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Fund Public Health

Fund Public Health

The Fund Public Health campaign demands a public health system capable of meeting our public health needs and eliminating health inequities.

Having well-funded and robustly staffed health departments is critical to advancing health equity and public health. For too long, elected officials have underfunded and under-staffed our health departments, leaving them ill-prepared for pandemics, heat waves, and the day-to-day public health problems we face. This must change.

The Fund Public Health campaign works to advance the following priorities:

  • $25 million more in the FY2025 City of Chicago Corporate Fund budget for the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH).
  • $23 millions more in the FY2025 Cook County Corporate Fund budget for the Cook County Department of Public Health (CCDPH).
  • No cuts to health department budgets.
  • Both City and County officials must fix the HR problems and slow hiring processes that plague both CDPH and CCDPH
  • New good public health jobs that are filled by people who are from the communities served and focused on public health improvement and advancing health equity

Our two letters to local officials have now had 80+ organizations signed on.

Read our letter to Chicago officials
Read our letter to Cook County officials

Health departments need increased funding to hire staff to advance health equity and both protect and promote public health. As examples, funds could be used to hire community health workers, sanitarians, communicable disease case investigators, lead risk assessors, community health assessment and planning, emergency preparedness, nurse home visiting, harm reduction to respond to opioids, and public health responses to violence.

No matter what issue you care about—maternal and child health, opioids, violence, heart disease, asthma, diabetes, lead poisoning, cancer, or any other—health departments work on most every public health issue. But they can only take them on appropriately if they have the funds and staff to do so.

The stakes are high. As one example of a health inequity that requires action, there is an 11-year life expectancy health inequity between Black Chicagoans and others. Health inequities, by definition, are unfair, unjust, and remediable. But the remedies require, in part, public health staff to work on the various interventions to support public health.

 

This issue in the media:

For more information, contact: Wesley Epplin, Policy Director, wepplin@hmprg.org

Campaign Supporters

Alphabetical list of organizations that have signed on to our letters to Chicago and Cook County officials:
  1. Health & Medicine Policy Research Group
  2. Access Living
  3. AFGE Local 704
  4. AIDS Foundation Chicago
  5. Alternatives Youth
  6. ASI
  7. Black Researchers Collective
  8. Black Treatment Advocates Network
  9. Brighton Park Neighborhood Council
  10. Chicago Center for Health and Environment
  11. Chicago Family Doulas, LLC
  12. Chicago Housing Justice Coalition
  13. Chicago Jobs Council
  14. Chicago Survivors
  15. Chicago United for Equity
  16. Chicago Volunteer Doulas
  17. Chicago Women Take Action
  18. Chicago Women’s AIDS Project
  19. Chicago Workers Collaborative
  20. Chicagoland Healthcare Workforce Collaborative
  21. Children’s Best Interest Project
  22. Chinese American Service League
  23. Collaborative for Community Wellness
  24. Collaborative for Health Equity Cook County
  25. Community Organizing and Family Issues
  26. Complete Communications, Inc.
  27. Cornerstone Community Outreach
  28. Cook County College Teachers Union
  29. Deborah’s Place
  30. DePaul University Master of Public Health Program
  31. Employment & Employer Services
  32. Equity in Health Advisors Network
  33. EverThrive Illinois
  34. Every Block a Village Community Stakeholders
  35. Greater Auburn Gresham Development Corporation
  36. Health in the Arts Program, UIC School of Public Health
  37. HRDI Human Resources Development Institute
  38. Illinois Chapter, American Academy of Pediatrics
  39. Illinois Disability Housing Justice
  40. Illinois Psychiatric Society
  41. Illinois Public Health Association
  42. Illinois Public Health Institute

43. Increase The Peace Chicago
44. Institute of Medicine of Chicago
45. Israel’s Gifts of Hope
46. Jewish Council on Urban Affairs
47. Kaizen Health
48. Kindu 4 Humanity
49. Lawrence Hall Youth Services
50. Legal Council for Health Justice
51. Mental Health America of Illinois
52. Metropolitan Asian Family Services
53. Metropolitan Tenants Organization
54. Michael Reese Health Trust
55. Midwest Asian Health Association
56. NAMI Chicago
57. NAMI Illinois
58. NAMI South Suburbs of Chicago
59. National Association of Social Workers – Illinois Chapter
60. Nehemiah Trinity Rising
61. Northside Action for Justice
62. Northwest Center
63. ONE Northside
64. Open Communities
65. Padres Angeles community organización LV
66. People’s Response Network
67. Phalanx Family Services
68. PODER
69. POWER-PAC IL
70. scaleLIT
71. Shriver Center on Poverty Law
72. Sinai Urban Health Institute
73. Sokana Collective Birth Justice Doula Agency and Training Academy
74. Southside Together Organizing for Power
75. Southwest Organizing Project
76. Start Early
77. The HAP Foundation
78. The Resurrection Project
79. The Southwest Collective
80. Thresholds
81. Trilogy Inc
82. Ujimaa Medics
83. Universidad Popular
84. University of Chicago Department of Psychiatry
85. University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health
86. West Suburban Midwife Associates, Ltd

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