Every pathway connects you to content, services, officials, learning paths, and opportunities across Houston's civic landscape.
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Policies
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Learning Paths
Pathway 1 · Health
Wellness, healing, and care for every Houstonian. Explore clinics, mental health support, nutrition programs, and insurance options that keep our communities strong.

HearMe is a paid app ($7.99/month) that connects people with trained listeners for emotional support. The app lets you chat anonymously about anything on your mind - like work stress, health, parenting, or identity issues. Listeners are trained volunteers and social work students who provide judgment-free support. Your conversations are private and encrypted. You must be 18 or older to use HearMe. The app is not for crisis situations - if you're having thoughts of suicide or self-harm, call 988 instead. The FAQ page also lists many other mental health resources like the 988 Crisis Lifeline, therapy directories, LGBTQ+ support groups, and hotlines for different needs. HearMe offers internships and is looking for new volunteer listeners who complete their training program. Technical support is available through the app.
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Pathway 2 · Families
Strong foundations for every family. Find schools, childcare, youth programs, and safety resources that help Houston families grow and thrive.

The Nehemiah Strategy is a powerful community development program that has helped over 6,500 families become first-time homeowners. Led by faith communities and organizations like East Brooklyn Congregations, this program transforms empty lots and abandoned land into affordable homes in low-income neighborhoods. The strategy works by getting city governments to sell empty lots cheaply and provide building subsidies. It has created $1.5 billion in wealth for African-American and Latino families in cities like Brooklyn, Chicago, Baltimore, and Washington DC. Rev. David Brawley from St. Paul Community Baptist Church explains that it started with imagination - seeing something better where there were only empty lots. The program works with both Democratic and Republican mayors to secure funding. CBS News featured stories of homeowners like Matilda Dyer, who called her application an 'act of faith,' and Sandra and Armando Martinez, who call their home their 'palace.' This approach helps neighborhoods grow stronger without pushing out existing residents through gentrification. The program proves that with organized community power and vision, the American Dream of homeownership can become real for working families.
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Pathway 3 · Neighborhood
The places we share and call home. Discover housing resources, parks, libraries, and neighborhood initiatives that make Houston a better place to live.

The Activating Boston Project helps neighborhoods create better outdoor spaces that bring people together across different ages and backgrounds. Started in 2022, this program gives money to community groups to improve parks, create art projects, and build food gardens in areas that get very hot during summer. Seven neighborhood organizations in Boston have received funding to work with local residents, especially young people and seniors, to make their communities healthier and more connected. Projects include community murals in Chinatown, youth art programs in parks, food forests in vacant lots, and neighborhood beautification with sunflowers. The program focuses on areas experiencing severe heat stress and helps communities become more resilient to climate change. Each project brings neighbors together through public art, community celebrations, and intergenerational activities that honor local culture. The initiative is run by Healthy Places by Design working with John Hancock, the City of Boston, AARP Massachusetts, and UMass Boston. By improving and activating outdoor spaces, these projects help people stay connected to their neighbors while addressing important community issues like heat resilience and environmental justice.
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Pathway 4 · Voice
Your civic power, amplified. Get informed about voting, advocacy, town halls, and organizing opportunities that put your community in charge.

The Horizons Project explains how authoritarian leaders stay in power through support from key groups called 'pillars.' These pillars include businesses, faith communities, professional groups, labor unions, and veterans' groups. The organization uses research to understand how these groups provide resources and legitimacy to authoritarian systems. By identifying these support systems, pro-democracy organizers can develop better strategies to protect democracy. The framework helps activists understand that power flows upward through specific institutions, and by targeting these institutions, movements can weaken authoritarian control. Horizons provides tools, research, and case studies from around the world to help people take effective pro-democracy action. Their work focuses on building diverse coalitions that can strategically challenge threats to democratic institutions and norms.
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Pathway 5 · Money
Financial opportunity for everyone. Explore jobs, benefits, credit-building, and small business resources that strengthen economic well-being.

This is not Houston civic content. This webpage provides access to Harvard Business School's annual reports from 2006 to 2025. These reports show the school's activities, finances, and achievements each year. The page is a simple directory with links to download PDF reports and access newer online versions. While these reports might contain information about business education and leadership development, they are specific to Harvard University in Massachusetts, not Houston. This content would only be relevant to Houston if someone was researching business education models or comparing educational institutions. The reports are primarily for Harvard stakeholders, alumni, and researchers studying business education.
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Pathway 6 · Planet
Climate, environment, and sustainability in our region. Learn about air quality, flooding, energy programs, and green initiatives shaping Houston's future.

Houston Wilderness runs several big programs to protect and restore nature around Houston and the Gulf Coast. Their main projects include: 1) The Gulf-Houston Regional Conservation Plan, which brings together businesses, environmental groups, and government to protect 10 different ecosystems across 13+ counties. 2) The Super Trees for Sustainability Initiative, which plants native trees to fight pollution, flooding, and extreme heat. 3) The Houston Ship Channel TREES program, aiming to plant 1 million native trees along the 25-mile ship channel by 2030. 4) The Riverine Buyouts program, which buys flood-prone homes and turns them into natural areas with trees and wetlands. 5) The Great Green Quest, which gives thousands of students wilderness passports to explore outdoor spaces. These programs help clean air and water, reduce flooding, store carbon, provide wildlife habitat, and cool down hot urban areas. Houston Wilderness works with many partners including health departments, schools, businesses, and local governments to make the Houston region more resilient to climate change while protecting its diverse natural areas like coastal prairies, forests, wetlands, and waterways.
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44 totalPathway 7 · The Bigger We
Building across difference, together. Explore resources for bridging, dialogue, inclusion, and trust that connect all of Houston's communities.

This guide explains how religious communities can help protect democracy in America. It shows that faith and freedom work together - democracy protects religious freedom, and faith groups help strengthen democracy. The guide gives examples from around the world where religious leaders stood up to bad governments. It describes four main ways faith communities can help: speaking out against abuse of power, peacefully resisting unfair laws, bringing different groups together, and providing meeting spaces and resources for organizing. The guide includes stories like Catholic nuns in the Philippines who knelt before tanks while praying, helping end violence. It also tells about Black churches that were the backbone of the Civil Rights movement. The resource provides toolkits and action steps for faith communities who want to get involved in protecting democratic values while staying true to their beliefs.
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How pathways connect
Community issues do not live in silos. These pathways share content, services, and focus areas.
“Simple pleasures are the last healthy refuge in a complex world. ”
Oscar Wilde.