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THE MAINE RESILIENCE BUILDING NETWORK

 

The Maine Resilience Building Network (MRBN) is a statewide organization dedicated to educating Maine citizens about ACEs and promoting resilience among those in our state who are suffering the negative effects of ACEs.   MRBN meetings are held in Waterville whenever a fifth Thursday occurs in a month.   Their meetings not only provide superb programs but also give the members a chance to network with other agencies in the state who work with people affected by ACEs.

VBRP is a member agency of MRBN, and we have benefited a great deal from their assistance to us in our first year of organization.  We will continue to work alongside them as we promote resiliency for our children, families, and older residents here in Van Buren. 

I found the article below on the website of MARC (Mobilizing Action for Resilient Communities) , a rather well-funded nationwide organization that is conducting very promising and very well researched pilot programs in several cities, and also has developed some great tools for the rest of us to use as we work to bring people, organizations, and agencies together to combat ACEs.

It's great to see that MRBN is gaining recognition nationally --- and I wanted to share this with our blog participants.  Here's the article:

MARC

Mobilizing Action for Resilient Communities

Maine Resilience Building Network: Catalyzing a Statewide Movement  

by Anndee Hochman

In 2019, the Maine Resilience Building Network grew up. After seven years of operating as a volunteer-driven, grass-roots, cross-sector coalition devoted to building resilience for the state’s children, families and communities, MRBN developed a business plan, applied for non-profit status and hired its first two paid staff.

That work was supported by the Bingham Program, a charitable endowment at Tufts Medical Center and a longtime funder of MRBN, formed in 2012 to educate individuals and organizations across Maine about ACEs, their impact and the protective factors that can help people thrive.

Members of the volunteer leadership team leapt at the prospect of having paid staff and being able to “continue this work in a more meaningful and organized manner,” says Kini-Ana Tinkham, who moved from the leadership team to become MRBN’s executive director. “We just hit the ground running; there’s so much work to be done.”

MRBN, whose tagline is “Join the Conversation,” brings together practitioners in medical care, education and behavioral health, along with those working in business, law enforcement, the military, juvenile justice and faith communities.

The network now comprises 960 “contacts”—MRBN recently developed a paid membership structure, with different price levels for individuals, non-profit organizations and for-profit businesses—with about 50-75 people attending the group’s meetings, held five times a year.

From the beginning, MRBN’s message has focused on wellness and healing rather than illness and trauma; a recent change in the domain name from MaineACEs to MaineResilience reflects that thinking. The word “resilience” had to be part of the name, says MRBN co-founder Sue Mackey Andrews. “We talk about how it’s never too late to realize your ACEs and, through support and personal discovery, overcome them.”

A 2016 report, “Adverse Childhood Experiences in Maine II: Knowledge, Action, and Future Directions,” cited the impact of MRBN’s efforts to raise ACEs awareness across the state.

In 2010, a survey by the Maine Children’s Growth Council showed that 41.8% of the state’s practitioners (in health, education, mental health and other disciplines) had heard of the original ACE Study; four years later, 81.1% were familiar with the study. And more than one-third of respondents said they had learned about ACEs from summits organized by MRBN.

It was the cross-sector approach that drew Tinkham to MRBN. “I’m interested in collaborating with people and organizations who are like-minded and strive to improve outcomes and wellbeing for our children, families and communities. Meeting with people and combining efforts makes a lot of sense,” she says.

One measure of that multi-sector approach is the line-up at MRBN’s May conference, “Building Resilience Across the Lifespan,” which included speakers and sessions on “Cool Calm Kids,” poverty and resilience, and grandparents as caregivers.

For the past 15 months, MRBN has been training Community Resilience Facilitators, 23 individuals equipped to do one- or two-hour ACEs and resilience presentations in their communities. Joyce Morrissette, a psychiatric nurse for 25 years was trained last year; this summer, she became MRBN’s Engagement and Training Director.

Recently, she led presentations for school bus drivers, child welfare advocates and K-12 teachers. “One of the things I’ve observed is that you can see people connecting the dots,” she says. “People come up after the presentations and share. It resonates.”

An ongoing challenge, given the state’s size, spread-out population and high rates of poverty and ACEs (25% of Maine children have experienced two or more ACEs, compared to 22.6% nationally), is to make sure the message reaches and engages people in all parts of Maine. That’s why, when MRBN received a federal Department of Education grant to conduct 12 trainings this fall for early childhood education and pre-school staff, it was critical to Tinkham that those trainings happen in northern, central and down-east regions of the state.

MRBN’s fall meeting will include a showing of Broken Places, a documentary that explores why some children suffer lifelong damage from early adversity while others thrive. Tinkham and Morrissette hope that screening, and the panel discussion to follow, will continue the momentum of a multi-sector ACEs/resilience movement in Maine.

“None of us can do it alone,” says Tinkham. “We need to work alongside each other to be part of the solution.”

 Resources: 

Anndee Hochman is a journalist and author whose work appears regularly in The Philadelphia Inquirer, on the website for public radio station WHYY and in other print and online venues. She teaches poetry and creative non-fiction in schools, senior centers, detention facilities and at writers' conferences.

The Health Federation of Philadelphia serves as a keystone supporting a network of Community Health Centers as well as the broader base of public and private-sector organizations that deliver health and human services to vulnerable populations. 

 

 

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