Earlier this month I traveled with VtPHA Board Members Molly Lawrence and Burt Wilcke to the American Public Health Association’s (APHA) Annual Meeting in Washington, DC.
It was a surreal time to be in the nation’s capital. The shutdown was still in full-swing, small pods of National Guard troops wandered the mostly-deserted streets, and inside the Walter E. Washington Convention Center over 11,000 meeting participants listened, discussed, and debated how best to meet the very real and existential threats facing our nation’s public health ecosystem.
If I were to distill the many overlapping and competing themes at this sprawling meeting to just two, it would go like this:
- Theme One was championed by individuals and organizations focused on a future opportunity to build back better – to envision a more just and equitable public health ecosystem that will rise from the ashes of the current calamity at some future date when political winds are blowing back in our direction.
- Theme Two rested on the efforts of those individuals desperately trying to hold the line and not lose any more ground. To continue fighting for every SNAP benefit recipient, every American that will be spared illness or death thanks to modern vaccines, and every child, adult, and senior that depends on public health programs for their health and well-being.
At VtPHA, we understand that destruction is sometimes the precursor to new beginnings. We also understand that destroying public health infrastructure means destroying lives and potential, and that is something we cannot abide.
Our Association has three main program areas: Education, Mentorship, and Advocacy. Regarding Advocacy, here is a sampling of some of the work we’ve been up to:
- VtPHA Joins Healthy States Collaborative
- Vermont’s New Advocacy Roundtable
- Vermont’s First Vaccine Coalition
- Calling for Policy Committee Volunteers
- Event: How States Can Lead on Environmental Health
VtPHA is a staff of one, a board of eight, and a membership – today – of 150.
Take a look at what we’re up to. What could we accomplish, together, if we grew this Association 10-fold? In this world, political power is predicated on numbers or money. Money… well, let’s just say that isn’t usually our strong suit in public health advocacy. But numbers… that is something we can build.
To current VtPHA members, thank you. Thank you for being part of our growing coalition that is trying to hold the line. And to those not-yet members – will you join us?
Dan Olson
VtPHA Executive Director












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