Priority One Coalition helps individuals, families, and vulnerable communities move from crisis and instability toward strength, structure, and long-term self-reliance through hands-on education, humanitarian service, practical skills training, and development-centered support that serious partners, donors, and investors can recognize and support.
Founded in 1996 by George M. Frye, the mission has always been bigger than temporary relief. It is about restoring dignity, building usable knowledge, and creating real pathways forward for Miami and beyond.
A long-standing mission with more than three decades of service and community commitment.
Programs rooted in practical life knowledge, workforce readiness, health awareness, and self-sustaining skills.
Documented relief work includes Haiti crisis response and broader international outreach.
The mission extends beyond emergency response into energy, housing, agriculture, and economic self-reliance.
Priority One Coalition has never believed in standing at a distance from suffering. In moments of emergency, the work moves directly toward the need â with care, presence, supplies, and practical response. That includes documented field support during the Haiti earthquake crisis, where emergency care, first aid, food support, and direct humanitarian engagement were part of the organizationâs visible response.
But relief is only the beginning. The bigger goal is recovery with dignity, structure, and the tools that make future dependence less likely.
Our work brings together relief, education, discipline, and practical development. The aim is simple: meet urgent need, then help build the strength to move beyond it.
Rapid response, field presence, emergency assistance, and practical support in times of crisis.
Basic care, emergency response support, health-conscious guidance, and service where conditions are urgent.
Food access, distribution support, and community-centered relief during disruption and instability.
Hands-on models for renewable energy, solar-powered systems, and resilient infrastructure pathways.
Practical education around food independence, skill development, and disciplined self-reliance.
Longer-term thinking around sustainable living, family stability, and built environments that support growth.
Priority One Coalitionâs mission is rooted in the belief that real change happens when people gain usable knowledge, practical discipline, and the confidence to build. That is why the work emphasizes hands-on education instead of passive dependency.
Training-centered pathways can include solar energy exposure, agriculture and food independence, practical trade development, personal discipline, holistic awareness, and skills that prepare people for meaningful work and stronger daily living. The goal is not charity that expires. The goal is capability that lasts.
Priority One Coalition did not appear overnight, and it was not built as a trendy cause. It was built through years of service, education, community engagement, and direct effort to strengthen lives and families in practical ways.
Priority One Coalition is founded by George M. Frye with a mission centered on community support, quality of life, and meaningful service.
The organization grows from education, family support, spiritual and cultural awareness, and practical empowerment.
The Coalition extends into relief work, including documented humanitarian activity during the Haiti crisis.
The broader vision grows into international partnerships tied to housing, energy, economic empowerment, and self-sufficiency.



This organization should never read like a paper-only mission. Its leadership identity is shaped by presence â in communities, in crisis zones, in partnership settings, and in the practical realities of service. Donors and partners do not just need language. They need to know somebody actually shows up.
That forward edge continues through the coalitionâs interlinked development relationship with New Genesis Project, where Prince Odulani Ibikunle is presented in a leadership role connected to energy, housing, and economic empowerment across multiple regions.
Some people give. Some volunteer. Some open doors, make introductions, or support programs as partners. However you step in, the goal is the same: stronger people, stronger families, and stronger communities.
Offer time, energy, professional skill, or on-the-ground support where it can make a real difference.
Support the mission through collaboration, sponsorship, institutional partnership, or infrastructure-focused initiatives.