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Board leans toward highlighting public‑health system capacity in 2026 state health report as FPHS funding gaps loom
Summary
Board members directed staff to keep the seven cross‑cutting priorities in the 2026 state health report but focus recommendations on areas where the board can act—particularly public‑health system capacity—after hearing that FPHS faces a $4M gap for 2026 and a projected $21M shortfall for 2027.
Board members spent a large portion of the meeting refining the scope and audience of the 2026 State Health Report and flagged foundational public health services (FPHS) funding as a central concern.
Michelle Davis, the board’s executive director, told members the FPHS steering committee "reached agreement in closing the $4,000,000 shortfall for 2026" but that the committee must still address a projected $21,000,000 gap for fiscal year 2027. She explained those shortfalls stem in part from a last‑minute legislative change to the definition of tobacco products that affected revenue.
Members broadly supported keeping the contractor Sound Within’s seven priorities in the report while elevating a subset—especially public‑health system capacity and environmental health/climate risks—where the board can provide more targeted recommendations to the governor and legislature. Local board members urged tailoring language so county commissioners and local health jurisdictions can see themselves in the report and use it for advocacy.
Mindy Flores and Molly Donardo outlined a process to keep the document concise, elevate partner recommendations as flexible principles, and prepare targeted outreach so the report will be useful for state and local decision‑makers. The board asked staff to emphasize clear calls to action the governor and legislature could respond to as they shape budget priorities.
Board members also asked DOH and staff to continue outreach to local boards and to present a tightened draft for June adoption.
