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Healthy Communities Initiative: Grantee Orientation/Leadership Meeting April 17 – 19, 2013.

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Presentation on theme: "Healthy Communities Initiative: Grantee Orientation/Leadership Meeting April 17 – 19, 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Healthy Communities Initiative: Grantee Orientation/Leadership Meeting April 17 – 19, 2013

2 Mission & Purposes Healthy Communities Initiative Mission: To promote policy, systems and environmental changes that support healthy eating and active living. Purposes of the Orientation: To orient community partners to the Healthy Communities Initiative To establish the policy focus of the Healthy Communities Initiative To ground participants in leadership competencies To connect participants to state and national resources

3 Who is here today?  Healthy Communities Initiative Leadership Teams  Kansas Health Foundation  Technical Assistance Team: Center for Community Support & Research Healthy Kids Challenge Public Health Law Center  Healthy Communities Initiative Kansas Advisory Committee

4 HCI Implementation Grant Kansas Health Foundation will provide:  Funding Up to $25,000 per year over three years contingent upon a local cash match of $.50 on the dollar or $12,500 each year. Cash Match FAQ  Significant technical assistance To implement the community change framework to create an environment that supports the policy priority identified during the planning grant year.

5 HCI Action Plan  Healthy Communities Initiative Team  HCI Leadership Teams  Kansas Health Foundation  Technical Assistance Providers: Center for Community Support & Research Healthy Kids Challenge Public Health Law Center

6 HCI Action Plan  Community Planning Phase  One-year planning process  Identify one policy priority by September 2013  Develop implementation proposal to advance policy priority  Community Implementation Phase  Funding and technical assistance to implement community change framework to create an environment that supports the policy priority

7 Policy Priorities  Healthy Eating Food Policy Councils Healthy foods in public service venues Healthy Concessions  Active Living Safe Routes to School Complete Streets Active Transportation

8 Community Change Framework Environment that Supports Community Health Policies Community Mobilization Community Education Advocacy with Organizational Decision Makers Educating Government Policymakers

9 Measuring Progress The extent to which communities are implementing activities highlighted in grant proposals and help identify:  Barriers getting in the way of implementation.  Why some communities are making more progress than others.  Environmental/contextual factors contributing and/or detracting from progress.

10 Measuring Progress The extent to which communities have been able to mobilize others around their policy priorities:  Whether there has been an increase in the number of supporters for the policy priority within the community.  The extent to which communities have been able to target and/or develop quality champions to move the work forward.  How the overall capacity of the coalition, partnership or leadership team is evolving over time.

11 Measuring Progress The extent to which public opinion is supportive of the issue:  Whether there has been an overall increase in community awareness around the issue.  Whether there has been an increase in the number and quality of earned media hits or other evidence of public discussion of the issue.  Whether individuals with influence in the community (i.e., policy makers and decision-makers) are aware of the policy priority.

12 Measuring Progress Data required from HCI Leadership Teams:  Semi-monthly tracking forms – Gauge how communities are progressing toward policy goals in terms of activities completed.  Leadership Team Assessment – Tool to track progress on the HCI Leadership Team development over time.  Annual Context Mapping – Tool that provides a better understanding of the different individuals and organizations each coalition, partnership or leadership team plans to target during each year of implementation and potential barriers that may hinder progress.

13 HCI Round 2 Timeline April 1, 2013 – March 31, 2014: Planning Grants Ongoing Technical Assistance September 1, 2013 -- Identify policy priority October 2 – 4, 2013 -- HCI convening, Wichita, KS April 1, 2014 – Grant status reports due May 1, 2014 – KHF invites implementation grants (due June 15 th ) August 1, 2014 – Implementation grant awards announced September 1, 2014 – August 31, 2017: Implementation grant period Ongoing technical assistance

14 HCI SharePoint Site https://www.myctb.org/wst/hci

15 Allen County: Claudia Hohnbaum & Ron Alexander Cheyenne/Rawlins counties: Vickie James & Kevin Bomhoff Franklin County: Claudia Hohnbaum & Ron Alexander Harvey County: Claudia Hohnbaum & Amy Delamaide Reno County: Claudia Hohnbaum & Scott Wituk Saline County: Vickie James & Joyce McEwan Crane Seward County: Vickie James & Amy Delamaide Stafford County: Claudia Hohnbaum & Joyce McEwan Crane PHLC: Mary Marrow, Julie Ralson Aoki, & Natasha Frost Technical Assistance Contacts

16 Timeline Technical Assistance Contacts Webinars & Networking HCI SharePoint Evaluation Next Steps


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