Jersey City’s Women Empowerment Pilot Program Helps Hundreds of Low- and NoIncome Families get Much-Needed Medical Care
JERSEY CITY, NJ – Mayor Steven M. Fulop and the Department of Health and Human Services
are introducing a resolution to the City Council this week to significantly expand Jersey City’s
successful and innovative pilot partnership with Planned Parenthood of Metropolitan New Jersey,
increasing access to critical healthcare services for women and children living below the poverty line.
Since the June 2022 launch of the Women's Empowerment: Education and Services (WEES) pilot,
over 300 Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) participants in Jersey City have received life-changing
services ranging from emergency visits to general checkups. This week’s resolution utilizes a $30,000
grant awarded to HHS to increase the number of patients served and create an informative, step-by-step
WEES replication toolkit for other municipalities and organizations to mirror - ultimately increasing
access on a much broader level to vital preventative health services for those who need it most.
“Our pilot program has been an incredible success as it is a natural extension of the mission of the Jersey
City WIC program to provide much-needed reproductive support to our community, and to take it a step
further, we include transportation to ensure these critical services are accessible to all,” said Mayor
Fulop. “This partnership serves as a prime example of how two organizations can work together to
expand the scope of critical services and the reach of resources, and there has never been a more crucial
time to make these services accessible than now. We want to double down on this proven successful
investment to help even more women and children by growing these services and providing greater
access to the quality health care that everyone deserves.”
Expanding the WEES program also includes LBGTQ Training Programming with Jersey City Leaders
as well as Recreation and Youth Development staff, and establishes a Train the Trainer program under
the Division of Community Health and Wellness.
Stacey Flanagan is the Director of HHS and has been the lead on this pilot program for Jersey
City. “This partnership has serviced more than 20% of Jersey City WIC’s eligible (adult female)
clientele. As encouraging as these numbers are, they don’t even begin to quantify the true scope of this
partnership. To date, more than 20% of the individuals who received these services were referred to
other community partners, including Medicaid, which help them get other affordable services they might
not otherwise receive.”
Reliable transportation is a top social determinant surrounding residents’ health, which is why we will
continue free transportation under the WEES program to encourage more low- and no-income families
to seek vital medical care who may otherwise be deterred from such a barrier.
"In partnership with Jersey City's HHS, PPMNJ has seen great success in serving patients through its
WIC program. We are committed to this continued strategic partnership that has opened critical access
to people seeking sexual and reproductive health access in Hudson County. This type of community
engagement and partnership provides the essential tools for breaking down barriers to better healthcare
access," added Dr. Randa Francis-Nicholas, Vice President of Health Services for Planned
Parenthood of Metropolitan New Jersey.
With the Council’s approval, this week’s resolution will allocate grant funding awarded to HHS from
the Clinical Services Division Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE). It is one of many grants HHS has been
awarded recently as a result of the Department’s effectiveness and leadership, especially in a postpandemic environment.
In addition to the WEES program, HHS recently completed the HealtheirJC mini-grant RFP process to
allocate a total of over $434,000 in Enhancing Local Public Health Infrastructure (ELPHI) and
Congressional Appropriation for Workforce Development funding to support 50 local nonprofit
organizations. In fact, all eligible applicants received funding. Jersey City’s HHS applied for the
ELPHI grants through the New Jersey Association of County and City Health Officials.
The grants, worth upwards of $15,000, will provide much-needed financial assistance to various local
nonprofits offering a range of community services from supporting workforce development
programming and food pantries to youth development and resource centers.
“These funds further the City’s reach in communities supporting health equity, neighborhood by
neighborhood,” concluded Mayor Fulop.