Community Resources
Strong communities protect each other. Learn how to build networks of mutual support that help neighbors thrive in good times and weather difficult ones.
Community Is Protection
Getting Started
Mutual Aid Networks
Find or start a mutual aid group in your community. How neighbors help neighbors with food, housing, and support.
Learn moreRapid Response
Community rapid response protocols. How to organize when neighbors need immediate support.
Learn moreKnow Your Neighbors
Building community resilience starts with knowing who lives around you. Resources for neighborhood organizing.
Learn moreSupport Vulnerable Communities
How to be an ally to immigrants, refugees, and others who may face heightened risks.
Learn moreLegal Observers
How to serve as a legal observer at protests and public events. Training, responsibilities, and best practices.
Learn morePrinciples of Mutual Aid
Solidarity, Not Charity
Mutual aid is about people helping each other as equals, not a hierarchy of givers and receivers.
Meet Real Needs
Ask what people actually need rather than assuming. Listen to the community.
Build Power Together
Mutual aid builds relationships and community power that last beyond any single crisis.
Everyone Has Something to Give
Time, skills, connections, and care are all valuable contributions.
Actions You Can Take Today
Start Small
- • Introduce yourself to neighbors you don't know
- • Exchange phone numbers for emergencies
- • Learn who might need extra help (elderly, disabled, families)
- • Share a meal or check in regularly
Build Networks
- • Create a neighborhood group chat or email list
- • Map community resources and skills
- • Connect with local mutual aid organizations
- • Organize a regular neighborhood gathering
Being an Effective Ally
Listen First
Ask what support is actually wanted. Don't assume you know what's needed. Respect the agency and expertise of those you're trying to help.
Show Up Consistently
One-time help is valuable, but sustained relationships matter more. Commit to ongoing support rather than crisis-only involvement.
Use Your Privilege
If you have advantages — citizenship, language, connections, resources — use them to support those who don't. Accompany people to appointments, make phone calls, provide rides.
Protect Privacy
Never share information about someone's immigration status, location, or situation without explicit permission. Safety depends on discretion.
Community Emergency Planning
Know Before a Crisis:
- • Who in your building/block might need help evacuating?
- • Where is the nearest emergency shelter?
- • Who has medical training in your community?
- • What's the plan if communications go down?
- • Where will you meet if you can't go home?
Community Resources to Map:
- • People with generators or solar power
- • People with trucks or large vehicles
- • People with medical supplies or training
- • People who speak multiple languages
- • People with tools, skills, or extra space
Organizations & Tools
- Mutual Aid Hub — Directory of mutual aid groups by location
- Big Door Brigade — Resources for starting and running mutual aid projects
- United We Dream — Immigrant youth-led network with community resources
- Ready.gov Community — FEMA resources for community emergency planning