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Start a Local Chapter

Bring this work to your community.

A local chapter brings free, anonymous peer support into a community that needs it. You bring the relationships. We bring everything else.

What a chapter actually is.

A local chapter is a community-anchored affiliate — a group of trained volunteers who run peer support drop-ins, manage intake referrals, and act as a visible local presence for the people who need it most.

Chapters aren't franchises and they're not independent nonprofits. They operate under our national structure, using our training and materials, with our insurance covering their activity. You build the relationships. We handle the compliance, the liability, and the infrastructure.

We currently have 38 active chapters across 22 states. Each one started with a single person who decided their community needed this.

38
active chapters across 22 states
The newest launched eight months ago in a mid-sized city where the founding volunteer had never run an organisation before. Chapter size ranges from three volunteers to forty-two.

What we provide.

You don't need to figure this out alone. Here's what comes with the chapter model from day one.

Training programme

Every chapter volunteer completes our 40-hour peer support training before working with service users. Training covers active listening, trauma-informed communication, crisis recognition, and safe messaging around suicide. It's delivered online in modules you can complete at your own pace.

40 hours · Online · Self-paced

Materials and platform access

Chapter leads get access to our Ground platform for intake referrals, our resource library, printable outreach materials, and digital assets. All materials are produced centrally and kept current — you don't need to create anything from scratch.

Platform + print + digital assets

Operational support

Every chapter has a named support contact at the national organisation — someone who answers questions, joins quarterly check-ins, and helps navigate difficult situations. You're not alone when a volunteer gets overwhelmed or a service user discloses something complex.

Named contact · Quarterly check-ins

Insurance coverage

All chapter activity — drop-ins, outreach events, one-to-one peer support sessions — is covered under our national general liability and professional indemnity policies. You don't need to source or fund your own insurance. This alone removes the biggest barrier most community organisers face.

General liability + professional indemnity

What you bring.

We believe in honesty about what this takes. Starting a chapter is meaningful work, and it requires real commitment from you and your founding team.

  • Time and consistencyA chapter lead typically commits 8–12 hours per month, more in the early months. Peer support volunteers average 4–6 hours per month. This is volunteer work — we don't compensate chapter staff.
  • A founding team of at least three peopleWe don't accept solo applications. You need at least two co-founders who have committed before you apply. Three is better. Five is sustainable.
  • Community knowledgeYou know things we don't. Who the trusted voices are. Which communities have been underserved by mental health services. Where people actually gather. That local intelligence is the most valuable thing you bring.
  • A suitable venue for drop-insChapter drop-ins need a consistent, accessible, private space — at least once a month to start. Libraries, faith buildings, community centres, and employers have all hosted chapters. You identify and secure this; we advise on requirements.
  • Willingness to go through trainingEveryone doing peer support — founding team included — completes our full 40-hour training before working with service users. No exceptions, and no shortcuts.

How it works.

From first enquiry to first drop-in, most chapters take three to six months to get running. Here's the shape of that journey.

1

Tell us about yourself and your community

Email us a short note — who you are, where you're based, what you've seen in your community, and who else is on your founding team. We don't use an application form because we want to read what you actually think, not what fits in a box.

2

Introductory call with our chapters team

A 45-minute call with a chapters coordinator. We'll ask questions about your community and your team, and you should ask us everything you need to know. We'll be honest if we think the timing isn't right or the fit isn't there.

3

Founding team training

If we're moving forward, your founding team completes the 40-hour online training. All of you, before anything else. You'll also attend a live three-hour cohort session with other new chapter leads from around the country.

4

Affiliation agreement and setup

We sign an affiliation agreement covering how you represent the organisation, what you can and can't do, and how we support you. We set up your platform access, add you to the chapter directory, and assign your support contact.

5

First drop-in

You run your first drop-in, and we're available by phone if anything comes up. Most first sessions are small — that's expected and fine. We don't measure success by attendance in month one. We measure it by whether you're still running in month twelve.

Where chapters exist today.

Active chapters are spread across urban, suburban, and rural communities. We deliberately do not cluster — if your area has no chapter, that's the point.

Indicative chapter distribution — 38 affiliates across 22 states
Active chapter
Dots indicate approximate regional distribution only. No real city or state names are implied.

If anyone in your community is in crisis right now: call or text 988 — the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, free and available 24/7.

Ready to start the conversation?

Tell us who you are, where you're based, and what you've seen in your community. We'll take it from there.

Email our chapters team →
If you're in crisis right now

Call or text 988 — the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. Free, confidential, available 24/7.

Ground Chat

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