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Community engagement at CareOregon

Community engagement is the heartbeat of CareOregon. We believe in building bridges between healthcare services and the people who need them most. Through active collaboration with community partners, sponsorships, volunteer programs and more, we strive to empower individuals and families to take charge of their health and their lives. Together, we’re creating a healthier community, one connection at a time. Join us in making a difference! 

Community Impact Stories

CareOregon invests $295,000 in metro area non-profits to support mental health and other social health needs

Nov 10, 2023, 01:30 AM
Queer & Trans Pacific Islanders Banner

CareOregon awarded $295,000 in community grants to 13 nonprofit organizations across the Portland metropolitan region that fill critical gaps in social health, including mental health, housing, food access, climate and utilities support and more.    

“Good health is about so much more than what happens in the four walls of a doctor’s office,” said Shawn DeCarlo, CareOregon Director of Community Impact. “We are proud to partner with incredible nonprofits working to address social needs in our community. These partnerships are vital to helping our members get and stay on the path to health.”

Among the grants awarded, CareOregon is investing $25,000 in Utopia PDX to provide culturally specific mental health support to queer and trans Pacific Islander youth.

UTOPIA Portland is a nonprofit organization run by and for queer and trans Pacific Islanders (QTPIs) in the Portland and Vancouver areas. It offers community organizing, cultural connection, youth programming, mental health resources, among others.

The grant will help develop and implement the QTPI Youth Mental Health Project, a comprehensive mental health program that addresses the needs of QTPI students in Portland schools. The program coordinator will work with school staff and students to create a safe and inclusive environment where students feel comfortable discussing mental health concerns. The coordinator will also develop and facilitate training sessions for school staff to help them recognize the mental health needs of QTPI students and respond effectively.

The QTPI Youth Mental Health Project is part of UTOPIA PDX’s VOYAGERS programming founded for youth mentorship. VOYAGERS - Voices of Youth Advancement, Growth, Empowerment, Resiliency, and Success, aims to support Pacific Islander youth navigate through culture, tradition, identity and trauma.

“Living in diaspora is challenging for many of us, but layer on intersections of queerness, disability, and lack of accessibility—it becomes near impossible for our queer/trans Pacific Islander (QTPI) youth to thrive,” said Kāme'o Kahawai, UTOPIA PDX Executive Director.

“We created this program in response to community needs and requests for sacred spaces that heal and guide. This program is crucial for our QTPI youth as there are very limited resources and programs that are culturally rooted in Pasifika Tradition, and led by fellow QTPI who have similar lived experiences which create opportunities for reciprocity in sharing, learning, growing and healing."

Grant recipients include:

Housing

  • Elevate Oregon ($25,000): Funds will enable organizational staff to distribute Direct Client Assistance in rental assistance for students.

  • Greater New Hope Charities ($25,000): Funds will go toward providing housing wraparound support services to houseless people or those at risk of houselessness, as well as assistance in obtaining permanent affordable housing.

  • Hacienda CDC ($25,000): The grant will be used to fund a half-time community organizer who will build social services partnerships at two new affordable housing developments in Oregon City and Beaverton.

  • Operation Nightwatch – Portland ($10,000): Funding will help cover part of the costs of the Mental Health Program, which supports unhoused and vulnerable community members that may not receive mental health services otherwise.

Food Access

  • Our Streets PDX ($30,000): Funding will support access to food through their meal program. Our Streets is on track to prepare over 1,000 meals a day.

  • The Community for Positive Aging (CfPA) ($25,000): Funds will help support low-income seniors and older adults in Multnomah County through the organization’s Asian Food Pantry, food security programs and community health work.

  • United Congolese Community Organization ($20,000): Funding will support access to culturally specific and healthy foods for the Congolese community through food assistance programming.

Climate and Utilities Supports

  • Community Action Organization ($60,000): Funding will support the Crisis Intervention Team who provides outreach and support to those most in need of services, including utility assistance.

  • SouthWest Somali Community Of Oregon ($10,000): Funding will help around 60 Somali American and refugee families obtain utility assistance.

Other Social Supports

  • We Belong PDX ($20,000): The grant will help fund a new location (Hope Center) to expand and deepen program strategies to promote mental wellness in order to combat depression and anxiety in youth.

  • UTOPIA Portland ($25,000): Funds will help provide culturally specific mental health support to queer and trans Pacific Islander (QTPI) youth through the QTPI Youth Mental Health Project.

  • Boost Oregon ($10,000): Funds will be used to pay a portion of staff salaries and benefits for executing the Training THWs in Motivational Interviewing to Increase Vaccine Confidence project, as well as office supplies, printing, travel, meeting expenses and shipping required for training THWs and supplying them with resources to use with clients.

 

 






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Community Impact Stories

CareOregon invests $295,000 in metro area non-profits to support mental health and other social health needs

Nov 10, 2023, 01:30 AM
Queer & Trans Pacific Islanders Banner

CareOregon awarded $295,000 in community grants to 13 nonprofit organizations across the Portland metropolitan region that fill critical gaps in social health, including mental health, housing, food access, climate and utilities support and more.    

“Good health is about so much more than what happens in the four walls of a doctor’s office,” said Shawn DeCarlo, CareOregon Director of Community Impact. “We are proud to partner with incredible nonprofits working to address social needs in our community. These partnerships are vital to helping our members get and stay on the path to health.”

Among the grants awarded, CareOregon is investing $25,000 in Utopia PDX to provide culturally specific mental health support to queer and trans Pacific Islander youth.

UTOPIA Portland is a nonprofit organization run by and for queer and trans Pacific Islanders (QTPIs) in the Portland and Vancouver areas. It offers community organizing, cultural connection, youth programming, mental health resources, among others.

The grant will help develop and implement the QTPI Youth Mental Health Project, a comprehensive mental health program that addresses the needs of QTPI students in Portland schools. The program coordinator will work with school staff and students to create a safe and inclusive environment where students feel comfortable discussing mental health concerns. The coordinator will also develop and facilitate training sessions for school staff to help them recognize the mental health needs of QTPI students and respond effectively.

The QTPI Youth Mental Health Project is part of UTOPIA PDX’s VOYAGERS programming founded for youth mentorship. VOYAGERS - Voices of Youth Advancement, Growth, Empowerment, Resiliency, and Success, aims to support Pacific Islander youth navigate through culture, tradition, identity and trauma.

“Living in diaspora is challenging for many of us, but layer on intersections of queerness, disability, and lack of accessibility—it becomes near impossible for our queer/trans Pacific Islander (QTPI) youth to thrive,” said Kāme'o Kahawai, UTOPIA PDX Executive Director.

“We created this program in response to community needs and requests for sacred spaces that heal and guide. This program is crucial for our QTPI youth as there are very limited resources and programs that are culturally rooted in Pasifika Tradition, and led by fellow QTPI who have similar lived experiences which create opportunities for reciprocity in sharing, learning, growing and healing."

Grant recipients include:

Housing

  • Elevate Oregon ($25,000): Funds will enable organizational staff to distribute Direct Client Assistance in rental assistance for students.

  • Greater New Hope Charities ($25,000): Funds will go toward providing housing wraparound support services to houseless people or those at risk of houselessness, as well as assistance in obtaining permanent affordable housing.

  • Hacienda CDC ($25,000): The grant will be used to fund a half-time community organizer who will build social services partnerships at two new affordable housing developments in Oregon City and Beaverton.

  • Operation Nightwatch – Portland ($10,000): Funding will help cover part of the costs of the Mental Health Program, which supports unhoused and vulnerable community members that may not receive mental health services otherwise.

Food Access

  • Our Streets PDX ($30,000): Funding will support access to food through their meal program. Our Streets is on track to prepare over 1,000 meals a day.

  • The Community for Positive Aging (CfPA) ($25,000): Funds will help support low-income seniors and older adults in Multnomah County through the organization’s Asian Food Pantry, food security programs and community health work.

  • United Congolese Community Organization ($20,000): Funding will support access to culturally specific and healthy foods for the Congolese community through food assistance programming.

Climate and Utilities Supports

  • Community Action Organization ($60,000): Funding will support the Crisis Intervention Team who provides outreach and support to those most in need of services, including utility assistance.

  • SouthWest Somali Community Of Oregon ($10,000): Funding will help around 60 Somali American and refugee families obtain utility assistance.

Other Social Supports

  • We Belong PDX ($20,000): The grant will help fund a new location (Hope Center) to expand and deepen program strategies to promote mental wellness in order to combat depression and anxiety in youth.

  • UTOPIA Portland ($25,000): Funds will help provide culturally specific mental health support to queer and trans Pacific Islander (QTPI) youth through the QTPI Youth Mental Health Project.

  • Boost Oregon ($10,000): Funds will be used to pay a portion of staff salaries and benefits for executing the Training THWs in Motivational Interviewing to Increase Vaccine Confidence project, as well as office supplies, printing, travel, meeting expenses and shipping required for training THWs and supplying them with resources to use with clients.

 

 






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