Center for State and Local Policy

With decision-making moving increasingly to the state and local arenas, preservationists need to be able to influence elected officials through coordinated and sustained advocacy efforts in the states.  The National Trust created the Center for State and Local Policy to empower a network of statewide and local preservation-minded organizations around the country to positively influence public policy in their states and communities. 

How Can the Center Help You in Your Community?   The Center for State and Local Policy provides educational materials focused on the specific needs and issues confronting preservation interests.  The Center provides: 1)  information focused on public policy development and advocacy and targeted to the specific needs and issues confronting statewide and local preservation groups, including Main Street organizations; 2)  a comprehensive preservation advocacy training program; and 3)  direct technical assistance on advocacy matters to advocates nationwide.

Information

The Center for State and Local Policy provides educational materials focused on the specific needs and issues confronting preservation interests. The Model Public Policies series provides an analysis of specific preservation policies and examples of best practices at the state and local level.

Advocacy Training

The Center for State and Local Policy offers a comprehensive preservation advocacy training program, while the Advocacy Training Manual provides information on shaping public policy to preservation groups and Main Street organizations.

Would you like to help train local citizens how to advocate on behalf of preservation? Contact policy@nthp.org or call 202-588-6167 for more details.

Technical Assistance

The Center for State and Local Policy provides direct technical assistance on a range of issues – including rehabilitation tax credits, building codes, funding sources, and historic schools – to communities across the country.  For assistance with your preservation policy issue, call 202-588-6167 or email policy@nthp.org.  Examples of technical assistance include: 

  • Helping to develop strategies for advocacy campaigns
  • Providing guidance on legislative language
  • Providing statistics/data to support the economic case for historic preservation
  • Providing sample testimony
  • Suggesting ways of expanding grassroots support and encourage effective coalitions
  • Providing educational materials that can be shared with elected officials, advocates, and media
  • Sharing successful advocacy startegies of other organizations
  • Speaking at state and local conferences, events, and workshops

New Grant and Technical Assistance to Encourage Community Center Schools

Is your state facing threats of demolition or abandonment of neighborhood schools? When new schools are built, can your children to walk to their school? Do decision-makers understand the many roles schools play within your community? In addition to reaching educational objectives, do you believe that schools can serve other purposes in your neighborhood?

Concerned about the abandonment of older neighborhood schools and the siting of new schools outside of communities, the National Trust is offering an opportunity for organizations and coalitions in up to five states to analyze their state’s current policies and develop an educational outreach program with policy recommendations to help citizens and officials make informed choices when spending their limited dollars on school facilities. Selected organizations will receive a year of technical assistance and a $6,000 grant to: 1) research state policies and practices; 2) convene a policy summit to develop recommendations; 3) develop educational materials; and 4) hold a press event to announce policy findings. By participating in this program, organizations will secure community-centered schools for their state through the implementation of state-level policies. The proposal deadline is July 14, 2008 at 5:00 p.m. eastern.

Through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and with support from the Jessie Ball duPont Fund, the National Trust launched the Helping Johnny Walk to School: Sustaining Communities through Smart School Siting Policies program to help localities site their schools in a way that not only achieves their educational objectives, but also anchors the local neighborhood, supports better public health, creates a cleaner environment, spurs economic development, and offers additional amenities to the community. Since publishing the seminal work Why Johnny Can’t Walk to School: Historic Neighborhood Schools in the Age of Sprawl and listing the threat to older neighborhood schools on the America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Sites list in 2000, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has continually sought ways to raise awareness about the important link between community vitality and walkable neighborhood schools.

This new program is a program of the National Trust Center for State and Local Policy which provides technical assistance, trains advocates, and conducts research on policies that impact the country’s historic resources. Partners in this work with include authors Constance Beaumont and Tom Hylton, as well as organizations such as Safe Routes to School, The Rural School and Community Trust, and the 21st Century School Fund.

For more information about this issue and details about applying for this new grant opportunity, visit http://www.preservationnation.org/issues/historic-schools/ or contact Renee Viers Kuhlman, Director of Special Projects, Center for State and Local Policy, at Phone: 202-588-6234, e-mail: renee_kuhlman@nthp.org.