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What is 2-1-1?
[CLICK TO VIEW THE 211 VIDEO]
2-1-1 is an easy to remember telephone number that, where available, connects people with important community services and volunteer opportunities, and is being spearheaded by United Ways and Information and Referral Centers in states and local communities. United Way of America (UWA) and the Alliance for Information and Referral Systems (AIRS) strongly support federal funding so that every American has access to this essential service.
Every hour of every day, someone in the United States needs essential services - from finding an after-school program to securing adequate care for a child or an aging parent. Faced with a dramatic increase in the number of agencies and help-lines, people often don't know where to turn. In many cases, people end up going without these necessary services because they do not know where to start. 2-1-1 helps people find and give help.
Is 2-1-1 in Pennsylvania?
No, it's not...
As of June 2007 , 2-1-1 is serving approximately 215 million Americans - over 72% of the US population; Active 2-1-1 systems cover all or part of 43 states (including 19 states with 100% coverage) plus Washington, DC and Puerto Rico can call 2-1-1 to get safety and evacuation information, checkout rumors, or just find ways to help out. Rarely has such a simple innovation in serving people shown such remarkable promise. 2-1-1 is a good idea whose time in Pennsylvania has come. Please call your elected officials to voice your support of 2-1-1.
LINK HERE TO FIND OUT HOW TO CONTACT YOUR ELECTED OFFICIAL
CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE ENDORSEMENT LISTING AND SIGN ON YOUR ORGANIZATION.
A NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON 211: LINK FOR www.211.ORG
Commissioner Miller Pushes Support for Statewide 2-1-1 Service
Bucks County Commissioners Support HB 539, PA 2-1-1 Telephone Service Act
At today’s bi-monthly meeting, Commissioner Sandra A. Miller called for the board of commissioners to support of a piece of legislation at the state level that would establish a 2-1-1 line. According to Miller, 2-1-1 serves approximately 196 million Americans in 41 states, and provides critical information about health and human services. CLICK FOR MORE
Click for Bristol Pilot Article Covering Bucks County Commissioner 2-1-1 endorsement.
50 Ways 2-1-1 Works
1. Laid-Off
Workers: 2-1-1 provides one memorable
number that works for any kind of health or human service need. In a
Brookings Institution Study, researchers reviewed the experience of
laid-off hotel workers after the September 11th attacks and
found that even when social service agencies were doing a good job making
housing, food, and other assistance available, displaced workers couldn't
figure out how to get help. Pat Atkins, a researcher from George
Washington University noted that 2-1-1 " . enables people to get
assistance before they decide to give up."
2. Disease
Epidemic:
2-1-1 helps people during epidemics as
it did for the residents of Toronto, Canada during the SARS outbreak - People needed to know, for example, how to get groceries while
quarantined. 2-1-1 will be used to provide information on West Nile virus,
as well as such threats as anthrax and smallpox attacks.
3. Flu
Shots:
2-1-1 provides easy access to
information about how to get flu shots and how to pay for them if
necessary. This year, complete flu shot information is available in Palm
Beach County, Florida by calling 2-1-1.
4. Evacuation
Routes:
2-1-1 can provide information
about emergency shelters and evacuation routes during natural and man-made
disasters.
5. CHIP,
Etc: 2-1-1 provides basic information and connection to state - provided income
and insurance benefits such as the Children's Health Insurance Program. In
Florida, United Way 2-1-1 of Jacksonville has a partnership with the State
Agency for Health Care Administration to pilot a strategy that uses 2-1-1
as the entry point for MediKids, Kidcare and other state benefits.
6. Crime
Victims: 2-1-1 could provide information to crime victims on services and
benefits available to them.
7. Travelers' Aid:
2-1-1 can help people who are stranded.
In Atlanta, thousands of people were stranded at Hartsfield International
Airport for several days after September 11th. According to Dan
Williams, former national 2-1-1 coordinator, "Not only did people call
looking for rooms, we had people calling 2-1-1 offering rooms in their
homes for people who were stranded." In all, hundreds of people received
temporary housing until the crisis passed.
8. ESL
Help: 2-1-1 helps non-English speaking
people get comprehensive health and human service information. It was
important in the SARS outbreak in Toronto, for example, to be able to
serve the Mandarin Chinese speaking population. In addition to the large
Spanish speaking population in this country, many pockets of other
non-English speaking people exist in nearly every community.
9. Reliable,
Comprehensive Human Services Database:
2-1-1 provides a comprehensive,
continuously updated human service web-based database for everyone,
including social workers, doctors, and others trying to help people. In
Connecticut, at least 15% of calls to 2-1-1 are from helping professionals
and legislators looking for information to help someone. The database is
available on disk and through the 2-1-1 website.
10.
Community Response to Economic
Emergencies: 2-1-1 helps communities hit by industry shutdown --- 2-1-1 was the
critical community connection for residents of Atlanta who were unemployed
in the sudden decline of the airline industry in the aftermath of
September 11th. 2-1-1 provided the focal point for community
leaders to respond quickly.
11.
No stigma, confidential:
2-1-1 provides
a neutral, confidential resource for help in any situation. People will
call 2-1-1, because it is neutral and anonymous and does not require
people to call themselves homeless, abused, elderly, mentally ill or other
"labels".
12.
Alternative solutions and plans: 2-1-1 helps people with
multi-faceted problems - such as a sudden serious illness. Many people
need help but find it hard to formulate a plan. They just know what their
predicament is.
13. Targeting
Assistance: 2-1-1 provides a knowledge base to steer funding to where it can help the
most ---In Battle Creek Michigan, data collected between 11/02 and 1/03,
showed that 131 of 160 unmet needs were in the area of utility assistance.
As a result, the United Way released an additional $10,000 to help local
residents pay heating bills. Upon hearing this, Semco Energy matched the
$10,000 donation.
14. Rural
Assistance:
2-1-1 will give rural
Pennsylvanians better access to health and human service information.
There are 14 of the 67 counties in Pennsylvania that currently do not have
access to a comprehensive information and referral service.
15. Parent
Support and Education:
2-1-1 gives parents immediate access to
parenting information. In Hawaii, which has statewide 2-1-1 service, the
Hawaii Children's Trust Fund has provided a grant that will help fathers
in Hawaii access resources through Aloha United Way 2-1-1.
16. 9-1-1
Relief: 2-1-1
provides an outlet for the non-emergency calls that can flood 9-1-1
centers during a disaster. The Switchboard of Miami has a standing
agreement with their 9-1-1 center that when a hurricane is imminent,
Switchboard staff relocate to the 9-1-1 center to handle all the
non-emergency requests for information that come in. Switchboard is
not yet a 2-1-1 service but its proven usefulness to the 9-1-1
service center will only increase when it makes that change.
17. Employee
Retention: 2-1-1
helps employers retain employees and
reduce absenteeism. In a May 8, 2003 article in Business Direct Weekly,
Ted J. Baird, an employment law specialist in Michigan, wrote that, "
2-1-1 has the potential to save time, decrease stress, increase employment
opportunities, increase labor pools, and reduce pressure on employers to
increase benefits .. We need to answer this call."
18. Inventory of
Beds for the Homeless:
2-1-1 can provide an up-to-date, broad
geographic inventory of shelter beds available to the homeless. At
Connecticut's 2-1-1 Info line, a
statewide count is maintained daily, so that every homeless person can be
accommodated, especially during dangerously cold weather.
19. Reaching
At-Risk Populations in an Emergency:
According to Burt Wallrich, long time Coordinator for
Information and Referral in Los Angeles,
2-1-1 systems can reach the majority of
at-risk people through a broad network of small agencies serving the
homeless and others who are disconnected by language, recent immigration,
transience, distrust of government or mental illness. "The risks of not
reaching these people [in a major disaster] include unnecessary loss of
life and injury if services don't reach them, disease spreading from
improvised camps to the rest of the community, civil disorder if people
feel neglected and cut off from help, and political pressure and
litigation brought to bear by advocates for these groups."
20.
Suicide Prevention: Connecticut's 2-1-1 Infoline receives several calls every night from
people who are contemplating suicide. The American Association for
Suicidology evaluates Connecticut's crisis workers and certifies them for
the clinical practice of this specialized type of crisis management.
21. Assistance
to Local Governments: Many local governments do not have the extra tax dollars to establish a
3-1-1 service to provide information about municipal government services.
As an alternative, 2-1-1 can provide an up-to-date official directory of
detailed contact information so that residents know who to call for
non-emergency information such as tax information, to report a dangerous
road condition, or to ask a question about codes and zoning.
22.
Reporting Scams Aimed at
the Elderly:
In Texas, there is discussion about using 2-1-1 as a statewide "clearing
house" to assist senior citizens seeking advice about suspicious services
or offers and keep track of potential scams. Neighbors and others could
also use the line to discuss concerns about potential elder abuse. Funding
such a service through 2-1-1 could come possibly from the Crime Victims' Compensation Fund.
23. Reduce
Government Waste: 2-1-1 can prevent the proliferation of government sponsored 1-800
helplines. In some states, government agencies are required to use 2-1-1
if possible before being permitted to create a new 800 helpline.
24. Rumor
Control: 2-1-1 can provide a means to control
rumors by providing one trusted information sources during events such as
nuclear power plant failures.
25. Power
blackouts: In Toronto, calls to
2-1-1 tripled during the night of the blackout. Cheryl May, 2-1-1
Director, said, "The call center is always up to speed and on top of
events, and counselors work with information specialists to collect and
maintain the information required throughout a crisis."
26. Health
Education Campaigns: 2-1-1
provides an easy way for government to do short and long term public
information and education campaigns. For example, in Connecticut, the
Tobacco Quitline can be reached through dialing 2-1-1. It takes only 2
staff for 2-1-1 to operate this service in contrast to the six to eight
staff that would have been required for state government to establish
Quitline.
27.
Responds to Individual Needs:
The 11/30 edition of PARADE Magazine profiled Joshua Webbert of Holland,
Michigan who 2-1-1 helped to obtain a special outlet that he needed to
keep him alive while awaiting a heart transplant. 2-1-1 Centers can
allocate staff to search for solutions to special problems.
28. Basis
for Case Coordination System:
In Florida and elsewhere centralized I&R systems and 2-1-1 are providing
the basis for electronic case coordination systems. These systems will
save precious staff time by allowing system wide entry of callers' basic
information, needs and service requests. A secure e-mail system between
human service workers is often built into these case coordination systems.
2-1-1 systems are moving further in some locations, piloting programs to
use 2-1-1 as the enrollment point for public benefit programs such as the
children's health insurance program.
29. Housing
Assistance:
Although some communities provide specialized information and referral to
address housing needs, many do not. 2-1-1 can provide housing information
so that everyone in need can get appropriate housing assistance and create
a better life. During the past 10 years, researchers in the HUD Moving
to Opportunity project have found remarkable health improvements in
people who have moved from crowded urban conditions including decreased
asthma in children, decreased depression in adults, and greater feelings
of happiness overall. (See New York Times Magazine, 10/13/03, "Enough
to Make You Sick?").
30.
Forest Fires: Since the recent forest fires in
California, 2-1-1 is under consideration as the way to provide up to date
information on how far fires have spread.
31. Crisis
Counseling: 2-1-1 will provide crisis counseling for any crisis. Specialized lines
that provide expert help to victims of rape and domestic violence serve
most communities. 2-1-1 will connect people in need to these lines and
other special crisis lines. For many of life's crises, however, there are
no special telephone lines. 2-1-1 will provide trained crisis counselors
to help people regain emotional control and make a plan to defuse a
personal crisis.
32. Volunteer
Opportunities: Although many
communities have Volunteer Centers to help people find an appropriate
match for their skills and time, many do not. 2-1-1 can help callers
identify community Volunteer Centers and help people find opportunities
where volunteer placement services do not exist.
33. Calls
to 2-1-1 Can Warn Public Health Authorities of Emerging Outbreaks of
Disease:
States are now developing the National Electronic Disease Surveillance
System (NEDSS), a national project to provide a centralized internet-based
system for doctors to report disease to public health authorities. Like
NEDSS, 2-1-1 provides a data collection system that can provide early
warning of disease outbreaks through a built-in analysis of data as it is
received and entered.
34. After
Hours Support for Agencies: In Connecticut, the calls to over 40 agencies are forwarded to 2-1-1 after
hours so that caseworkers and others can be reached after hours when
needed.
35. State
Homeland Security Plan:
States such as Arizona have included
establishing statewide 2-1-1 service as a goal in state Homeland Security
plans. 2-1-1 complements emergency lines by taking non-emergency calls,
thus freeing emergency workers to handle real threats to life and
property.
36. Help
for Helpers: In Connecticut,
about 45,000 calls per year (15% of total) are from social workers,
clergy, doctors, legislators and other helpers who want to know how best
to help the people they are serving.
37. Court Ordered Case Plans:
Courts often order parents to obtain
counseling, improved housing and other services as a step toward regaining
custody of children placed in foster care. The juvenile justice system
makes similar requirements of adjudicated youth and their parents. 2-1-1
will provide a great way for social workers and criminal justice employees
to help their clients take responsibility for achieving the goals included
in court ordered plans.
38. Tracking and Helping Former Welfare Clients: In Connecticut, 2-1-1 makes sure that former TANF clients are followed and
get support and services, providing a safety net after TANF benefits end.
39. Quality Childcare:
2-1-1 can provide callers with
information on childcare options and openings in their locale and assist
them with information to evaluate quality and suitability for their child
and family situation.
40. For Kids: Parents and educators can teach kids to call 2-1-1 when they are faced
with confusing, non-emergency situations and do not know where to turn.
Connecticut Infoline provides a "Teen Yellow Pages" on its website that is
just for kids.
41.When Services Don't Work Out:
Sometimes, people do not get the help
they need because for some reason things just don't work out. They may be
frightened or may have been sent to the wrong service. Many people then
just walk away because they are in an emotionally charged situation and do
not know what to do. 2-1-1 provides trained counselors who can review why
the help did not work and plan what to do next.
42. Donations of Goods:
Whether you represent a corporation
wishing to donate excess building materials or are a homeowner who is
moving and would like to donate a large appliance to charity, 2-1-1 can be
used to find an appropriate place to donate excess goods. Besides
providing central information on the donation acceptance policies and
hours of food banks and Goodwill stores and other traditional recyclers of
used goods, 2-1-1 can match donors of more unusual in-kind gifts with
charities that can use them. This function is particularly useful in the
aftermath of a disaster when many donors emerge to help.
43. Help Through Phone, Website, E-mail, Walk-In:
2-1-1
can be used as an Information and Referral resource regardless of how
people choose to connect to help. In today's internet service environment, people need the choice of personalized service --- especially for those
who are not computer literate.
44. Training:
Because of the high standards for 2-1-1
call center operation, 2-1-1 centers are used to provide training to
government and non-profit staff who answer phones, especially for crisis
or human services calls.
45. Avoiding Litigation:
By assuring that one reliable and
accessible gateway to services exists, government can have confidence that
all people have access to a comprehensive range of assistance regardless
of physical or language barriers.
46. Employee Assistance Programs:
Many businesses provide "Employee
Assistance Programs" --- providing a way for employees to get help with
individual and family problems before they get out of hand is the right
thing to do and is also good business. 2-1-1 provides a major resource in
support of "EAP's".
47. e-Library:
Through its companion website and recorded informational tapes, 2-1-1 can
provide important legal, health and safety information. The Connecticut Infoline website lists, for example, special information on child support
enforcement and how to check for an individual's criminal record.
48. Specialized Information and Referral: Excellent specialized I&R programs exist through Area Agencies on Aging,
Mental Health / Mental Retardation offices, Drug and Alcohol agencies, HIV
/ AIDS programs and others. 2-1-1 can make a direct connection with these
specialized I&R programs.
49. Daily "Are You OK?" Call to the Homebound:
Through automated phone technology, calls can be placed on a daily basis
to homebound individuals to be sure that they are OK --- if there is no
answer or a person indicates a need for help, immediate follow-up is made.
50. Public
Policy Research: Because of the
high volume of calls and the structured nature of the assistance and
follow-up that is provided, 2-1-1 creates a real-time source of data on
people's needs. This provides an "instant focus group" which can serve as
the basis for research to guide the efforts of legislators and other
public policy makers.
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