Early Childhood Hub chosen to create blueprint for improving outcomes for children
If anything were possible, what would it take to ensure that every child, family, and community has an equitable opportunity to succeed? What might it look like to have a system of support that doesn’t need to be “navigated”?
These are a few key questions United Way’s Early Childhood Hub of Lane County is hoping to propose answers to, through a partnership with Oregon Health and Education Collaborative (OHEC)’s new Upstream Initiative.
As a strong convener of local early childhood work locally, the Early Childhood Hub of Lane County was selected as one of five organizations from across the state to design a Child Success Models blueprint, part of OHEC’s Upstream Initiative. The blueprints will propose ways of improving the success of children in the first 1000 days of life – from conception to about age two. Research and data strongly demonstrate that these early years are a key time in which communities can make the most impact to influence lasting change.
Each organization chosen will design their own local model; later this summer, each community’s model will be integrated to inform policy recommendations for the 2025 legislature, to scale a blueprint that can be replicated statewide.
Gov. John Kitzhaber, chair of the OHEC board, visited the Early Childhood Hub on January 12, 2024 with OHEC’s Executive Director Chelsea King to talk with local early learning and healthcare providers involved in this effort.
creating a local blueprint
Over the next eight months, the Early Childhood Hub of Lane County will work directly with local partners and community members to create a blueprint for a Child Success Model specific to Lane County.
The blueprint will ensure services, supports, interventions, and protective factors reach each child during the first 1000 days of life, prepare children and families to successfully enter the education system, and then provide community support to ensure educational and health needs are met. Ideally, these efforts would be coordinated through a community-based entity that can reach far upstream, identify the factors that threaten the success of a child, and prevent them before they begin.
“Instead of trying to help folks navigate the current system,” proposed Gov. Kitzhaber, “step back and try to imagine a system that doesn’t have to be navigated because it’s intentionally built and designed to address a suite of challenges and barriers that are keeping them from better well-being and being successful.”
The other four Design Pilots are the Blue Mountain Early Learning Hub, the Marion & Polk Early Learning Hub, Yamhill Community Care and KairosPDX in Multnomah County. Each will receive $65,000 grant to support their work.
Healthcare providers, educators, and those serving families, as well as families themselves, are invited to weigh in and help shape on this community blueprint. For more information, contact Michelle Sheng-Palmisano, Co-Director of the Early Childhood Hub, at msheng@unitedwaylane.org.
For more information about the Oregon Health and Education Collaborative or the First 1000 Days Upstream Initiative, visit oregoncollaborative.org.