The WHY of Appropriations Advocacy Campaigns
Long-term focused investments are needed for every expectant parent, infant, toddler, and caregiver to experience great health and well-being. Proper nutrition, quality health care, safe and stable homes, skilled early care and education, and financial security for families are all essential conditions for the health, development, and well-being of children aged prenatal to three (PN-3). These conditions can and should be supported by public systems funded by taxpayer dollars. The good news is that robust public investments in the PN-3 population are a win-win for families and taxpayers.
While many advocacy tools focus on making laws, few emphasize the power of the budget process to improve families’ circumstances through strategic funding. This toolkit gives advocates a deeper understanding of the appropriations process and practical ways to make budgets work for babies!
“If it is true that a chain is only as strong as its weakest link,
isn’t it also true a society is only as healthy as its sickest citizen and only as wealthy as its most deprived?”
― Maya Angelou, Even the Stars Look Lonesome
Appropriations campaigns can be tough. Advocates are challenged to prove return on investment (ROI); competing against other issues; and, fluctuating state funds can mean fewer public dollars available when needs are the greatest. Deciphering a state budget requires patience, math, a policy analyst, and a good lobbyist. It is not unusual for state budgets to include policies that fail through normal legislative processes. When legislatures are working to pass a budget, these so-called ‘poison pills’ can make their way into state budgets, limiting or diverting the intended impact of the funding through earmarks or by including policy measures that preempt local authority. Even when advocates successfully secure the appropriation they need, the fight usually begins anew each budget cycle. This reality can wear down grassroots advocates and coalitions who must ask for the same thing year after year.
In this toolkit you will find (click on a topic to download the specific section):
Influencing the Inside Game
Demonstrating People Power
- Campaigning
- Communications and Messaging
- Organizing and Mobilizing
Additional Resources