell Routh —Medical Officer, COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force, CDC Dr. Michelle Colby…Learn More
 

  • Vaccine Hesitancy in Rural America

A recent report published by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) provides information gathered in surveys and focus groups concerning public opinion about COVID-19 vaccination in rural areas. “With the pandemic’s toll hitting rural communities hard, the findings from are a cause for concern. Rural residents are among the most vaccine hesitant groups, along with…Learn More
 

  • Consider Hosting a Public Health Associate – Apply by February 16

Managed by CDC’s Center for State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial Support , the Public Health Associate Program (PHAP) is a training program for early-career public health professionals who have a recent college degree and an interest in public service and public health. Throughout the two-year program, associates complete a comprehensive training curriculum and work at a host organization to gain hands-on experience…Learn More

From the Urban Institute

By Alanna McCargo, Jung Hyun Choi, and Edward Golding May 2019

Homeownership is an important wealth-building source and a foundation for economic stability. Owning a home can provide a stable place to live and remove significant economic uncertainty in the form of fixed housing costs. These benefits are well documented, yet there is persistent inequality in access and attainment of homeownership across racial lines and less wealth accumulation for black households through homeownership. The continually depressed black homeownership rate and overall wealth gap have reached alarming levels. The black homeownership rate has persistently lagged behind that of white families, a gap that has widened since the Great Recession.

  • Funding Opportunity Food and Agriculture Service Learning Program

The Food and Agriculture Service Learning program increases knowledge of agricultural sciences and improves the nutritional health of children. The program focuses on increasing the capacity for food, garden, and nutrition education within host organizations, such as school cafeterias and classrooms, while fostering community engagement between farms and school systems. This initiative is part of a broader effort to increase access to school meals for low-income children and greatly improve meal quality. For more information, read the Food and Agriculture Service Learning funding opportunity.

  • Funding Opportunity Children, Youth, and Families at Risk Sustainable Community Projects

The Children, Youth, and Families at Risk (CYFAR) program improves the quality and quantity of comprehensive community-based programs for at-risk children, youth, and families supported by the Cooperative Extension System. The CYFAR program mission is to marshal resources of the Land-Grant and Cooperative Extension Systems to develop and deliver educational programs that equip limited-resource families and youth, who are at-risk for not meeting basic human needs, with the skills they need to lead positive, productive, contributing lives. For more information, read the CYFAR funding opportunity.

From RWJF

Nearly 40 million people in the United States are at risk of losing their homes in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.

No one should have to choose between paying rent and putting food on the table and protecting the health of themselves, their families, and their communities.

A new RWJF policy brief makes evidence-based recommendations for the Biden-Harris Administration and 117th Congress to ensure people do not lose their homes during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond and build transformational change that guarantees housing as a human right and public good that advances racial and economic equity.

Read the recommendations to promote stable housing >

As the nation faces an unprecedented health crisis, it is more important than ever to have health information at the local level. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 500 Cities is expanding to PLACES, a first-of-its-kind effort to release health information covering the entire United States down to the city, county, and census tract level, including rural areas, small and midsize cities.

The PLACES project includes 27 different health measures, including mental and physical health, access to health insurance and preventive screenings, for every county, city, and census tract in the U.S. The chronic disease measures focus on health outcomes, unhealthy behaviors, and prevention practices that have a substantial impact on how well and long people live. Created by the CDC in 2016 to provide city and census tract-level health data for the 500 largest cities, the 500 Cities project expanded to PLACES, providing data for the entire country with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 1/25

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

The purpose of the Weekly Bulletin is to provide you with WCC grant specific information as well as some useful tools and resources that might be helpful to your work.

  1. WCC Grant Information – grant specific information such as reporting deadlines, important calls, etc. will continue to be top of the bulletin.
  2. Action Required – anytime there is an action required related to an item in the bulletin, we will indicate that in the heading.
  3. News, Research, and Resources from the Field – This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities. If there are any grant expectations related to an included resource, those will be clearly communicated to you through a webinar, training, PI Call, etc. We’ve also added a News, Research, Resource, or Funding Opportunity designation to assist you in quickly finding the information that is most relevant to you.

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of January 25, 2021:

In this Edition

  • Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021
  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • National Health Outreach Conference
  • WCC Communications Toolkit
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021

  • Quarterly PI Calls are an opportunity to disseminate information and updates related to the WCC grant. The next Quarterly PI Call will be Friday, February 19, 2021 from 1:30 – 3:00 PM ET. We will be meeting via Zoom. PIs should refer to the Outlook Calendar invite from Shay McNeil for the link and password to connect to the meeting. An agenda for the meeting will be provided closer to the next call.

Quarterly PI Call Schedule:

  • February 19, 2021
  • May 21, 2021
  • August 20, 2021

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Action Required National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021

Here are the latest updates on the virtual National 4-H Summit for Healthy Living, February 12-15, 2021.  The working schedule is here https://4-h.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/National-Youth-Summit-on-Healthy-Living-2021-Tentative-Agenda.pdf. Reminder: attendance at the Summit is a deliverable for WCC Communities (attending either the past 2020 or upcoming 2021 Summit). Keynote speaker is Kazi Mannan, a remarkable immigrant restaurateur whose give back to the hungry in Washington DC is an inspiring story. Youth in Action winners will lead off the afternoon openings on Saturday and Sunday, and there will be a career panel kick-off speaker on Monday. The final agenda will detail all speakers.

REGISTRATION IS OPEN ONE MORE WEEK

Register

It is a three-step process as explained here:

  1. STEP ONE – PURCHASE TICKETS
    • Each delegate (youth and adult) will need a “ticket” to participate in the Summit experiences. This step confirms your ticket(s) purchase.
    • Purchase tickets by Friday, January 29, 2021.
  • Purchasing tickets via Group Option:
    • Group Lead purchases the quantity of tickets they need.
  • Purchasing tickets via Individual Option requires submitting complete delegate registration information at the time of purchase.
  • If you have not yet registered, please make sure to include WCC in the Group/Team/Community Title box so we can easily find your team among the registrations.
  1. STEP TWO – DELEGATE REGISTRATION
    • Selecting the Group Option when purchasing tickets will result in the Group Lead Contact receiving an automatic email. This email will contain information on how to submit delegate registration information (name, DOB, email, shipping address).
    • If the Individual Option is used, registration information will be requested at the time of ticket purchase.  
    • Delegation registration information must be submitted in order to select track sessions (step 3). Accurate emails are essential for track selection communication.

Note: A Summit Activity Box will be shipped to each delegate using their provided address. Please check for complete & accurate addresses.  

  1. STEP THREE – TRACK SELECTIONS
    • Summit workshops and career panels will be grouped into tracks. Delegates will pre-select their track of interest.
    • Each registered delegate will be emailed information to select their track preferences. This email can be expected within five business days of registration.
    • All track preferences must be submitted by February 5, 2021.

TRACK INFORMATION:  There are six tracks available plus an adult professional development track: food insecurity, nutrition, substance abuse, physical activity, mental health and health equity. Everyone in a state/community group does not have to stay in the same track but once a track has been designated for each individual, they must stay in that track for the workshops and career panel.  Please look at the workshops planned for your probable track and read the descriptions in the Google drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xfplGi9-vRO4Dcv2uOqXsEwQbsjSd9fi?usp=sharing.

  • 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.

Professional Development

  • Cooperative Extension and its Role in Public Health

January 28, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Speaker: Roger Rennekamp, PhD

Roger Rennekamp, National Director for Extension will lead the conversation on our collective effort to foster systems change while implementing policies, systems and environment (PSE) change across our Well Connected Communities. This interactive session will focus on:

  1. Cooperative Extension System and its role in public health and health equity.
  2. Driving PSE and systems change through cross-unit collaboration at university and community levels.
  3. Strengthening equity work across communities, urban, tribal and rural.
  4. Creating and disseminating tools and stories for peer-to-peer learning and evaluation.
  5. What to expect in 2021 for professional development sessions, youth-adult partnerships and Master Volunteer Programs.

Register

  • Peer Perspectives: Creating PSE Change

February 25, 2021, 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET

Policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) change are powerful tools for expanding impact, fostering culture change, and sustaining progress. PSE change takes time and can look different in every community. Communities across the country have helped light the way, creating practices and patterns that help make PSE change more doable than ever. Join us to hear how WCC peers are scaling impact through PSE and participate in small group discussion for how your states/communities take action. Learn more:

WCC Blog: Understanding Policy, Systems and Environmental Change

Register

  • 2021 National Extension Conference on Volunteerism – 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/

National Health Outreach Conference

  • 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.

The NHOC will provide 10 scholarships covering the full registration cost to assist those interested in attending the 2021 Virtual NHOC. Scholarships will be awarded in the amount of $250 each to cover the early-bird registration fee, deadline is February 12, 2021. Recipients will be provided a secure code to enter upon registering for the conference.

  • CALL FOR PROPOSALS

Proposals are now being accepted for the 2021 National Health Outreach Conference (NHOC). At this time the NHOC planning team is particularly interested in presentations that focus on COVID-19; particularly adaptations of learning environments, use of technology to disseminate and distribute education, and engaging learners. Limited number of proposals will be accepted as these will be added to the sessions that were chosen for the May 2020 NHOC that was cancelled.
Deadline: February 12, 2021

Interested individuals and teams are invited to submit proposals for plenary, breakout and poster sessions that address the conference’s theme in the following topic/theme areas:

  • Effective Messaging to Targeted Audiences
  • Health Behavior Change
  • Health Equity
  • Interagency Partnerships & Collaborations
  • Evaluation of Health/PSE Interventions
  • Social & Economic Impact on Health

All proposals will be peer-reviewed. Submit proposals HERE.
Review submission guidelines HERE.

WCC Communications

  • Updates to the WCC Communications Toolkit

Take a moment to peruse the updated communications toolkit on the WCC Portal: https://portal.wellconnectedcommunities.org/communications-toolkit/

Some items of interest are an updated PPT template, virtual backgrounds for all your online meeting needs, and a full ZIP file of WCC logos for every use. Also included in the update are the current Brand, Logo and Positioning Guidelines. The new positioning–or a brief statement of the what, why and how of the initiative–has been updated on all the templates and materials available in the toolkit, as well.

Coming Soon! A WCC overview PPT, WCC overview factsheet, WCC Q&As, and more.

News, Research, and Resources from the Field:

This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities.

  • NEW From Roger Rennekamp, National Extension Health Director, ECOP
    • COVID-19 Vaccine Education Toolkits for Cooperative Extension
      Overcoming hesitancy to receive the new COVID-19 vaccines is a growing issue across the U.S. despite more 400,000 deaths resulting from virus to date. According to a recent report published by the Kaiser Family Foundation, rural residents are among the most vaccine hesitant groups with seven in ten rural residents expressing at least some reluctance to receive the vaccine. But as trusted members of the communities they serve, Cooperative Extension…Learn More
  • The Role of Critical Health Literacy in Addressing Social Determinants of Health
    Roger Rennekamp, National Extension Health Director, ECOPThe Roundtable on Health Literacy of the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine is sponsoring a workshop on the Role of Critical Health Literacy in Addressing Social Determinants of Health on Wednesday, January 27 from 3:00 – 4:30 PM. The social determinants of health are the conditions in which people are born, grow, work, live, and age, and the systems that shape the conditions of daily life…Learn More
  • APLU President Endorses Extension’s Involvement in Vaccination Education

On January 19, Association of Public and Land Grant Universities (APLU) President Peter McPherson sent a letter to land grant university presidents outlining how the Cooperative Extension System can help build confidence in the new COVID-19 vaccines and increase their uptake. According the McPherson, “the vaccines can only be effective, however, if the public understands their efficacy and gets the vaccinations. As institutions rooted in knowledge…Learn More

  • COVID Vaccinations for Food & Agriculture Essential Workers – Webinar

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will offer a webinar on the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccines for food and agriculture workers including information about vaccine safety and confidence and recommendations for vaccine prioritization. Preregistration is required. Panelists include: Dr. Janell Routh —Medical Officer, COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force, CDC Dr. Michelle Colby…Learn More
 

  • Vaccine Hesitancy in Rural America

A recent report published by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) provides information gathered in surveys and focus groups concerning public opinion about COVID-19 vaccination in rural areas. “With the pandemic’s toll hitting rural communities hard, the findings from are a cause for concern. Rural residents are among the most vaccine hesitant groups, along with…Learn More
 

  • Consider Hosting a Public Health Associate – Apply by February 16

Managed by CDC’s Center for State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial Support , the Public Health Associate Program (PHAP) is a training program for early-career public health professionals who have a recent college degree and an interest in public service and public health. Throughout the two-year program, associates complete a comprehensive training curriculum and work at a host organization to gain hands-on experience…Learn More

From the Urban Institute

By Alanna McCargo, Jung Hyun Choi, and Edward Golding May 2019

Homeownership is an important wealth-building source and a foundation for economic stability. Owning a home can provide a stable place to live and remove significant economic uncertainty in the form of fixed housing costs. These benefits are well documented, yet there is persistent inequality in access and attainment of homeownership across racial lines and less wealth accumulation for black households through homeownership. The continually depressed black homeownership rate and overall wealth gap have reached alarming levels. The black homeownership rate has persistently lagged behind that of white families, a gap that has widened since the Great Recession.

  • NEW Funding Opportunity Food and Agriculture Service Learning Program

The Food and Agriculture Service Learning program increases knowledge of agricultural sciences and improves the nutritional health of children. The program focuses on increasing the capacity for food, garden, and nutrition education within host organizations, such as school cafeterias and classrooms, while fostering community engagement between farms and school systems. This initiative is part of a broader effort to increase access to school meals for low-income children and greatly improve meal quality. For more information, read the Food and Agriculture Service Learning funding opportunity.

  • NEW Funding Opportunity Children, Youth, and Families at Risk Sustainable Community Projects

The Children, Youth, and Families at Risk (CYFAR) program improves the quality and quantity of comprehensive community-based programs for at-risk children, youth, and families supported by the Cooperative Extension System. The CYFAR program mission is to marshal resources of the Land-Grant and Cooperative Extension Systems to develop and deliver educational programs that equip limited-resource families and youth, who are at-risk for not meeting basic human needs, with the skills they need to lead positive, productive, contributing lives. For more information, read the CYFAR funding opportunity.

  • NEW Webinar Whole Child Town Hall: Visioning a Healthy, Equitable Future

Thursday, January 28  | 1 p.m. ET

Featuring youth leaders from across the country

To bring inspiration to the New Year, Healthier Generation is hosting a 45-minute panel that will highlight the role youth must play in visioning a healthy, equitable future. 

Attendees will:  

  • Learn why youth engagement is essential to support whole child health and to inform public health campaign efforts, including anti-vaping and COVID-19. 
  • Identify at least 3 strategies to lift youth voice and position youth as health advocates.  

Reserve your seat to attend live and receive a link to the session recording.

From RWJF

Nearly 40 million people in the United States are at risk of losing their homes in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.

No one should have to choose between paying rent and putting food on the table and protecting the health of themselves, their families, and their communities.

A new RWJF policy brief makes evidence-based recommendations for the Biden-Harris Administration and 117th Congress to ensure people do not lose their homes during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond and build transformational change that guarantees housing as a human right and public good that advances racial and economic equity.

Read the recommendations to promote stable housing >

  • NEW Webinar Mastering Live Demonstrations

From Pennsylvania State University

Participants will learn about capabilities within a Zoom webinar conference to engage the audience and enhance educational delivery. Specifically, participants will learn how to: set up and use multiple cameras for live demonstrations, optimize Zoom settings for the best participant viewing experience, manage the chat and Q&A pod, set up an automatic survey link, direct participants to a specific website following the webinar, and other best practice tips.

  • You must register to receive the zoom link.

As the nation faces an unprecedented health crisis, it is more important than ever to have health information at the local level. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 500 Cities is expanding to PLACES, a first-of-its-kind effort to release health information covering the entire United States down to the city, county, and census tract level, including rural areas, small and midsize cities.

The PLACES project includes 27 different health measures, including mental and physical health, access to health insurance and preventive screenings, for every county, city, and census tract in the U.S. The chronic disease measures focus on health outcomes, unhealthy behaviors, and prevention practices that have a substantial impact on how well and long people live. Created by the CDC in 2016 to provide city and census tract-level health data for the 500 largest cities, the 500 Cities project expanded to PLACES, providing data for the entire country with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

On Thursday, January 28 at 1:00 PM ET the CDC, RWJF, and CDC Foundation will host a webinar with a live demo of the new PLACES site and its interactive capabilities. We’ll also have a few leaders (including Cara James!) who will speak to the ways in which communities can use this powerful new data resource to improve health in their communities. And plenty of time mapped out for Q&A. Registration details are here. 

From American Economic Review: Insights   

by: C. Kirabo Jackson, Shanette C. Porter, John Q. Easton, Alyssa Blanchard, and Sebastián Kiguel, vol. 2, no. 4, December 2020

Using value-added models on data from Chicago Public Schools, we find that high schools impact students’ self-reported socioemotional development (SED) by enhancing social well-being and promoting hard work. Conditional on their test score impacts, schools that improve SED in ninth grade reduce school-based arrests and increase high school completion and college going. For most longer-run outcomes, using both SED and test score value added more than doubles the variance of the explained school effect relative to using test score value added alone. Results suggest that high school impacts on SED can be captured using self-report surveys and SED can be fostered by schools to improve longer-run outcomes.

From RWJF

New findings from a national, ongoing poll from RAND Corporation show that many people—even those who may have been hit hardest by COVID-19—do not recognize racism as a barrier to good health. And despite the toll the pandemic has taken on so many lives, perceptions have not changed over the past months.

The poll looks at how COVID-19 is affecting health, optimism for the future, and the views, values, and experiences of those who are most affected by this crisis.

Read the complete survey findings >

From the American Communities Project

by Ari Pinkus November 23, 2020

Covid-19 is widely thought to have triggered the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, surpassing the Great Recession that caused significant hardship just over 10 years ago — the problem of hunger vividly displayed by food lines across America these past eight months.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 1/18

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With the start of a new year, we have made a few changes to the WCC Weekly Bulletin that will hopefully streamline the content. The purpose of the Weekly Bulletin is to provide you with WCC grant specific information as well as some useful tools and resources that might be helpful to your work.

  1. WCC Grant Information – grant specific information such as reporting deadlines, important calls, etc. will continue to be top of the bulletin.
  2. Action Required – anytime there is an action required related to an item in the bulletin, we will indicate that in the heading.
  3. News, Research, and Resources from the Field – This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities. If there are any grant expectations related to an included resource, those will be clearly communicated to you through a webinar, training, PI Call, etc. We’ve also added a News, Research, Resource, or Funding Opportunity designation to assist you in quickly finding the information that is most relevant to you.

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of January 18, 2021:

In this Edition

  • Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021
  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • WCC Communications Toolkit
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Quarterly PI Call Friday, February 19, 2021

  • Quarterly PI Calls are an opportunity to disseminate information and updates related to the WCC grant. The next Quarterly PI Call will be Friday, February 19, 2021 from 1:30 – 3:00 PM ET. We will be meeting via Zoom. PIs should refer to the Outlook Calendar invite from Shay McNeil for the link and password to connect to the meeting. An agenda for the meeting will be provided closer to the next call.

Quarterly PI Call Schedule:

  • February 19, 2021
  • May 21, 2021
  • August 20, 2021

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021

Registration is now open for the National 4-H Summit for Healthy Living.  https://shop4-h.org/products/healthy-living-summit-registration  or https://4-h.org/parents/national-youth-summits/#healthyliving

This is a virtual event scheduled for February 12-15 for high school students and adults. Registration closes January 29, 2021.

Registration is $75 per person, youth or adult. Each participant will receive a Summit box of materials to promote having a great Summit experience.

Registration will be a two-step process. First, the attendees need to be registered and payment made in order to get the Summit boxes to everyone in time.  Secondly, after registration closes January 29, attendees have one week to designate the track they will stay in: nutrition, physical activity, mental health, substance abuse, health equity, and food insecurity plus an adult track for professional development. This needs to be done by February 5, 2021 and you will receive information on what the workshop offerings will be for each track prior to the deadline.  The tracks are the “how” behind allowing unlimited participation.  Workshop offerings are being finalized now.

Please pass this information along to county staff, 4-H Club volunteers, anyone with an interest in deepening their 4-H Healthy Living knowledge.

  • 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.

Professional Development

  • Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours

Office hours will be held on Monday, January 25, 2021 from 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET to entertain questions about Youth-Adult Partnerships or Master Volunteers.  The specific sub-topic we will focus on sharing what each WCC grantee is doing with their LGUs WCC program – training, internship in light of the pandemic, etc.  For example, New Hampshire will be using the training track they sign up for at the HL Summit as part of their MV training which will be at least 4 hours.

Register

Additional Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours will be held:

  • April 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • July 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • October 18, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • Cooperative Extension and its Role in Public Health

January 28, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Speaker: Roger Rennekamp, PhD

Roger Rennekamp, National Director for Extension will lead the conversation on our collective effort to foster systems change while implementing policies, systems and environment (PSE) change across our Well Connected Communities. This interactive session will focus on:

  1. Cooperative Extension System and its role in public health and health equity.
  2. Driving PSE and systems change through cross-unit collaboration at university and community levels.
  3. Strengthening equity work across communities, urban, tribal and rural.
  4. Creating and disseminating tools and stories for peer-to-peer learning and evaluation.
  5. What to expect in 2021 for professional development sessions, youth-adult partnerships and Master Volunteer Programs.

Register

  • Peer Perspectives: Creating PSE Change

February 25, 2021, 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET

Policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) change are powerful tools for expanding impact, fostering culture change, and sustaining progress. PSE change takes time and can look different in every community. Communities across the country have helped light the way, creating practices and patterns that help make PSE change more doable than ever. Join us to hear how WCC peers are scaling impact through PSE and participate in small group discussion for how your states/communities take action. Learn more:

WCC Blog: Understanding Policy, Systems and Environmental Change

Register

WCC Communications

  • Updates to the WCC Communications Toolkit

Take a moment to peruse the updated communications toolkit on the WCC Portal: https://portal.wellconnectedcommunities.org/communications-toolkit/

Some items of interest are an updated PPT template, virtual backgrounds for all your online meeting needs, and a full ZIP file of WCC logos for every use. Also included in the update are the current Brand, Logo and Positioning Guidelines. The new positioning–or a brief statement of the what, why and how of the initiative–has been updated on all the templates and materials available in the toolkit, as well.

Coming Soon! A WCC overview PPT, WCC overview factsheet, WCC Q&As, and more.

News, Research, and Resources from the Field:

This section includes links to relevant articles, tools, resources, as well as funding opportunities. It is meant to provide information that might be useful to your work in your communities.

As the nation faces an unprecedented health crisis, it is more important than ever to have health information at the local level. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 500 Cities is expanding to PLACES, a first-of-its-kind effort to release health information covering the entire United States down to the city, county, and census tract level, including rural areas, small and midsize cities.

The PLACES project includes 27 different health measures, including mental and physical health, access to health insurance and preventive screenings, for every county, city, and census tract in the U.S. The chronic disease measures focus on health outcomes, unhealthy behaviors, and prevention practices that have a substantial impact on how well and long people live. Created by the CDC in 2016 to provide city and census tract-level health data for the 500 largest cities, the 500 Cities project expanded to PLACES, providing data for the entire country with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

On Thursday, January 28 at 1:00 PM ET the CDC, RWJF, and CDC Foundation will host a webinar with a live demo of the new PLACES site and its interactive capabilities. We’ll also have a few leaders (including Cara James!) who will speak to the ways in which communities can use this powerful new data resource to improve health in their communities. And plenty of time mapped out for Q&A. Registration details are here. 

From American Economic Review: Insights   

by: C. Kirabo Jackson, Shanette C. Porter, John Q. Easton, Alyssa Blanchard, and Sebastián Kiguel, vol. 2, no. 4, December 2020

Using value-added models on data from Chicago Public Schools, we find that high schools impact students’ self-reported socioemotional development (SED) by enhancing social well-being and promoting hard work. Conditional on their test score impacts, schools that improve SED in ninth grade reduce school-based arrests and increase high school completion and college going. For most longer-run outcomes, using both SED and test score value added more than doubles the variance of the explained school effect relative to using test score value added alone. Results suggest that high school impacts on SED can be captured using self-report surveys and SED can be fostered by schools to improve longer-run outcomes.

From RWJF

New findings from a national, ongoing poll from RAND Corporation show that many people—even those who may have been hit hardest by COVID-19—do not recognize racism as a barrier to good health. And despite the toll the pandemic has taken on so many lives, perceptions have not changed over the past months.

The poll looks at how COVID-19 is affecting health, optimism for the future, and the views, values, and experiences of those who are most affected by this crisis.

Read the complete survey findings >

From the American Communities Project

by Ari Pinkus November 23, 2020

Covid-19 is widely thought to have triggered the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, surpassing the Great Recession that caused significant hardship just over 10 years ago — the problem of hunger vividly displayed by food lines across America these past eight months.

Where available, webinar recordings, PowerPoint slides, and transcripts for 2020 National Rural Health Day programming can now be accessed on the National Rural Health Day website. All links are free and accessible to the public. Event topics range from telehealth and COVID-19 testing to social determinants of health and substance use disorder.  Participating organizations included HHS entities CDC, CMS, HRSA, NIH, the National Advisory Committee on Rural Health and Human Services, the National Association of Rural Health Clinics, and the National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health.

From the American Communities Project

by Stuart Reid, December 01, 2020

When George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis in the spring, the coronavirus pandemic was no longer the only major issue facing the city. As protests erupted in South Minneapolis, many small businesses were damaged and destroyed. Seward Community Co-op has two storefronts owned by more than 21,000 Minneapolis households — both in neighborhoods where protests and property damage occurred

  • News University of Missouri Extension to Expand Mental Health Resources in Rural Areas

Missouri’s rural counties lack mental health services despite growing financial stress and suicide rates. All of Missouri’s 99 rural counties face a shortage of mental health professionals; 57 of them have none. University of Missouri Extension hopes to change that through a multistate project to help farmers, ranchers and farm families find affordable help close to home. MU is part of a $28.7 million, three-year grant from USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture through the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network (FRSAN). FRSAN supports projects that provide stress assistance and suicide prevention services for farmers, ranchers and others in agricultural occupations, says MU Extension health and safety specialist Karen Funkenbusch, who is MU’s principal investigator for the grant. For more information, read the MU article.

  • Funding opportunity Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program (CFPCGP)

The CFPCGP program fights food insecurity through developing community food projects that help promote the self-sufficiency of low-income communities. CFP supports the development of projects with a one-time infusion of federal dollars to make projects self-sustaining. For more information, read the full CFP funding opportunity.

FORHP will hold an hour-long webinar for applicants on Tuesday, January 26, 2021 from 1-2 p.m., ET.  A recording will be made available for those who cannot attend.  Please reference page ii in the NOFO for the dial-in information for the webinar and contact ruralopioidresponse@hrsa.gov with programmatic questions and bmirindi@hrsa.gov with fiscal/budget-related questions.

From NPR

“All Things Considered”, December 28, 2020

The virus infecting thousands of Americans a day is also attacking the country’s social fabric. The coronavirus has exposed a weakness in many rural communities, where divisive pandemic politics are alienating some of their most critical residents — health care workers.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 1/11

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The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of January 11, 2021:

In this Edition

  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Second Youth Introductory Session, January 19, 2021, 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET

On January 19, 2021, from 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET, there will be another virtual Youth Introductory Session where the youth teams from our WCC communities can introduce themselves and their health issues to their peers. We had a very successful first session on August 26, 2020 with 49 participants. Youth from that session are invited to return to cheer on and learn about their peers. This repeat session is for those communities that did not have youth on the August call and to introduce WCC youth to each other prior to the National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living. Each youth team is asked to prepare 1-2 slides to tell about their communities and their activities. PI’s are asked to register their youth and adult participants using this link.  Slides should be sent to Hayat Essa (hessa@fourhcouncil.edu) by January 11, 2021. If your community plans to participate and you have not yet sent your slides to Hayat, please do so as soon as possible.

  • National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021

Registration is now open for the National 4-H Summit for Healthy Living.  https://shop4-h.org/products/healthy-living-summit-registration  or https://4-h.org/parents/national-youth-summits/#healthyliving

This is a virtual event scheduled for February 12-15 for high school students and adults. Registration closes January 29, 2021.

Registration is $75 per person, youth or adult. Each participant will receive a Summit box of materials to promote having a great Summit experience.

Registration will be a two-step process. First, the attendees need to be registered and payment made in order to get the Summit boxes to everyone in time.  Secondly, after registration closes January 29, attendees have one week to designate the track they will stay in: nutrition, physical activity, mental health, substance abuse, health equity, and food insecurity plus an adult track for professional development. This needs to be done by February 5, 2021 and you will receive information on what the workshop offerings will be for each track prior to the deadline.  The tracks are the “how” behind allowing unlimited participation.  Workshop offerings are being finalized now.

Please pass this information along to county staff, 4-H Club volunteers, anyone with an interest in deepening their 4-H Healthy Living knowledge.

  • 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 p.m. PST on Monday, March 29, 2021.

Professional Development

  • Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours

Office hours will be held on Monday, January 25, 2021 from 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET to entertain questions about Youth-Adult Partnerships or Master Volunteers.  The specific sub-topic we will focus on sharing what each WCC grantee is doing with their LGUs WCC program – training, internship in light of the pandemic, etc.  For example, New Hampshire will be using the training track they sign up for at the HL Summit as part of their MV training which will be at least 4 hours.

Register Here

Additional Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours will be held:

  • April 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • July 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • October 18, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • Cooperative Extension and its Role in Public Health

January 28, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Speaker: Roger Rennekamp, PhD

Roger Rennekamp, National Director for Extension will lead the conversation on our collective effort to foster systems change while implementing policies, systems and environment (PSE) change across our Well Connected Communities. This interactive session will focus on:

  1. Cooperative Extension System and its role in public health and health equity.
  2. Driving PSE and systems change through cross-unit collaboration at university and community levels.
  3. Strengthening equity work across communities, urban, tribal and rural.
  4. Creating and disseminating tools and stories for peer-to-peer learning and evaluation.
  5. What to expect in 2021 for professional development sessions, youth-adult partnerships and Master Volunteer Programs.

Register

News, Research, and Resources from the Field:

Where available, webinar recordings, PowerPoint slides, and transcripts for 2020 National Rural Health Day programming can now be accessed on the National Rural Health Day website. All links are free and accessible to the public. Event topics range from telehealth and COVID-19 testing to social determinants of health and substance use disorder.  Participating organizations included HHS entities CDC, CMS, HRSA, NIH, the National Advisory Committee on Rural Health and Human Services, the National Association of Rural Health Clinics, and the National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health.

From the American Communities Project

by Stuart Reid, December 01, 2020

When George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis in the spring, the coronavirus pandemic was no longer the only major issue facing the city. As protests erupted in South Minneapolis, many small businesses were damaged and destroyed. Seward Community Co-op has two storefronts owned by more than 21,000 Minneapolis households — both in neighborhoods where protests and property damage occurred

  • NEW University of Missouri Extension to Expand Mental Health Resources in Rural Areas

Missouri’s rural counties lack mental health services despite growing financial stress and suicide rates. All of Missouri’s 99 rural counties face a shortage of mental health professionals; 57 of them have none. University of Missouri Extension hopes to change that through a multistate project to help farmers, ranchers and farm families find affordable help close to home. MU is part of a $28.7 million, three-year grant from USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture through the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network (FRSAN). FRSAN supports projects that provide stress assistance and suicide prevention services for farmers, ranchers and others in agricultural occupations, says MU Extension health and safety specialist Karen Funkenbusch, who is MU’s principal investigator for the grant. For more information, read the MU article.

  • NEW Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program (CFPCGP)

The CFPCGP program fights food insecurity through developing community food projects that help promote the self-sufficiency of low-income communities. CFP supports the development of projects with a one-time infusion of federal dollars to make projects self-sustaining. For more information, read the full CFP funding opportunity.

From NPR

“All Things Considered”, December 28, 2020

The virus infecting thousands of Americans a day is also attacking the country’s social fabric. The coronavirus has exposed a weakness in many rural communities, where divisive pandemic politics are alienating some of their most critical residents — health care workers.

  • Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program (CFPCGP)

The Community Food Projects Competitive Grant Program (CFPCGP) fights food insecurity through developing community food projects that help promote the self-sufficiency of low-income communities.

NIFA’s Community Food Projects (CFP) intends to solicit applications and fund two types of grants. The types are:

  1. Community Food Projects (CFP)
  2. Planning Projects (PP)

CFP supports the development of projects with a one-time infusion of federal dollars to make such projects self-sustaining. CFPs are designed to create community-based food projects with objectives, activities and outcomes that are in alignment with Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program (CFPCGP) primary goals. Planning Projects complete a plan toward the improvement of community food security in keeping with the primary goals of the CFPCGP. Planning Projects focus on a defined community and describe in detail the activities and outcomes of the project. For more information, read the full CFP funding opportunity

The Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Federal Office of Rural Health Policy (FORHP) will be making approximately 78 awards of $1 million each to rural communities to enhance substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorder (OUD), service delivery.  Over the course of a three-year period of performance, grant recipients will implement a set of core prevention, treatment, and recovery activities that align with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Five-Point Strategy to Combat the Opioid Crisis.  Award recipients are strongly encouraged to leverage workforce recruitment and retention programs like the National Health Service Corps (NHSC).  All domestic public and private entities, nonprofit and for-profit, are eligible to apply and all services must be provided in HRSA-designated rural areas (as defined by the Rural Health Grants Eligibility Analyzer).  The applicant organization must be part of an established network or consortium that includes at least three other separately-owned entities.  A majority, or at least 50 percent, of members in each consortium must be located within HRSA-designated rural areas.  Applicants are encouraged to include populations that have historically suffered from poorer health outcomes, health disparities, and other inequities, as compared to the rest of the target population, when addressing SUD/OUD in the proposed service area.  FORHP will hold an hour-long webinar for applicants on Tuesday, January 26, 2021 from 1-2 p.m., ET.  A recording will be made available for those who cannot attend.  Please reference page ii in the NOFO for the dial-in information for the webinar and contact ruralopioidresponse@hrsa.gov with programmatic questions and bmirindi@hrsa.gov with fiscal/budget-related questions.

American Communities Project

by Becky Ofrane October 21, 2020

Inspired in part by the American Communities Project’s county-level health analysis by Community Type, City Health Dashboard recently released an analysis and typology of America’s small and midsize cities, categorizing cities of population between 50,000 to 500,000 into 10 distinct City Types.

  • Covid-19 Dashboard for Rural America

From The Daily Yonder

We’re tracking the spread and impact of Covid-19 across rural America. The numbers and maps on this dashboard are updated weekly. View the Covid-19 Dashboard.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 1/4

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

Happy New Year!

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of January 4, 2021:

In this Edition

  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Second Youth Introductory Session, January 19, 2021, 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET

On January 19, 2021, from 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET, there will be another virtual Youth Introductory Session where the youth teams from our WCC communities can introduce themselves and their health issues to their peers. We had a very successful first session on August 26, 2020 with 49 participants. Youth from that session are invited to return to cheer on and learn about their peers. This repeat session is for those communities that did not have youth on the August call and to introduce WCC youth to each other prior to the National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living. Each youth team is asked to prepare 1-2 slides to tell about their communities and their activities. PI’s are asked to register their youth and adult participants using this link.  Slides should be sent to Hayat Essa (hessa@fourhcouncil.edu) by January 11, 2021. 

  • National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021
    • The National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living will be virtual and held on its usual Presidents’ Day Weekend, February 12 -15, 2021. The number of hours per day is still TBD but will last no more than approximately 4-5 hours on any one day.
  • Cost is $75 per youth or adult.
  • Registration will open soon and will close January 22, 2021.  Once your team is registered, you will have the opportunity to select a track for your team from these 6: Food Insecurity, Nutrition, Physical Activity, Substance Abuse, Mental Health and Health Equity.  The selection will need to be made by January 29, 2021.
  • Because of the tracks, there will be no limit on the number of registrations.
  • Highlights of the Summit will include keynote and capnote speakers and a speaker of the day, virtual State Showcase, 3 workshops, career exploration, a virtual “Coffee House” for discussion of national health issues, action plan development, and lots of opportunities for networking.
  • New for this year will be TBD follow-ups for pitching action plans in the “Dolphin Tank”, and following those action plans to see the impact on communities.

Professional Development

  • Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours

Office hours will be held on Monday, January 25, 2021 from 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET to entertain questions about Youth-Adult Partnerships or Master Volunteers.  The specific sub-topic we will focus on sharing what each WCC grantee is doing with their LGUs WCC program – training, internship in light of the pandemic, etc.  For example, New Hampshire will be using the training track they sign up for at the HL Summit as part of their MV training which will be at least 4 hours.

Register Here

Additional Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours will be held:

  • April 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • July 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • October 18, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • Cooperative Extension and its Role in Public Health

January 28, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Speaker: Roger Rennekamp, PhD

Roger Rennekamp, National Director for Extension will lead the conversation on our collective effort to foster systems change while implementing policies, systems and environment (PSE) change across our Well Connected Communities. This interactive session will focus on:

  1. Cooperative Extension System and its role in public health and health equity.
  2. Driving PSE and systems change through cross-unit collaboration at university and community levels.
  3. Strengthening equity work across communities, urban, tribal and rural.
  4. Creating and disseminating tools and stories for peer-to-peer learning and evaluation.
  5. What to expect in 2021 for professional development sessions, youth-adult partnerships and Master Volunteer Programs.

Register

News, Research, and Resources from the Field:

  • NEW Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program (CFPCGP)

The Community Food Projects Competitive Grant Program (CFPCGP) fights food insecurity through developing community food projects that help promote the self-sufficiency of low-income communities.

NIFA’s Community Food Projects (CFP) intends to solicit applications and fund two types of grants. The types are:

  1. Community Food Projects (CFP)
  2. Planning Projects (PP)

CFP supports the development of projects with a one-time infusion of federal dollars to make such projects self-sustaining. CFPs are designed to create community-based food projects with objectives, activities and outcomes that are in alignment with Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program (CFPCGP) primary goals. Planning Projects complete a plan toward the improvement of community food security in keeping with the primary goals of the CFPCGP. Planning Projects focus on a defined community and describe in detail the activities and outcomes of the project. For more information, read the full CFP funding opportunity

The Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Federal Office of Rural Health Policy (FORHP) will be making approximately 78 awards of $1 million each to rural communities to enhance substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorder (OUD), service delivery.  Over the course of a three-year period of performance, grant recipients will implement a set of core prevention, treatment, and recovery activities that align with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Five-Point Strategy to Combat the Opioid Crisis.  Award recipients are strongly encouraged to leverage workforce recruitment and retention programs like the National Health Service Corps (NHSC).  All domestic public and private entities, nonprofit and for-profit, are eligible to apply and all services must be provided in HRSA-designated rural areas (as defined by the Rural Health Grants Eligibility Analyzer).  The applicant organization must be part of an established network or consortium that includes at least three other separately-owned entities.  A majority, or at least 50 percent, of members in each consortium must be located within HRSA-designated rural areas.  Applicants are encouraged to include populations that have historically suffered from poorer health outcomes, health disparities, and other inequities, as compared to the rest of the target population, when addressing SUD/OUD in the proposed service area.  FORHP will hold an hour-long webinar for applicants on Tuesday, January 26, 2021 from 1-2 p.m., ET.  A recording will be made available for those who cannot attend.  Please reference page ii in the NOFO for the dial-in information for the webinar and contact ruralopioidresponse@hrsa.gov with programmatic questions and bmirindi@hrsa.gov with fiscal/budget-related questions.

American Communities Project

by Becky Ofrane October 21, 2020

Inspired in part by the American Communities Project’s county-level health analysis by Community Type, City Health Dashboard recently released an analysis and typology of America’s small and midsize cities, categorizing cities of population between 50,000 to 500,000 into 10 distinct City Types.

  • NEW Covid-19 Dashboard for Rural America

From The Daily Yonder

We’re tracking the spread and impact of Covid-19 across rural America. The numbers and maps on this dashboard are updated weekly. View the Covid-19 Dashboard.

RWJF Culture of Health Blog, Nov 16, 2020, Posted by Jeanette Betancourt, Katie Wehr

The lovable Muppets of Sesame Street have a history of tackling tough topics with a compassionate, evidence-based, and age-appropriate approach. Helping us with the struggles of 2020 is no exception.

This year was full of change, loss, and challenges for kids who are learning how to manage big feelings. That’s why RWJF is proud to support Sesame Street in Communities. They are an important and needed resource to help families cope with the stress and uncertainty of the holidays amid a pandemic—and beyond.

Learn more >

12 QUESTIONS – TO SEE WHERE IN THE WORLD YOUR IDEAS COME FROM

From RWJF

How does the world inspire you? Take this quiz to discover how the rest of the world may shape what you do and how you think. The results might surprise you. The quiz is composed of two sets of questions. The first will ask you about how you’ve experienced the rest of the world, while the second will ask you about how you think about other countries.

  • From eXtension
  • Impact Collaborative Innovation Skill-Building Experience. Registration Open for eXtension Members! January 19th & 26th, February 2nd & 9th, 2021. Do you have a project idea that needs incubation, innovation, and ways to get to implementation and impact faster? Are you looking to learn about design thinking and lean experimentation combined with Cooperative Extension’s best practices for solving important community issues? Are you interested in becoming an Innovation Facilitator/Coach for future Impact Collaborative events and to support your institution’s teams and teams across the nation? If you answered yes, to any of these questions then join us to explore the Impact Collaborative’s Innovation Skill-building experience in a whole new way. Learn More
  • Federal Trade Commission Warns of Vaccine Scams
    Roger Rennekamp, Extension Health Director

Now that COVID-19 vaccinations have been approved for emergency use, scammers will not be far behind warns the warns the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).  In response, the FTC has developed a blog that include specific warnings and infographics that organizations like Cooperative Extension can use to inform their clients of these possible scams.  The blogs are available in English and Spanish…Learn More.

  • Social Determinants of Health: What’s Happenin’ on the Hill?
    Erin Yelland, Assistant Professor and Extension Specialist, Kansas State University
    I recently attended a Congressional Briefing on the Social Determinants of Health to learn more about what is happening at the national level regarding the social determinants (for a refresher course on the social determinants, see my last blog post here – federal policies are a big part of this equation). So, what’s happenin’? Turns out, quite a bit! And the future is expected to be bright as the 117th Congress begins next month…Learn More

This episode is the audio from a webinar hosted by the eXtension Foundation on December 2nd, 2020, featuring individuals from the USDA Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion. The description of the webinar is available below:

The 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans will be released soon, and anticipation is building around this important roadmap for healthy eating. As a Cooperative Extension nutrition communicator, you play an important role in helping us disseminate key Dietary Guidelines consumer messages to your unique audiences in your local communities throughout the country. While the content of the latest Dietary Guidelines is being finalized, during the webinar we will share key consumer messaging with you and offer suggestions for getting promotional materials ready.

Susan Harris and Soni Cochran from Nebraska Extension about their project – Wellness in Tough Times Toolkit – that focuses on rural Nebraska communities impacted by disaster(s) with limited resources for recovery. This team’s journey working with the eXtension Foundation began in 2019 as a brand new project working through the Impact Collaborative program. Since then, they have received funding to support their work. At present, they are one of eight teams selected by the eXtension Foundation to have their project accelerated through our New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE) program.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 12/21

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

In this Edition

  • National 4-H Council Closed December 25, 2020 – January 3, 2021
  • Past Due Q4 Reporting
  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

National 4-H Council Closed December 25, 2020 – January 3, 2021

  • National 4-H Council will close beginning December 25, 2020 and will re-open January 4, 2021. There will not be a WCC Weekly Bulletin for the week of December 28, 2020.

Past Due Q4 Reporting

  • The Q4 report was due December 15, 2020. If you have not submitted the following, please submit as soon as possible.

The reporting period is September 1 – November 30, 2020.

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Second Youth Introductory Session, January 19, 2021, 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET

On January 19, 2021, from 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET, there will be another virtual Youth Introductory Session where the youth teams from our WCC communities can introduce themselves and their health issues to their peers. We had a very successful first session on August 26, 2020 with 49 participants. Youth from that session are invited to return to cheer on and learn about their peers. This repeat session is for those communities that did not have youth on the August call and to introduce WCC youth to each other prior to the National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living. Each youth team is asked to prepare 1-2 slides to tell about their communities and their activities. PI’s are asked to register their youth and adult participants using this link.  Slides should be sent to Hayat Essa (hessa@fourhcouncil.edu) by January 11, 2021. 

  • National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021
    • The National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living will be virtual and held on its usual Presidents’ Day Weekend, February 12 -15, 2021. The number of hours per day is still TBD but will last no more than approximately 4-5 hours on any one day.
  • Cost is $75 per youth or adult.
  • Registration will open Christmas Week and close January 22, 2021.  Once your team is registered, you will have the opportunity to select a track for your team from these 6: Food Insecurity, Nutrition, Physical Activity, Substance Abuse, Mental Health and Health Equity.  The selection will need to be made by January 29, 2021.
  • Because of the tracks, there will be no limit on the number of registrations.
  • Highlights of the Summit will include keynote and capnote speakers and a speaker of the day, virtual State Showcase, 3 workshops, career exploration, a virtual “Coffee House” for discussion of national health issues, action plan development, and lots of opportunities for networking.
  • New for this year will be TBD follow-ups for pitching action plans in the “Dolphin Tank”, and following those action plans to see the impact on communities.

Professional Development

  • DATE CHANGE Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours

Office hours will be held on Monday, January 25, 2021 from 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET to entertain questions about Youth-Adult Partnerships or Master Volunteers.  The specific sub-topic we will focus on sharing what each WCC grantee is doing with their LGUs WCC program – training, internship in light of the pandemic, etc.  For example, New Hampshire will be using the training track they sign up for at the HL Summit as part of their MV training which will be at least 4 hours.

Register Here

Additional Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours will be held:

  • April 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • July 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • October 18, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • Cooperative Extension and its Role in Public Health

January 28, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Speaker: Roger Rennekamp, PhD

Roger Rennekamp, National Director for Extension will lead the conversation on our collective effort to foster systems change while implementing policies, systems and environment (PSE) change across our Well Connected Communities. This interactive session will focus on:

  1. Cooperative Extension System and its role in public health and health equity.
  2. Driving PSE and systems change through cross-unit collaboration at university and community levels.
  3. Strengthening equity work across communities, urban, tribal and rural.
  4. Creating and disseminating tools and stories for peer-to-peer learning and evaluation.
  5. What to expect in 2021 for professional development sessions, youth-adult partnerships and Master Volunteer Programs.

Register

News, Research and Resources from the Field:

  • NEW The Science Behind Your Traditional Holiday Meal

Holidays are traditionally a time to focus on family, friends and food. This year, as Americans navigate this unprecedented holiday season, many are turning to the kitchen to cook up expressions of love and care. Throughout the year, USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) funds research across the nation that puts safe, affordable, nutritious food on your table. Here are some examples of NIFA-funded projects that make up an all-American feast:

The United States leads the world in turkey production. In 2019, the U.S. produced 5.82 billion pounds of turkey meat, per USDA’s Economic Research Service. NIFA-supported researchers at West Virginia University are working to improve meat quality through better nutrition and management. The Hatch Act provides funds to support agricultural research at U.S. land-grant universities. Michigan State University researchers have a grant from NIFA’s Agriculture and Food Research Initiative to address thermal challenge and meat quality. For more information, read the NIFA blog.

RWJF Culture of Health Blog, Nov 16, 2020, Posted by Jeanette Betancourt, Katie Wehr

The lovable Muppets of Sesame Street have a history of tackling tough topics with a compassionate, evidence-based, and age-appropriate approach. Helping us with the struggles of 2020 is no exception.

This year was full of change, loss, and challenges for kids who are learning how to manage big feelings. That’s why RWJF is proud to support Sesame Street in Communities. They are an important and needed resource to help families cope with the stress and uncertainty of the holidays amid a pandemic—and beyond.

Learn more >

12 QUESTIONS – TO SEE WHERE IN THE WORLD YOUR IDEAS COME FROM

From RWJF

How does the world inspire you? Take this quiz to discover how the rest of the world may shape what you do and how you think. The results might surprise you. The quiz is composed of two sets of questions. The first will ask you about how you’ve experienced the rest of the world, while the second will ask you about how you think about other countries.

  • NEW From eXtension
  • Impact Collaborative Innovation Skill-Building Experience. Registration Open for eXtension Members! January 19th & 26th, February 2nd & 9th, 2021. Do you have a project idea that needs incubation, innovation, and ways to get to implementation and impact faster? Are you looking to learn about design thinking and lean experimentation combined with Cooperative Extension’s best practices for solving important community issues? Are you interested in becoming an Innovation Facilitator/Coach for future Impact Collaborative events and to support your institution’s teams and teams across the nation? If you answered yes, to any of these questions then join us to explore the Impact Collaborative’s Innovation Skill-building experience in a whole new way. Learn More
  • Federal Trade Commission Warns of Vaccine Scams
    Roger Rennekamp, Extension Health Director

Now that COVID-19 vaccinations have been approved for emergency use, scammers will not be far behind warns the warns the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).  In response, the FTC has developed a blog that include specific warnings and infographics that organizations like Cooperative Extension can use to inform their clients of these possible scams.  The blogs are available in English and Spanish…Learn More.

  • Social Determinants of Health: What’s Happenin’ on the Hill?
    Erin Yelland, Assistant Professor and Extension Specialist, Kansas State University
    I recently attended a Congressional Briefing on the Social Determinants of Health to learn more about what is happening at the national level regarding the social determinants (for a refresher course on the social determinants, see my last blog post here – federal policies are a big part of this equation). So, what’s happenin’? Turns out, quite a bit! And the future is expected to be bright as the 117th Congress begins next month…Learn More

This episode is the audio from a webinar hosted by the eXtension Foundation on December 2nd, 2020, featuring individuals from the USDA Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion. The description of the webinar is available below:

The 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans will be released soon, and anticipation is building around this important roadmap for healthy eating. As a Cooperative Extension nutrition communicator, you play an important role in helping us disseminate key Dietary Guidelines consumer messages to your unique audiences in your local communities throughout the country. While the content of the latest Dietary Guidelines is being finalized, during the webinar we will share key consumer messaging with you and offer suggestions for getting promotional materials ready.

Susan Harris and Soni Cochran from Nebraska Extension about their project – Wellness in Tough Times Toolkit – that focuses on rural Nebraska communities impacted by disaster(s) with limited resources for recovery. This team’s journey working with the eXtension Foundation began in 2019 as a brand new project working through the Impact Collaborative program. Since then, they have received funding to support their work. At present, they are one of eight teams selected by the eXtension Foundation to have their project accelerated through our New Technologies for Ag Extension (NTAE) program.

HHS released a new comprehensive HHS Action Plan and the U.S. Surgeon General issued a complementary Call to Action to Improve Maternal Health to reduce maternal deaths and disparities that put women at risk before, during, and after pregnancy.

HHS also announced a public-private partnership with the March of Dimes to support these initiatives. 

USDA will host a Faith and Opportunity Fellowship convening bringing together faith leaders, faith-based organizations, and houses of worship to engage with peers, discuss common challenges, and hear best practices related to food security and community food system resilience.  Register here. Reach out to alex.cordova@usda.gov with any questions. 

Tuesday, December 15 at 1:00 pm ET.  Building on work conducted by the FORHP-supported Rural and Minority Research Center, this hour-long presentation will review key elements of social determinants of health (SDOH) such as education, income, and health facility availability. 

The Community Connect Grant Program provides financial assistance to eligible applicants that will provide service at or above the Broadband Grant Speed to all premises in rural, economically-challenged communities where broadband service does not exist. The deployment of broadband services on a “community-oriented connectivity” basis stimulates economic development and provides enhanced educational and health care opportunities in rural areas. RUS will give priority to rural areas that demonstrate the greatest need for broadband services, based on the criteria contained herein.

  • New module of the “Increasing Cultural Awareness and Equity in Extension Programs” series available
  1. Go to https://campus.extension.org
  2. The login pane is on the left hand side of the screen. Enter existing login credentials or choose “Create New account”
  3. Once logged in, search for the course “Increasing Cultural Awareness & Equity in Extension Programs”
  4. To enroll in this course
  5. Select the course
  6. Enter the Enrollment Key (your state name, i.e. Maryland)
  7. Select “Enroll Me”
  • CDC PLACES data for every census tract in the nation

PLACES (Population Level Analysis and Community Estimates) includes 27 different measures of health— including mental and physical health, access to health insurance, and preventive screenings— at a hyper-local level. These data can be used to identify and understand health disparities, establish health goals, and target programs and policies where you live.

  • Explore the new data! Go to https://www.cdc.gov/places to explore health data where you live— by county, city, or census tract!
  • Save the date! On January 28 at 1:00pm (ET), the CDC will host a webinar with a live demonstration of the new PLACES data and their interactive capabilities. You’ll also hear how local leaders are planning to use this powerful new resource in their communities.  Registration details to follow.

WCC Weekly Bulletin Week of 12/14

posted in: Weekly Bulletin | 0

The following bulletin includes information regarding the Well Connected Communities initiative for the week of December 14, 2020:

In this Edition

  • Due this Week Q4 Reporting
  • Youth Voice and Leadership
  • Professional Development
  • News, Research, and Resources from the Field

Due this Week Q4 Reporting

  • The Q4 report will be due December 15, 2020. The reporting period is September 1 – November 30, 2020.

Youth Voice and Leadership

  • Second Youth Introductory Session, January 19, 2021, 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET

On January 19, 2021, from 7:00 – 8:30 PM ET, there will be another virtual Youth Introductory Session where the youth teams from our WCC communities can introduce themselves and their health issues to their peers. We had a very successful first session on August 26, 2020 with 49 participants. Youth from that session are invited to return to cheer on and learn about their peers. This repeat session is for those communities that did not have youth on the August call and to introduce WCC youth to each other prior to the National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living. Each youth team is asked to prepare 1-2 slides to tell about their communities and their activities. PI’s are asked to register their youth and adult participants using this link.  Slides should be sent to Hayat Essa (hessa@fourhcouncil.edu) by January 11, 2021. 

  • National 4-H Summit for Health Living, February 12 – 15, 2021
    • The National 4-H Summit on Healthy Living will be virtual and held on its usual Presidents’ Day Weekend, February 12 -15, 2021. The number of hours per day is still TBD but will last no more than approximately 4-5 hours on any one day.
  • Cost is $75 per youth or adult.
  • Registration will open Christmas Week and close January 22, 2021.  Once your team is registered, you will have the opportunity to select a track for your team from these 6: Food Insecurity, Nutrition, Physical Activity, Substance Abuse, Mental Health and Health Equity.  The selection will need to be made by January 29, 2021.
  • Because of the tracks, there will be no limit on the number of registrations.
  • Highlights of the Summit will include keynote and capnote speakers and a speaker of the day, virtual State Showcase, 3 workshops, career exploration, a virtual “Coffee House” for discussion of national health issues, action plan development, and lots of opportunities for networking.
  • New for this year will be TBD follow-ups for pitching action plans in the “Dolphin Tank”, and following those action plans to see the impact on communities.

Professional Development

  • Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours

Office hours will be held on Monday, January 18, 2021 from 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET to entertain questions about Youth-Adult Partnerships or Master Volunteers.  The specific sub-topic we will focus on sharing what each WCC grantee is doing with their LGUs WCC program – training, internship in light of the pandemic, etc.  For example, New Hampshire will be using the training track they sign up for at the HL Summit as part of their MV training which will be at least 4 hours.

Register Here

Additional Youth-Adult Volunteer Leadership Office Hours will be held:

  • April 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • July 19, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • October 18, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
  • Cooperative Extension and its Role in Public Health

January 28, 2021, 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET

Speaker: Roger Rennekamp, PhD

Roger Rennekamp, National Director for Extension will lead the conversation on our collective effort to foster systems change while implementing policies, systems and environment (PSE) change across our Well Connected Communities. This interactive session will focus on:

  1. Cooperative Extension System and its role in public health and health equity.
  2. Driving PSE and systems change through cross-unit collaboration at university and community levels.
  3. Strengthening equity work across communities, urban, tribal and rural.
  4. Creating and disseminating tools and stories for peer-to-peer learning and evaluation.
  5. What to expect in 2021 for professional development sessions, youth-adult partnerships and Master Volunteer Programs.

Register

News, Research and Resources from the Field:

HHS released a new comprehensive HHS Action Plan and the U.S. Surgeon General issued a complementary Call to Action to Improve Maternal Health to reduce maternal deaths and disparities that put women at risk before, during, and after pregnancy.

HHS also announced a public-private partnership with the March of Dimes to support these initiatives. 

USDA will host a Faith and Opportunity Fellowship convening bringing together faith leaders, faith-based organizations, and houses of worship to engage with peers, discuss common challenges, and hear best practices related to food security and community food system resilience.  Register here. Reach out to alex.cordova@usda.gov with any questions. 

Tuesday, December 15 at 1:00 pm ET.  Building on work conducted by the FORHP-supported Rural and Minority Research Center, this hour-long presentation will review key elements of social determinants of health (SDOH) such as education, income, and health facility availability. 

The Community Connect Grant Program provides financial assistance to eligible applicants that will provide service at or above the Broadband Grant Speed to all premises in rural, economically-challenged communities where broadband service does not exist. The deployment of broadband services on a “community-oriented connectivity” basis stimulates economic development and provides enhanced educational and health care opportunities in rural areas. RUS will give priority to rural areas that demonstrate the greatest need for broadband services, based on the criteria contained herein.

  • NEW New module of the “Increasing Cultural Awareness and Equity in Extension Programs” series available
  1. Go to https://campus.extension.org
  2. The login pane is on the left hand side of the screen. Enter existing login credentials or choose “Create New account”
  3. Once logged in, search for the course “Increasing Cultural Awareness & Equity in Extension Programs”
  4. To enroll in this course
  5. Select the course
  6. Enter the Enrollment Key (your state name, i.e. Maryland)
  7. Select “Enroll Me”
  • NEW CDC PLACES data for every census tract in the nation

PLACES (Population Level Analysis and Community Estimates) includes 27 different measures of health— including mental and physical health, access to health insurance, and preventive screenings— at a hyper-local level. These data can be used to identify and understand health disparities, establish health goals, and target programs and policies where you live.

  • Explore the new data! Go to https://www.cdc.gov/places to explore health data where you live— by county, city, or census tract!
  • Save the date! On January 28 at 1:00pm (ET), the CDC will host a webinar with a live demonstration of the new PLACES data and their interactive capabilities. You’ll also hear how local leaders are planning to use this powerful new resource in their communities.  Registration details to follow.

USDA will host a Faith and Opportunity Fellowship convening bringing together faith leaders, faith-based organizations, and houses of worship to engage with peers, discuss common challenges, and hear best practices related to food security and community food system resilience.  Register here. Reach out to alex.cordova@usda.gov with any questions. 

  • From the Journal of Extension Volume 58 Number 5 – October 2020
  • We (All) Need to Talk About Race: Building Extension’s Capacity for Dialogue and Action
    v58-5comm1
    Walcott, Eric; Raison, Brian; Welborn, Rachel; Pirog, Rich; Emery, Mary; Stout, Mike; Hendrix, Laura; Ostrom, Marcia
    For Extension to remain relevant to the mission of meeting the most critical community needs, we must examine the racial inequities that hold us back as institutions and lead efforts to engage diverse communities in learning about race through dialogue. Responses from participants in 26 states who joined a train-the-trainer initiative suggested that despite previous efforts, there is great need for increased education and capacity building to address racism and prioritize racial equity both within our institutions and in the communities we serve. For Extension professionals to effectively engage in this work, it is critical for administrators to show visible support.

Participate in the JOE Discussion Forum on “We (All) Need to Talk About Race: Building Extension’s Capacity for Dialogue and Action

  • Decision-Making Tree for Prioritizing Racial Equity in Resource Allocation
    v58-5tt2
    Bain, Jamie; Harden, Noelle; Heim, Stephanie
    Within University of Minnesota Extension’s health and nutrition program area, we created and are using a decision-making tree to prioritize our work with communities of color through equitable decision-making practices. The tool is currently used to help grant administrators winnow down a pool of applicants for a participatory grant-making program called the Action Learning Seed Fund. In this article, we draw on our experiences with creating and using the tool to explore its potential application for advancing equitable decision making in other areas of Extension work.
  • Tips for Using Photovoice in Evaluation of Extension Programs
    v58-5tt7
    Keller, Kimberly J. M.; Mott, Rebecca
    Photovoice is a technique in which a facilitator guides a participant to produce a photograph and accompanying caption that reflects the participant’s unique views regarding a topic. The photovoice process is designed to be used with a wide range of audiences. This article describes ways Extension educators can incorporate photovoice into the evaluation of Extension programs and identifies issues they should consider when doing so.

Washington Post

Hardest hit are Black, Hispanic, low-income students and children with disabilities.

By Laura Meckler and Hannah Natanson

  • Save the Date: No Kid Hungry’s Virtual Rural Child Hunger Summit 
    March 23-24, 2021

The Summit will occur as a virtual event, held over Zoom for two days on March 23-24, 2021. The goals of the 2021 Rural Child Hunger Summit are to highlight the disparities driving child hunger in rural communities, identify promising practices and policy levers that amplify the impact of existing nutrition assistance programs and/or reduce the incidence of rural child hunger, and celebrate innovations that are community-based, user-centered and evidence-informed  

Stay tuned for future updates on how to register for this free event. In the meantime, you can learn more about past Summits by visiting our website.

  • Awards and Grant Opportunities

SAMHSA’s Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS) is accepting applications for fiscal year 2021 Statewide Family Network grant program to more effectively respond to the needs of children, youth, and young adults with serious emotional disturbances (SED) and their families.  Closing date: Jan. 4, 2021.

Funding for programs designed to strengthen communities and solve local problems, including those found in rural and underserved areas. Funding priorities include prescription drug and opioid abuse, education, and rural intermediary organizations. Closing date:  Jan 6, 2021.

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food and Nutrition Service grants to plan, establish, and/or sustain a Farm to School program that improves access to local foods in schools. Closing date: Jan. 8, 2021.

Grants to small communities to assist in the renovation of an historic or traditional central business district, or “Main Street” area, by replacing unused, obsolete, commercial space in buildings with affordable housing units. Closing Date: Jan. 19, 2021.

  • Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities
    The Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program makes federal funds available by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to states, U.S territories, Indian tribal governments, and local communities for pre-disaster mitigation activities. Closing date: Jan 29, 2020.