Established in 1805, the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (the NYC Health Department) is the oldest and largest health department in the country. Our mission is to protect and improve the health of all New Yorkers, in service of a vision of a city in which all New Yorkers can realize their full health potential, regardless of who they are, how old they are, where they are from, or where they live.
As a world-renowned public health agency with a history of building transformative public health programming and infrastructure, innovating in science and scholarship to advance public health knowledge, and responding to urgent public health crises — from New York City’s yellow fever outbreak in 1822, to the COVID-19 pandemic — we are a hub for public health innovation, expertise, and programs, and services. We serve as the population health strategist, and policy, and planning authority for the City of New York, while also having a vast impact on national and international public policy, including programs and services focused on food and nutrition, anti-tobacco support, chronic disease prevention, HIV/AIDS treatment, family and child health, environmental health, mental health, and racial and social justice work, among others.
Our Agency’s five strategic priorities, building off a recently-completed strategic planning process emerging from the COVID-19 emergency, are:
1) To re-envision how the Health Department prepares for and responds to health emergencies, with a focus on building a “response-ready” organization, with faster decision-making, transparent public communications, and stronger surveillance and bridges to healthcare systems 2) Address and prevent chronic and diet-related disease, including addressing rising rates of childhood obesity and the impact of diabetes, and transforming our food systems to improve nutrition and enhance access to healthy foods
3) Address the second pandemic of mental illness including: reducing overdose deaths, strengthening our youth mental health systems, and supporting people with serious mental illness
4) Reduce black maternal mortality and make New York a model city for women’s health
5) Mobilize against and combat the health impacts of climate change
Our 7,000-plus team members bring extraordinary diversity to the work of public health. True to our value of equity as a foundational element of all of our work, and a critical foundation to achieving population health impact in New York City, the NYC Health Department has been a leader in recognizing and dismantling racism’s impacts on the health of New Yorkers and beyond. In 2021, the NYC Board of Health declared racism as a public health crisis. With commitment to advance anti-racist public health practices that dismantle systems that perpetuate inequitable power, opportunity and access, the NYC Health Department continues to work in and with communities and community organizations to increase their access to health services and decrease avoidable health outcomes.
OPEN TO PERMANENT PRINCIPAL ADMINISTRATIVE ASSOCIATES.
The Bureau of Community Awareness, Action, Response, and Engagement (BCAARE) engages and supports community action to learn from community members’ experiences and expectations to develop and disseminate behavioral health linkages and supports for wellness, and for preparing for and responding to local and widespread events and emergencies. The bureau invites and includes peer perspectives to integrate equitable access to behavioral health across sectors and settings. BCAARE is organized into six main offices including Behavioral Health Emergency Preparedness and Response, Community Engagement and Training, Consumer Affairs, Data Aggregation, Translation and Analytics, and Neighborhood Response Unit. Key programs, initiatives, and collaborations include Connections to Care: Building Resilience for Youth, Community Covid Conversations (3C), NYC Project Hope, Resilience and Emotional Support Team (REST), and the Mayor’s Subway Safety Plan.
The COVID-19 Pandemic has created new and highlighted existing mental health needs throughout New York City. Many New Yorkers have not received much needed mental health and substance use services, Increasing the need for and visibility of acute mental health, substance use, and housing resources across the city, and particularly in communities with historic health and health care disparities. DOHMH Neighborhood Response Unit (NRU) is maximizing efforts to identify, engage, and connect New Yorkers to critical mental health and substance use services to prevent and respond to crises, including through direct community engagement and with key stakeholder partnerships. NRU is one of six units in the Mental Hygiene Bureau of Community Awareness, Action, Response and Engagement.
Reporting to the Director of Operations, the NRU Operations Manager will:
- Assist program with programmatic and administrative operational functions.
- Work closely with the team members on the operational staff to track inventory, staff uniforms, predict needs and escalate issues as necessary.
- Establish workflows for programmatic feedback for NRU and as needed for the bureau and escalate to leadership.
- Ensure programmatic compliance with mandatory DOHMH standards, policies and procedures.
- Participate in all program-related, supervisory and operational meetings.
- Collaborate with internal partners and serve as the operational liaison for Community Outreach.
- Work on special projects as needed.
- Serve as liaison for HR and materials needs
- Create and manage scheduling and preparation for daily/weekly/monthly team agenda and arrange new meetings and appointments, as needed
- Contribute to the development of activities/tools that promote equity and uphold social justice in practices and programming
- Contribute to the development of strategies to improve project and bureau operational efficiency and effectiveness
- Contribute to the review of operational budgets
- Other duties or projects as assigned.