With the ominous changes to federal funding and policy, maybe you have been asking the same questions we have.
- How do we figure out which headlines to pay attention to?
- Of all the potential changes to federal funding and/or health and social service programs, which are most likely?
- When funding or programming is cut, what happens next?
- What can we learn from recent past times of austerity that can help us navigate these moments?
- Where is the opportunity in the chaos?
Most of all: what is temporary and what might be irreversible?
Watch on-demand!
Resources
New York Times Administration Action Tracker
Myth v. Reality Targeting Nonprofits
Impact of federal funding on local budgets articles
- https://www.communitysolutions.com/resources/armstrong-thompson-mapping-the-money-funding-ohios-health-and-human-services
- https://www.communitysolutions.com/resources/federal-funding-by-ohio-congressional-district
- https://www.communitysolutions.com/resources/the-role-of-federal-funding-in-county-budgets
Trusted Resources and Partners
- https://www.communitysolutions.com/resources/5-resources-we-trust
- https://www.councilofnonprofits.org/
- https://www.chn.org/
Get involved with your human services chamber!
- Cuyahoga County: https://www.communitysolutions.com/chamber
- Franklin County: https://www.humanservicechamber.org/
- Hamilton County: https://humanserviceschamber.org/
Meet the Speaker

Emily Campbell serves as the President and Chief Executive Officer for The Center for Community Solutions, a nonpartisan nonprofit policy and research think tank focused on health, social, and economic conditions. Campbell previously worked for a U.S. Congressman, and she has consulted with numerous nonprofits, foundations, and government agencies to provide data and public policy decision support. Her work on poverty has appeared in every major newspaper in Ohio and she has been interviewed by a wide variety of media outlets including The Economist, The New York Times, ESPN.com, MSNBC, and NPR. She serves on the Board of United Way of Greater Cleveland, the steering committee of First Year Cleveland, and several other Boards and committees in Cleveland and beyond. She was recently named one of Cleveland’s “Power 150” and a Woman of Note by Crain’s Cleveland Business. Campbell holds a Bachelor of Arts in Economics and a Master of Arts in Political Science from Case Western Reserve University.