Based in Nevada with programs in 19 states and three territories, WestCare Foundation will be responsible for bringing together trauma and capacity-building experts as well as faith-and community-based organizations to develop and implement TIMM. The population that WestCare Foundation is seeking to address is children and adolescents impacted by Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACES). These experiences may include having divorced or separated parents, a deceased parent, living with someone with a substance use or mental health disorder, having a parent who served time in jail, or exposure to domestic or neighborhood violence. Our grant activities will address the SDOH domains of Health Care Access and Quality. TIMM specifically will address Healthy People 2030 objectives AH-D02(Increase the proportion of children and adolescents with symptoms of trauma who receive evidence-based treatment), MHMD-D01 (Increase the number of youth with serious emotional disturbance (SED) who are identified and receive treatment), and IVP-D03 (Reduce the number of young adults (aged 18 to 25 years) who report 3 or more Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs). WestCare Foundation will increase the access to trauma-informed care and mental health services and improve outcomes of children and adolescents experiencing ACES by offering training to 620 unduplicated clergy and congregational leaders across the 5-year funding period. WestCare initially will implement the TIMM model in Milwaukee, WI and Atlanta, GA during the first two years of operation, using data and feedback to refine and perfect the model as needed. During the last three years of funding, WestCare will roll out the model throughout its regions, focusing on communities of color with the highest risk and the most need.