Updates + Notices
Read below for updates on the agency, our projects, and our data, as well as timely public health notices or statements
 
      
      Overdose Awareness in Cortland County: Local and National Trends
On International Overdose Awareness Day, Cortland County has reason to reflect with hope. Overdose deaths have dropped 88% locally since 2021, mirroring the national decline. This progress is not accidental—it reflects years of harm reduction work by the Rural Health Institute of New York, including naloxone distribution, fentanyl test strip access, and compassionate community outreach. With overdose deaths at their lowest levels in years, sustaining this momentum requires continued investment in harm reduction and prevention strategies that save lives.
 
      
      New Report: Piloting the Grace Space, a Data-Driven, Low-Threshold Daytime Resource Center
From November 2024 to April 2025, RHI and other community partners operated a low-threshold daytime resource center for people experiencing housing insecurity and homelessness. This center--the Grace Space--was housed at Grace and Holy Spirit Church in downtown Cortland. This report details the work that went into planning, opening, and operating the space; it gives an overview and analysis of the data we collected through operating the space; and it lays out recommendations for Cortland County's next steps as well as for other communities that want to learn from this pilot project.
 
      
      Data For Equity Part 1: Data Access is Health Equity
At RHI, we believe that meaningful access to data is a matter of health equity.
In many rural communities like ours, the first barrier to data access is that the data simply doesn’t exist. Too often, we find ourselves relying on national or state-level datasets that either exclude our communities entirely or smooth over the details of local experience. When local data isn’t collected, or isn’t collected with enough detail to show what’s happening across different groups, we can’t see the disparities that exist, let alone address them. If we don’t count people, we risk making them invisible in policy and practice. This is especially true for marginalized groups whose experiences are often left out of broad-scale surveys. Without robust, place-based data that reflects the reality of their lives, our systems are flying blind.
 
      
      Turning Walls into Windows for Learning: RHI’s “Read · Talk · Sing · Play Every Day” banners popping up across Cortland County
From Marathon to CAPCO to Seven Valleys, bright purple “Read · Talk · Sing · Play” banners are appearing across Cortland County. They’re part of RHI’s Learning Moments campaign, a countywide effort to help parents and caregivers turn errands, mealtimes, and play into simple, no-cost learning opportunities. Each banner highlights everyday interactions—walking to the library, reading together, chatting at dinner—that build language, focus, and social skills. Explore the “Learning Moment of the Day” and practical activities at HelloCortland.fun, created with the Cortland County Literacy Coalition.
 
      
      Public Health Basics: Why You Shouldn’t Drink the River Water – Lessons from John Snow to Modern-Day Water Safety
 
      
      Understanding Fork Theory: How Negative Environments Increase the Risk of Substance Use for the LGBTQIA+ Community
 
      
      RHI is helping the Cortland County Housing and Homelessness Coalition set and reach its goals
 
      
      Redesigned 2023 Youth Survey Report is Now Available
The 2023 Cortland Youth Survey report is now available. It highlights current trends and emerging needs, makes recommendations for meeting those needs, and highlights the important work already happening. This is the first report that we have fully designed with data literacy in mind.
 
      
      New Youth Survey Allows Us to See Disparities
Every year since 2002, RHI has surveyed 7th-12th grade students in Cortland County about substance use behaviors and risk and protective factors that predict adolescent problem behaviors. Starting in 2023, we began using a new survey that goes beyond prevention to collect data about general health behaviors, like sleep, nutrition, mental health, and disability.
 
      
      CACTC at Cortland's First Pride
CACTC staff attended and presented as part of Cortland County’s first LGBTQ Pride Event
