CBEL supports three key Collective Impact Initiatives in the Salem-Keizer area.

What is Collective Impact?

At CBEL, we know that complex challenges—like ensuring safe neighborhoods, supporting families, and promoting educational success—cannot be solved by any single organization alone. That’s why we embrace Collective Impact, a structured approach to cross-sector collaboration that aligns multiple stakeholders around a common goal and shared strategies.

Through Collective Impact, CBEL works to:

  • Bring together diverse partners including families, schools, neighbors, community organizations, and local government.

  • Coordinate efforts and share resources to avoid duplication and maximize impact.

  • Measure progress using shared goals and data, ensuring that everyone stays focused on achieving meaningful outcomes.

All Neighborhood Family Council members participate in Collective Impact efforts, learning to work together across organizations and neighborhoods to create lasting, community-driven solutions.

By using the Collective Impact approach, CBEL strengthens collaboration, builds community capacity, and drives systemic change that helps families and children thrive.

Learn More About Collective Impact:

Collective Impact Forum – Overview

Stanford Social Innovation Review – Collective Impact Article

FSG – Collective Impact Resources

OUR 3 COLLECTIVE IMPACT PARTNERS

  • Marion & Polk Early Learning Hub

    Early Learning Hubs in 16 regions across Oregon are getting Human Services, Health, Early Learning, K-12 Education and Business Sector partners to work together to create local systems that are aligned, coordinated, and family-centered. Families receive the support they need to become healthy, stable and attached and their children receive the early learning experiences they need to thrive.

  • Fostering Hope Initiative

    CCS serves as the lead partner for this neighborhood-based collective impact initiative designed to strengthen families, mobilize neighborhoods and promote optimum child and youth development. It is a partnership of government, public and private organizations joining together with a common goal. FHI operates in high poverty, high need neighborhoods. Each FHI Neighborhood is staffed with a Community Health Worker who works with families and community partners to help support strong families and safe, healthy neighborhoods.

  • Mid-Willamette Valley Homeless Alliance

    The Mid-Willamette Valley Homeless Alliance, or “Alliance,” is a collaborative organization engaging in a communitywide commitment to coordinate, leverage, and align efforts and resources to prevent and end homelessness. Recognized by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in December 2019 as the Marion-Polk region’s Continuum of Care, the Alliance does not provide direct services. Rather, it focuses on communitywide planning and coordination, e.g., aligning services, implementing a strategic plan, collecting and analyzing data, expanding participation in Coordinated Entry, and bringing chronic and Veteran homelessness to functional zero through Built for Zero system improvement strategies. The Alliance is also responsible for annually compiling a single community application for federal Continuum of Care dollars.