Amanda Court Groundbreaking in Portland

EngAGE NW celebrated the groundbreaking for Amanda Court Apartments on July 14th in Portland, OR, with the developer, Stewardship Properties. This new construction project will provide new homes for 38 households of all ages, including 10 homes reserved for workers in Oregon’s agricultural industry.

“We are pleased to join with Stewardship Properties and our other partners, including Oregon Housing and Community Services, Banner Bank, Redstone Equity Partners, and Metro regional government in bringing this new affordable housing to families in Portland,” said EngAGE NW Regional Director, Maria Rojo de Steffey.

In addition to delivering programming centering on art, wellness, lifelong learning, and civic engagement at Amanda Court Apartments, EngAGE serves as Managing General Partner of the development.

Learn more about EngAGE Northwest here on our website.

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“Well Told” – Readings from EngAGE Northwest

Residents Dayan Margan-Sylvaen, Gabrielle Redheart, and Mary Haislipat of Cascadian Terrace in Portland, OR, participated in an EngAGE NW class taught by renowned storyteller Will Hornyak. In his class, “Well Told!”, they experimented with narrative and poetry in a variety of writing and storytelling exercises to develop and tell their personal stories in their own unique voices and styles. To celebrate the body of work they produced, Will and the writers held a culminating event on Zoom attended by their neighbors, families, and friends. Each writer took a turn to read their writing and share their experiences.

Congratulations to all!

(Video joins event in progress.)

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Nancy Goodhart, EngAGE C.O.O.: Rooted in Art

Nancy Goodhart, EngAGE C.O.O., shares a personal story.


Rooted in Art

Art and I met quite unexpectedly, under dire circumstances. Here’s how it all went down.

Life happened one day. After 33 years of marriage, we abruptly split up. It all went south so fast. Everything I thought I had was gone. My future plans and lifelong investments became null and void, overnight. I entered a new world, unprepared, dazed and confused.

Without the distraction of possessions to gather or assets to chase, my new reality, as a single woman in her late fifties, seemed uncomplicated, at a glance. But instantly I knew what I was challenged with: I needed to find my center, my purpose, my Self. I needed a new game plan, a new life plan, and a new perspective. I moved through, with a head full of windy thoughts, one day at a time.

Fortunately, I was employed with a very cool and creative nonprofit organization as a fitness instructor and Program Director for older adults. I had a secure job, and it was feel-good work. Days were full of energy, creativity, and positivity. Then, every workday would come to an end, and I would find myself in that hollow emotional space, that empty place. Unfilled spaces can go awry so easily.

It was an average day on the job when I was first introduced to Art. I was well aware that flirting with Art was way outside my comfort zone and my skill set, yet I felt gutsy and intrigued. It was good timing. Defaulting to my pragmatic, familiar self, I reviewed my situation to inform my next move. My money was tight, and there was no room in my budget for outings or costly pastimes. What I did have was a plentiful amount of free time and emotional space to invite in a new energy. Forget my lack of experience, I told myself, a healthy distraction is a good thing, So, if not now, when? It was calculated. I was going to do the Art thing and see where it went.

I took the initiative and made the first move with the tools that I knew I had, and with the mental images that I had been entertaining.

Pencil and Paper. Trees and Leaves.

I was drawing, one pencil stroke at a time. Trees felt safe – their shapes and designs were imperfect and unpredictable – Wabi Sabi-like. Each pencil mark, each crooked branch and tenacious root, grew energy and hope inside me. Forming leaves of life, in all their stages of sprouting, maturing, and falling, grounded me. Brushing away the dust from erased mistakes felt heart-healing.

I was feeling content, and curious about myself, if just for minutes at a time. And those minutes were golden. Art was way more than just a distraction or a time filler; we found meaningful connection in a simple and unassuming way. Art became my unpaved path to healing. We were traveling together, footloose and fancy free. And it wasn’t about where we were going, where the bumpy path would lead us; it was about our journey, our detours, our do-overs, and all the discoveries along the way.

Through the years, in a quiet and unannounced way, we grew deeply rooted and entwined, spending more and more time together. We were EngAGED and energized with all the creative possibilities our union presented.

As I write this, seven years later, Art and I have tied our creative knot. I am wholeheartedly committed to, and grateful for, this soul soothing, imperfect and forgiving, endlessly supportive presence in my life.

Nancy Goodhart
EngAGE C.O.O.
July 2021

Drawings by Nancy

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Experience Talks ZoomCast 7/28: LGBTQ+ Elder Housing

Check your email for a confirmation and link to join.

Dr. Imani Woody, Founder & CEO, Mary’s House for Older Adults, Inc.

Dr. Woody is an internationally and nationally recognized thought leader and an advocate of women; people of color; and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/same-gender loving (LGBTQ+/SGL) people for more than 25 years. She has spoken out nationally and internationally about the circumstances of elder LGBTQ+/SGL individuals, and the specific jeopardies that LGBTQ+/SGL elders of color face as they age. Dr. Woody brought these perspectives and decades of community praxis to the 2015 White House Summit on LGBT elder housing development, partnered with SAGE as a panelist in the National LGBT Elder Housing Symposium in 2019.  Most recently, Dr. Woody was invited to the White House by Vice President Kamala Harris to join a small, intimate group to discuss issues that impact LGBTQ/SGL elders.

Dr. Woody retired from AARP to become a pioneer in the building of alternative housing and creating welcoming environments. She is the founder and CEO of Mary’s House for Older Adults, (MHFOA) with the vision and commitment to serve LGBTQ+/SGL elders, experiencing housing insecurity and isolation. Dr. Woody has secured an expert board of advisors and a commitment of $1.2 million from the District of Columbia to begin construction on the first MHFOA dwelling, a 15-room communal residence in WDC and the only one in the country.

Dr. Woody has been a three-term Mayoral Commissioner appointee to the DC Office of LGBTQ Affairs and appointed by Mayor Bowser to serve on the Global Age-Friendly Task Force. She was the first Program Officer for the 50+ Ministry of Metropolitan Community Churches and is the President of the Greater Brookland Intergenerational Village.

Dr. Woody has a PhD in Public Service Leadership, and a Master of Human Services degree from Lincoln University. She has received many awards including Next Avenue’s 2019 Influencers in Aging, Forbes Business of Pride, and the SAGE Creating Change Advocacy Award. She created a Living Life Like It’s Golden program that empowers people to live their lives more fully through visioning. Dr. Woody lives with her wife of 20 years in Washington, DC.

Alan Acosta, Director of Strategic Initiatives, Los Angeles LGBT Center

Alan Acosta is responsible for spearheading implementation of key elements of the Center’s strategic plan, which includes supervision of special projects and organizational initiatives. Prior to working at the Center, Acosta served as Associate Vice President and Director of University Communications at Stanford University. As associate vice president, he was the chief university spokesperson and oversaw the Stanford website, news and media relations, external and internal communications and video production. He worked closely with the senior executive staff on a wide array of strategic management and communications issues.

Prior to his tenure at Stanford, Acosta was the deputy city editor of the Los Angeles Times; during his tenure at the Times, he shared in two Pulitzer Prizes awarded to the staff for coverage of the Los Angeles riots and the Northridge earthquake. He also worked as an editor and reporter at the Orange County Register, the Dallas Times Herald and the Hartford Courant. Acosta has taught journalism at the University of Southern California and creative nonfiction writing at Stanford. He served on the Center’s board of directors from 1991 to 1996. He co-chaired the board of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and has served on the executive boards of numerous other organizations, including the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists’ Association and Kitchen Sisters Productions.

Acosta earned a bachelor’s degree in politics from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and received a master’s degree in journalism, with honors, from Columbia University.

Kathleen Sullivan, Ph.D., Executive Director, Openhouse

Kathleen M. Sullivan, PhD, is an accomplished speaker, author, and trainer on issues related to LGBTQ aging, gender equity, affordable housing, and social environments. She is the recently named Executive Director of Openhouse San Francisco, which develops affordable housing for LGBTQ older adults; provides a suite of programs and services including the nations first LGBTQ specific PACE program in partnership with On Lok; and provides comprehensive training to providers in the greater Bay Area on the intersection of race, gender, and sexual orientation to create accepting, supportive environments for LGBTQ seniors.

Dr. Sullivan holds a Ph.D. from the Nohad Toulan School of Urban Studies and Planning at Portland State University where she coauthored Oregon’s first study on transportation issues for older adults. She is past Board President of the Oregon Gerontological Association, is a member of AARP’s Diversity Advisory Committee and held an appointment to the Governor’s Commission on Senior Services in Oregon. She is the author of a book on meditation, and an avid skier; runner and tennis player. Dr. Sullivan and her wife recently relocated to the Bay Area, and look forward to exploring the neighborhoods, outdoor space, and all the region has to offer.
 

Visit the Experience Talks website to learn more about our ZoomCasts!

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EngAGE Welcomes Craig Arthur Kolins, R. Lyne Martin-Modica, and Juanita Santana to Our Northwest Board of Directors

We are pleased to announce the addition of Craig Arthur Kolins, R. Lyne Martin-Modica, and Juanita Santana to our esteemed EngAGE Northwest Board of Directors. Please visit our website to see the entire list of dedicated board members.


Craig Arthur Kolins, Community College Administrator (retired) – Craig has experience conducting racial discrimination, sexual harassment, student and employment professional conduct, and Title IX investigations, and he is a diversity, equity and inclusion facilitator/trainer on implicit bias, whiteness/privilege and fragility. He also has experience in trauma intervention/emotional support, addiction/substance use and suicide prevention. He currently serves as Board Chair for SE Works, Inc. Craig is a survivor affected by HIV, with many personal and professional relationships involving people living with HIV going back decades. An early volunteer with Cascade AIDS Project in the 1980s, he now— over 30 years later—works to support the well-being of aging adults in the HIV community. He values collaboration and community advocacy, and continues to lean in to understand how bias, white centeredness, fragility, and privilege impact US culture, social isolation, and the human need for belonging and intergenerational connection. Craig has been married to his husband, Kelly, since 2006. They enjoy traveling internationally.


R. Lyne Martin-Modica, Executive Assistant, Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty – Lyne’s many years of experience in county and city government have lent her an understanding and appreciation for the community’s needs. She has worked for former County Chair Gladys McCoy, Beverly Stein, and County Commissioners Maria Rojo de Steffey and Dan Saltzman. Lyne is a lifelong Oregonian who is interested in serving on a Board that helps and provides a better standard of living for the members of her community. She brings a sense of humor to every encounter, and enjoys reading, traveling, and cooking for family and friends.


Juanita Santana, Executive Director, San Francisco State University Head Start/Early Head Start Programs (retired) – Juanita has been an active volunteer with AARP Oregon State Diversity Committee, Oregon Treasurer’s Financial Education Advisory Team, Oregon Governor’s appointee to the Oregon Retirement Savings Board, and Multnomah County Community Involvement Committee. She holds both a B.A. and a Master of Science in Business Administration. Ms. Santana is a National Head Start Fellow and a UCLA Head Start/Johnson & Johnson Fellow. She received the Certificate of Honor presented by San Francisco’s former Mayor, Gavin Newsom, for “positive contributions to the city, which will benefit generations to come.” She also received The Plate of Bounty Award, presented by the National Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Association in Washington, D.C., for making significant contributions to improve the lives of migrant and seasonal farmworker families at the national and state levels. Juanita has one daughter, Karla, who is married to Matthew Morgan. She has two grandchildren Elizabeth, 12 years old, and Paul Benjamin, eight years old.

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Tim Carpenter Awarded Sabbatical by Durfee Foundation in Recognition of His Leadership

The Durfee Foundation announced its 2021-2022 Sabbatical Fellowships giving leaders a chance to rest, reflect, and recharge


Downtown Los Angeles-based Durfee Foundation, which invests in extraordinary people who are making a better LA, announced today its 2021-2022 class of Sabbatical Fellows. Tim Carpenter, CEO/Founder of EngAGE, is honored to be selected in this year’s cohort.

In its 25th year of funding this program, in light of the extraordinary need following a year marked by intersecting crises and a global pandemic, the foundation more than doubled the number of awardees. There are 13 fellows in the 2021-2022 cohort.

Tim Carpenter commented, “I am truly honored to be a Durfee Foundation Sabbatical Fellow. What a terrific program to support social entrepreneurs by giving them some respite, especially after this difficult past year. I have been working for our mission for 22 years, and am looking forward to having some time to pause and regenerate.”

EngAGE will receive $60,000, which includes $50,000 for Tim to travel, reflect and recharge for a minimum of three consecutive months, and $10,000 to advance the skills and wellbeing of EngAGE’s staff, and also to reward those who carry extra responsibility during the sabbatical.

“Nonprofit leaders, community organizers, and people at the front line, providing support and social services to LA’s most vulnerable, kept our communities afloat with a superhuman lift in this past year,” said Claire Peeps, executive director of the Durfee Foundation. “They put themselves directly in harm’s way for all of our good, and now is the time to take care of them in return.”


EngAGE creates community and changes lives by transforming affordable older adult and multigenerational housing communities into vibrant centers of learning, wellness, and creativity. By delivering life-enhancing, tailored programming in well-being, the arts, lifelong learning, and intergenerational opportunities, residents are enabled to use their acquired skills in real-world ways to gain enrichment and mastery. Our mission is to empower people – intellectually, creatively, and emotionally – to do what they do best for the rest of their lives.


The Durfee Foundation has funded over 100 sabbaticals to leaders in Los Angeles since 1997. Evaluations have revealed that sabbaticals help organizations retain their leaders and help shift leaders’ perspectives from daily management to distributed leadership and generative thinking and activity. Organizations also benefit from having an opportunity to plan and strengthen their capacity. Sabbaticals can create a permanent shift in the culture of work/life balance for both the leader and the organization’s staff.

The 2021-2022 class of Sabbatical Fellows:

Martha Dina Arguello

Martha Dina Arguello is the Executive Director of Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR-LA). PSR-LA advocates for policies and practices that improve public health, eliminate nuclear and environmental threats, and address health disparities.

Martha Arevalo

Martha Arevalo is Executive Director for the Central American Resource Center (CARECEN). CARECEN empowers Central Americans and all immigrants by defending human and civil rights, working for social and economic justice and promoting cultural diversity.

Maria Lou Calanche

Maria “Lou” Calanche is the Founder and Executive Director of Legacy LA, a youth

development organization. Legacy LA builds the capacity of youth to reach their full potential and equips them with tools to transform their lives and community.

Tim Carpenter

Tim Carpenter is the CEO/Founder of EngAGE, a nonprofit that provides arts, wellness, lifelong learning, community building and intergenerational programs to older adults and families living in affordable older adult and multi-generational apartment communities in California and Oregon.

Liz Herrera

Liz Herrera is the Executive Director of El Nido Family Centers, a social service non-profit agency. El Nido strives to build healthy families by providing community-based social services in some of the most underserved communities in Los Angeles County.

Zachary Hoover

Zachary Hoover is the Executive Director of LA Voice, a multi-racial, multi-faith community organization that awakens people to their own power, training them to speak, act, and work together to transform our County into one that reflects the dignity of all people.

Laura Jiménez

Laura Jiménez is the Executive Director at California Latinas for Reproductive Justice (CLRJ). CLRJ is a statewide organization committed to honoring the experiences of Latinas to uphold their dignity, their bodies, sexuality, and families.

John Kim

John Kim is the Executive Director of Advancement Project California, a multi-racial, multi-generational racial justice organization working to expand educational opportunities for California’s children, create healthy and safe neighborhoods, build participatory and representative communities, and shift public investments towards equity.

Christine Mirasy-Glasco

Christine Mirasy-Glasco is the Executive Director of Upward Bound House (UBH). UBH’s mission is to eliminate homelessness among families with children in Los Angeles by providing housing, supportive services, and advocacy.

Adam Murray

Adam Murray is Chief Executive Officer of Inner City Law Center (ICLC), a non-profit poverty law firm serving the most vulnerable individuals and families in Los Angeles County. ICLC provides legal representation and advocacy to thousands of homeless and working poor clients.

Tara Peterson 

Tara Peterson is the Chief Executive Officer of the YWCA Glendale and Pasadena. The organization is dedicated to eliminating racism and empowering women and works to end gender-based violence, promote girls’ empowerment and advance racial justice.

Alberto Retana

Alberto Retana is the President and CEO of Community Coalition, a nonprofit organization that works to help transform the social and economic conditions in South LA that foster addiction, crime, violence and poverty by building a community institution that involves thousands in creating, influencing and changing public policy.

Alexandra Suh

Alexandra Suh is the Executive Director of KIWA (Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance). KIWA combines organizing, leadership development, services, and policy advocacy in order to improve the lives of immigrant workers in low-wage industries in Koreatown and build a foundation for social change.


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EngAGE Receives Grant from Bank of America

Bank of America recently awarded EngAGE a generous $20,000 grant to help fund the EngAGE in Wellness program, which partners with several large food banks to provide onsite delivery of tons of free food each month to thousands of low-income residents living in the affordable apartment communities we serve in Southern California. Tim Carpenter, CEO/Founder of EngAGE, responded, “We are so grateful for the continued and long-time support of Bank of America for our important work.”

The EngAGE in Wellness program solves two significant problems facing older adults and low-income families: the packaging of food is too bulky to handle and the pick-up locations are sometimes unreachable. We have trucks pick up the food, then we parcel it into bi-monthly, carryable packages, and arrange delivery directly to participating residents in our apartment communities.  

EngAGE also creates and, with the residents, maintains on-site vegetable gardens in many communities we serve. In addition, we provide free onsite wellness classes, teaching cooking and nutrition, exercise, yoga, falls prevention, health education, medication management, and other topics that empower residents to take on healthy behaviors that keep them in independent affordable housing and out of higher levels of care.


The demand for our wellness services increased significantly during the pandemic and remains very high. EngAGE is excited to put to work this Bank of America grant supporting greater access to food, a vital need in our communities. 


Bank of America partners with nonprofits, local governments and cultural institutions that boost job skills, provide affordable housing and improve the economic outlook for their local citizens. Bank of America’s support helps amplify their efforts and success.


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