AROUND 100 REPRESENTATIVES from local community organizations, nonprofits and city governments convened this week in San Francisco at a conference aimed at initiating regional collaboration and partnerships. 

The governor’s Office of Community Partnerships and Strategic Communications, or OCPSC, kicked off its “California Connects: Regional Convenings” conference, a statewide gathering held on eight different days in multiple cities across the state. 

OCPSC is a body of the state government that focuses on ensuring that public information campaigns are reaching historically underserved populations. It is part of the governor’s Office of Service and Community Engagement, or “GO-Serve,” which was established in 2024 to boost paid service and volunteer work in the state and promote public engagement in tackling the state’s most pressing issues. 

One of the goals of the conference is to provide a space where different organizations dedicated to helping underserved communities can congregate to network and help foster collaboration. It also aims to give local organizations access to funding resources and tools to help better serve their audiences. 

“We really wanted to bring together a diverse set of partners together to understand what they bring to the region, from their organization, get to know each other, and find new avenues to collaborate, partner and network,” said OCPSC acting executive director Aubrie Fong in an interview. 

Several organizations and state agencies discussed the benefits they have seen through working together. 

Adolfo Rivera is the Director of National Service Programs at Bay Area Community Resources, a regional nonprofit that provides a range of services, such as afterschool and mental health programs, to underserved populations. His organization has been able to expand its work to smaller communities that often get overlooked.

Attendees of the “California Connects: Regional Convenings” conference network and collaborate. The conference was hosted by the governor’s Office of Community Partnerships and Strategic Communications on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025 in San Francisco, Calif. (Alise Maripuu/Bay City News)

“What this partnership has done is, it’s brought our services to communities big and small throughout the state of California,” he said during a panel discussion. 

Speakers and participants noted how collaboration between stage agencies and community-based organizations is especially important given the federal government’s reduction in spending in areas such as health care, food assistance and housing programs, medical and scientific research, environmental protection and climate change, and national service programs like AmeriCorps

“While federal resources are being stripped away, California is doing the opposite — investing in communities, opening doors to information, and ensuring every Californian has access to the tools they need,” said GO-Serve Director and California Chief Service Officer Josh Fryday in a statement. “Division is leaving families behind while California is leading with action and bringing people together to foster civic engagement, build resilience, and spark solutions that will last well beyond these events.”

While federal resources are being stripped away, California is doing the opposite — investing in communities, opening doors to information, and ensuring every Californian has access to the tools they need. Josh Fryday, GO-Serve director and California Chief Service Officer

Quynh Nguyen is a program manager at Asian Health Services, a nonprofit that provides medical, dental and behavioral health services in 15 different languages in Alameda County. 

She said that changes in health advice from the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, regarding COVID-19 have impacted Asian Health Services’ scope of outreach in giving vaccinations.

“The work that our team does is around providing free COVID-19 vaccines for the underserved, under-resourced communities in the East Bay,” she said in an interview. “Within the last three to six months, there have been so many changes in the CDC. There have been a lot of changes to eligibility and who can get the vaccines.”

(L-R) Acting Director of the state governor’s Office of Community Partnerships and Strategic Communications Aubrie Fong, Deputy Director of Community Engagement for OCPSC Marcy Kaplan, President and CEO of Self Help for the Elderly Anni Chung, California Climate Action Corps Director Sunshine Swinford, Bay Area Community Resources Director of National Service programs Adolfo Rivera, Youth Empowerment Commission Executive Director Thomisha Wallace, University of California, Berkeley Possibility Lab Director Amy Lerman in a panel discussion during the “California Connects: Regional Convenings” conference hosted by OCPSC on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025 in San Francisco, Calif. (Alise Maripuu/Bay City News)

She explained that Asian Health Services’ partnership and grants from the Alameda County Department of Public Health has supported the organization’s ongoing work. However, uncertainty around federal healthcare funding has prompted the organization to try and strengthen ties with other local nonprofits and seek additional funding opportunities.

“We have been continuing to seek additional resources, additional grants and opportunities to prepare for when that COVID-19 vaccine grant is ending next year,” Nguyen said. 

The next California Connects conference will be held in Los Angeles on October 15. Then it will head to Sacramento, Fresno, and other parts of southern California. 

Alise is a general assignment reporter with a focus on covering government, elections, housing, crime, courts and entertainment in San Francisco and on the Peninsula. Alise is a Bay Area native from San Carlos. She studied history at University of California, Santa Cruz and first started journalism at Skyline College’s school newspaper in San Bruno. She has interned for Bay City News and for Eesti Rahvusringhääling, or Estonian Public Broadcasting. She has covered everything from the removal of former San Mateo County Sheriff Christina Corpus to the divisive battle over the Great Highway on San Francisco’s west side. Please send her any tips.