This initiative is a project of the National Human Services Assembly and is generously funded by The Kresge Foundation and Annie E. Casey Foundation.
Leveraging Coalitions' Influence for Community-Wide Reframing
In the last newsletter, we looked at individual human service organizations in Taking Practical Steps to Sustainable Implementation. Expanding on that theme, we consider how organizations can work in coalitions to institutionalize the Building Well-Being Narrative throughout their communities.
Human service organizations already understand and capitalize on the power and efficiencies of coalitions for advocacy objectives. Some are also achieving the benefits of formal collaboration on reframing initiatives by setting up task forces or committees to help coalitions plan for and implement reframing, supplementing their own individual organization efforts. There are a number of advantages to membership or partner organizations establishing reframing as a priority, including more consistent and stronger messaging across the sector to clearly demonstrate the impact human services have improving community well-being by fulfilling human potential.
Modeling Reframing Throughout Community Coalitions
Two National Reframing Initiative partners in Illinois and Austin in particular have invested their time and efforts to realize the value in developing a centralized reframing effort:
Illinois Partners for Human Service, a coalition of over 800 organizations across the state, and a reframing pioneer, formed a Reframing Committee as one piece of its broader reframing strategy. The committee is comprised of human service leaders from several communities to accelerate the sector’s adoption of reframing. Together, they have mapped out a strategy for mobilization and implementationwhile also reframing their own organizations’ communicationsthat includes:
  • Organizing and leading workshops and presentations to engage partners in reframing,
  • Communicating the building well-being narrative to policymakers and the public, as highlighted in this recent news article,
  • Developing sample communications, such as talking points for their board of directors on human services priorities for an advocacy day at the state’s capitol, and
  • Integrating reframing messages in public-facing communications, including the organization’s website (e.g., potential and well-being).
One Voice Central Texas, a coalition of the leadership of over one hundred nonprofit health and human service organizations, established a Reframing Leadership Task Force of member human service leaders that is a model for embedding reframing in membership coalitions. As with Illinois Partners, One Voice Task Force members are leading efforts to reframe their individual organization's communications, in addition to successful coalition-wide strategies such as:
  • Convening monthly meetings for trainings and hands-on learning to identify reframing opportunities and address common implementation challenges,
  • Conducting outreach and organizing reframing workshops and presentations to raise awareness among the broader Austin human services community, and
  • Reframing One Voice communications, such as advocacy principle statements, talking points, and public policy collateral, on key Austin human service priorities.
Starting the Reframing Process with Your Coalitions
If your organization is part of a local or state human service coalition or membership organization, consider incorporating reframing as a communications priority among the broader group. Of course buy-in among the leadership and membership is critical (and will be the subject of an upcoming newsletter). Practical considerations and recommendations, based on Illinois and Austin’s experiences as well as others, to ensure the coalition’s reframing process and outcomes are institutionalized include:
  • Establish a standing committee or task force of a representative and diverse cross-section of organizations for accountability
  • Designate a committee or task force point person to drive progress
  • Set a regular meeting schedule to identify and achieve consensus on objectives, priorities, desired outcomes, assignments and next steps
  • Engage decision-makers and influencers to shepherd decisions throughout the coalition
  • Determine if the initiative is focused on the coalition and its communications, or also includes implementation at the individual member-level
  • Conduct outreach and education for member organizations not on the task force/committee to explain reframing and its benefits
  • Identify if the initiative focus is one issue area (e.g., immigration) or across the human services sector
  • Create easy to download tools and resources on a shared platform
  • Track how often and how tools are used
  • Create a feedback loop that actively solicits member input
  • Report out progress and outcomes
As always, please email Bridget Gavaghan, Director of the National Reframing Initiative, with any questions and/or feedback, including any reframing strategies your organization has identified as best practices, so that we can share resources with your network peers.
Nate Balis, director of the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Juvenile Justice Strategy Group, authored a February 28, 2018 Juvenile Justice Information Exchange column, “What Law Enforcement, Advocates Need to Know About Protecting Young Immigrants,” that provides updated practice recommendations for the field to support noncitizen youth in the juvenile justice system. Balis also offers a helpful example of how to frame the conversation about federal immigration enforcement policy impacting these youth who face separation from their families, with a focus on potential, stability and community. As Balis observes, “We have a unique opportunity to support noncitizen youth in the juvenile justice system, rather than expose them to setbacks that compromise their ability to reach their full potential.”
We have a robust set of free tools to better equip you integrating this new narrative into your communications strategies.
Contact Us
For more information on how your organization can join the reframing mobilization, or for any questions about this newsletter or the online tools or website information, please contact Bridget Gavaghan at bgavaghan@nassembly.org.

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