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Early Childhood Alliance Onondaga: A Master Class in Cross-Sector Coalition Building

Early Childhood Alliance

When the Onondaga Citizens League saw that only 9% of the students in the Syracuse City School District were reading on grade level, members of this Central New York citizens鈥 group knew they had work to do. Every year, the nonprofit, non-partisan group conducted studies to shine a light on issues of importance to the community. In 2013, the group selected early childhood as its topic, but few were prepared for the not-so-great news the study ultimately revealed.

When the report came in showing single-digit reading scores in Onondaga County鈥檚 largest school district and only slightly better (26%) for the county itself, the statistics served as a call to action for what could be considered a master class in cross-sector coalition building.

鈥淲hen we realized that fewer than one in 10 children in our community鈥檚 largest school district were reading at grade level by third grade, it served as an alarm bell that grabbed the community鈥檚 attention,鈥 says Laurie Black, an OCL board member at the time and the study鈥檚 co-chair. 鈥淲e recognized that we couldn鈥檛 wait for state and federal government to bring in the resources to make changes, and we didn鈥檛 want to be a community that waited for someone else to act.鈥

Ensuring that children are kindergarten-ready is the compassionate thing to do, Black says, but the OCL realized it鈥檚 also the smart thing to do. 鈥淭he scientific evidence could not be clearer,鈥 she says. 鈥淐hildren who enter school unprepared are more likely to underachieve, drop out of school and need public assistance, and it鈥檚 hard for school systems to make up that deficit when children get in school. It really is this simple: We can focus on early learning now, or we can address the consequences later.鈥

In partnership with Catholic Charities of Onondaga County, the ECA launched Parent-Child + in 2018 to fill a gap in home visiting for children 18 months to 4 years of age. The goal is that children in this program will enter school ready to learn. Photo courtesy of the Early Childhood Alliance

The consequences 鈥 and rewards 鈥 can be stunning. Nobel prize-winning economist estimated in a report that investing in high-quality programs in a child鈥檚 early years can substantially reduce remedial education and criminal justice system costs. Heckman and his colleagues have on investment for high-quality, birth-to-5 early education, affecting health, crime, future earning power, IQ and even an increase in mother鈥檚 income after returning to work, if she has access to good child care.

The challenge with addressing the lack of such high-quality resources for children zero to 5 is that the early childhood landscape in this country 鈥 in some local jurisdictions more than others 鈥 is a patchwork of solutions, funding sources, regulatory mandates and good intentions that often fail to produce solid results. Some might call the situation chaotic.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a struggle all over this country to get children ready to learn,鈥 Black says. 鈥淭he issue is complicated and the system is fragmented, so simplistic solutions will never work. Looking at other communities, we saw the only approach that would really work was a cross-sector coalition to address the challenge on multiple fronts.鈥

Building a Coalition

Based on the recommendations of OCL鈥檚 study, (ECA) launched in January 2015. Comprising municipal, philanthropic, business, academic and nonprofit leaders, the coalition鈥檚 membership reads like a Who鈥檚 Who of Onondaga County鈥檚 educational, medical, legal, business and philanthropic organizations, all aligned on the mission of 鈥淐reating a community where all children are healthy, thriving and ready to succeed in school.鈥 The ECA is now financially supported by the Allyn Foundation, Health Foundation of Western & Central New York, Community Foundation of CNY, Onandaga County, the United Way of CNY and other funders from the community.

The Early Childhood Alliance Onondaga’s theory of change. (Early Childhood Alliance)

Members spent the first year reviewing the OCL findings and developing a vision for strategies focused on three key areas: health, early learning and strong families. By November 2015, members formed committees to focus on those key areas: child care, developmental screening, home visiting, trauma, safe babies, and the breadth and depth of the committees鈥 themes is both a testament to the community鈥檚 commitment to solutions and the seriousness with members approached OCL鈥檚 analysis and recommendations.

鈥淭ypically, these committees identify the gaps are in our community, then identify what evidence-based programs exist to fill those gaps,鈥 Black says. 鈥淭hen, the alliance seeks funding.鈥

One of the ECA鈥檚 earliest strategies was the 鈥淭alking is Teaching: Talk, Read, Sing鈥 campaign aimed at improving school readiness by spreading the word that parents are their child鈥檚 first and most important teacher. The program reminds parents that learning begins at birth and provides tools to strengthen their babies鈥 start in life. It is modeled on the national initiative by the same name developed by .

Another strategy has been to push for significant investments in child care. About 66% of parents in the Onondaga community are in the workforce and rely on child care. The coalition created a pilot program to raise pay in the community鈥檚 child care centers to be more closely aligned with teacher pay in the school districts. Increased pay will stabilize staffing in a high-turnover sector. Additionally, staff are trained to use evidence-based assessment tools and curricula to create quality child care for its youngest children. This improves the quality of child care, and provides existing workers with opportunities to expand skills and knowledge, thereby expanding their professional choices.

鈥淭he business community has been supportive of the conversation around child care because employers understand that in a tight labor market, they are impacted by the lack of affordable child care in our community.鈥 A found, 鈥淧roductivity problems cause employers to lose $12.7 billion annually due to child care challenges faced by their workforce.鈥

Another strategy 鈥 perhaps unique among early-learning alliances 鈥 is a committees鈥 focus on providing comprehensive support for pregnant women and mothers, including preventing unplanned pregnancies and working to provide resources to individuals so they can determine when and if they want to have a child.

鈥淥ur data showed that rates of unintended pregnancies were high for the state,鈥 Black says. 鈥淭he availability of contraceptives and good contraceptive information are important parts of the puzzle. We鈥檙e thrilled that The Allyn Family Foundation has led the charge on this one. 鈥淣ot all early childhood systems start pre-prenatal,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut we keep it in our frame because we think it鈥檚 the beginning of the conversation.

Although creating lasting, systemic change is expensive, doing nothing is far more costly, Black says. The local philanthropic community has stepped up in providing seed money for initiatives. But longer-term, programs need to be sustained by public money. In this regard, she says, Onondaga County has been a significant partner.

Approximately 5,200 babies are born each year in Onondaga County and 26,000 children between the ages birth to 5 reside in the county. The Early Learning Coalition鈥檚 goal is to reach 100% of families so they know that learning begins at birth and that they should read to their children every day. (Early Childhood Alliance)

鈥淲e pitched our county executive with a $1.5 million increase to the 2020 budget to fund initiatives like the Talking is Teaching campaign, the Help Me Grow initiative (physician outreach and data collection) and three new pilots to address quality child care and pay. The crux of the matter with early learning is the chronic under-investment in children zero to five. It鈥檚 going to cost some dollars to provide all children with a high-quality start in life.鈥

The latest data for 2018-2019 shows 22% of students in Syracuse and 40% in Onondaga County reading on grade level 鈥 a great improvement, Black says, but still with much room to grow. The county legislature has approved County Executive Ryan McMahon鈥檚 $1.5 million request for new funding support for early childhood, she says. In 2020 the coalition will have a significant investment from Onondaga County to keep moving forward with the strategies the ECA has mapped out for a community where children thrive and are ready to learn.

Pitfalls & Pointers

Each local community is individual, Laurie Black says, so there鈥檚 no one-size-fits-all approach to successful coalition building.

  • Be strategic, data-driven and make the best use of limited resources.
  • Identify key strategic people and the best champions of your message. Who is well-regarded? Who is well-respected? Who will work best in the trenches? Who鈥檚 willing to put in the time to create the bigger coalition?
  • Collect data. Feeling strongly about early learning is fine but data is powerful. 鈥淗aving powerful data identifies the scope of the problem. The second person you should hire is a data specialist 鈥 someone who can examine current data and help analyze it.鈥
  • Learn from other other communities. 鈥淚t was really helpful for us to have peer communities in New York State that were ahead of us, and also to see what other states and communities have been doing for years.鈥
  • Create a mix of long-term strategies and short-term projects. Be inclusive for different interests and capacity for involvement to provide levels of activity for everyone, while focusing on the more difficult, perhaps more costly, strategies.
  • Tread lightly with your business council; be mindful of their time and expertise. For example, don鈥檛 ask a busy executive to serve on a committee that will be grinding away for three years for results (sometimes, that鈥檚 what it takes).
  • Education is a huge part of the work. Help your community understand the issues, and how much they matter to individuals, to families, to society. As the well-being of children is a universal message, create a variety of ways to educate throughout your community.
  • Manage expectations. Remind people that one strategy alone cannot address all needs. Strike a balance between what needs to be done, what can be done and what is being done.
  • Bite your tongue and keep your eyes on the prize. Coalitions require patience and diplomacy.
  • Celebrate the small victories! Share every success with your network.

This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 蜜桃影视. Learn more here.

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