NWPP Expands Services with Regional Tax Proceeds

Despite tents on street corners, nonprofits say they are making progress, already housing 500 with regional homeless tax By Nicole Hayden | The Oregonian/OregonLive Updated: Apr. 17, 2022, 8:09 a.m. | Published: Apr. 17, 2022, 7:00 a.m. Employees from Northwest Pilot Project load up food that will go to people transitioning into housing. The organization received about … Read more

Walk-A-Thon May 1, 2022!

We are  excited for this year’s Walk-A-Thon!  With our new online platform you can choose to participate in-person or virtually.  We hope you are ready to fundraise-your-hearts-out for NWPP and the seniors we serve. Our goal this year to raise $150,000 to keep vulnerable, low-income seniors in housing, and we’ll need your help to reach this goal.  … Read more

Check out our 2021 Impact Report

During the tumultuous 12 months from July 2020 to this past June, NWPP faced a tremendous challenge: continue to provide our services – remotely. But even under the cloud of COVID-19, and despite the many challenges and hurdles, staff and clients have been remarkably resilient. It is not hyperbole to say that because of you … Read more

Emmons Place Groundbreaking

  Emmons Place – 146 units, estimated completion Spring 2023 Located in Portland’s immensely walkable Northwest neighborhood, NHA began construction on 146 studio units in a complex rehab/new construction project in July 2021. The building is named for Portland affordable housing advocate Susan Emmons who, as past executive director of NW Pilot Project, has been a passionate and determined … Read more

2021 Impact Awards

 

Since NWPP’s founding in 1969, volunteers, community partners, donors, funders and business partners have been critical to the success of this agency.  Our annual Impact Awards celebrate and show special gratitude to extraordinary people and groups whose contributions have been critical to the work of the agency for the past year.  NWPP is so fortunate to have a multitude of supporters without whom it would not be possible for us to fulfill our mission.  Thank you!  Meet this year’s honorees and let them inspire you!

 

Program Impact Award
Recognizes a significant contribution to NWPP housing program.

 

May Cha

May Cha is a Rent Assistance Specialist on Home Forward’s Short-Term Rent Assistance Team. She works collaboratively with NWPP to serve 40 low-income senior households enrolled in the Long-Term Rent Assistance Program (LRA). The LRA was initially an NWPP pilot project created to provide long-term rental subsidies for low-income households in Multnomah County. The NWPP Housing Team is honoring May Cha with the Program Impact Award because of her excellent communication skills, consistent responsiveness to our shared clients, and ongoing collaboration with NWPP to keep low-income seniors in safe and stable housing.

In response to being honored with the Program Impact Award, May Cha told us: “I enjoy working with the staff at NWPP to support the participants in the LRA (Program).  I believe it is a collaborative effort.  It takes everyone working together to provide the services and support to all the participants.  I am so grateful and honored to receive this award from NWPP.”

 

Multnomah County’s Adult Protective Services (APS) Team

Multnomah County Adult Protective Services is a 46 member team that annually manages 2,500 to 3,000 investigations into the abuse of older persons (defined as aged 60 or above) or persons with a physical disability. As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, reports to APS are increasing and reaching the highest levels recorded pre-pandemic. The NWPP Housing Team is honoring the Multnomah County Adult Protective Services team with the Program Impact Award for their crucial services during the pandemic. Over the past year, NWPP witnessed APS Team Members demonstrate incredible tenacity, persistence, empathy, and follow-through in their work with very vulnerable seniors. Likewise, the APS team relies on NWPP as a resource and referral source for seniors that are in need of help accessing affordable housing.

In response to being honored with the Program Impact Award, APS management communicated: It is an honor for Adult Protective Services to be recognized by Northwest Pilot Project with the Program Impact Award.  APS investigators have continuously made themselves available to see clients in person throughout COVID.  Their willingness to check on vulnerable people has been an important community response throughout the last year and a half.  The continued partnership between APS and Northwest Pilot Project will help address the critical health and safety needs of our shared clients as we work together to ensure stable housing and other vital supports are in place.”

 

Community Impact Award
Acknowledges the engagement of volunteers in supporting NWPP’s clients and services.

 

Bobbie Rodriguez

For the last 12 years, she has been organizing a holiday-in-kind drive with help from her dragon boat team, the Golden Dragons PDX. This year NWPP is honoring Bobbie Rodriguez with the Community Impact Award for her generous and steadfast support of NWPP’s client household needs, especially during COVID-19. Over the last year, as the pandemic restricted NWPP from easily accepting in-kind items, Bobbie worked with her network of dragon boat team members and her Portland condominium to facilitate three household items drives for NWPP’s clients. The items donated helped NWPP settle clients into their new homes during COVID-19. 

In response to being honored with the Program Impact Award, Bobbie shared: “I credit my parents for their modeling and encouraging all of us in my family to become involved in the community, so I feel that volunteering with projects for NWPP is honoring my parents. In addition, all people, no matter what their age, deserve respect and acknowledgment for the experiences they have encountered during their life and I know that NWPP helps to give seniors both dignity and respect. I am happy to be a small part of an organization that acknowledges the importance that seniors deserve by giving them the help they need.”

 

Vicki Schmall

“WOW! What a surprise this is!!”  Humble as ever, that was Vicki’s response when we shared with her that she was selected for one of this year’s Community Impact Awards. But it was no surprise for us.  Vicki’s ongoing generosity, demonstrated throughout our community, is strong and steady, and as an educator in the field of gerontology, Vicki has a special passion for older adults.  For many years, Vicki and a small group of volunteers have provided gifts for the NWPP clients who attend the annual Client Holiday Lunch. From Christmas-themed gift stockings to gift bags, these small expressions of love have created many big smiles. 

When NWPP couldn’t host the Client Holiday Lunch in person in December 2020 because of COVID-19, Vicki really went the extra mile for NWPP’s clients.  Thanks to her leadership, she and several volunteers to assembled gift bags that NWPP delivered to clients.  Vicki added a real personal touch to each bag.  In addition, she also supports NWPP by contributing much-needed bedding and kitchen kits throughout the year, encouraging her friends to join her in supporting the seniors served by NWPP, and even asking her dentist for donations of toothbrushes!

Vicky emphasized to us that “I would not have been able to do what I have done without the help and support of friends and my husband. I am so thankful for their support.”  Vicki continued “I am very touched and honored.  NWPP has a special place in my heart.”

 

Agency Impact Award
Recognizes a significant contribution that provided a transformative opportunity for NWPP.

 

A.C. Caldwell

Prior to joining NWPP as a case manager A.C. Caldwell had spent a fulfilling year in the Jesuit Volunteer Corps working with people who lived in subsidized housing and on the margins. That experience helped her on her first day at NWPP. She needed to talk with a client whose conduct was putting them at risk of eviction and who wasn’t responsive to anyone else.  A.C. did a home visit, and with her gentle approach, tactfulness, and intuitive sense of how to help, she resolved the problem and prevented the client from being evicted. Her boss at the time, Bobby Weinstock, said:  “It was clear to me that the way AC carried out the assignment made it certain that she was destined to be NWPP board chair someday.” 

After five years at NWPP, AC left to pursue a degree in theology, returned to Portland and joined Housecall Providers, a nonprofit providing in-home medical care and hospice services with a special focus on older adults, where she continues to work as a Chaplain. Recruited to the NWPP board in 2010, AC has served since then (with the requisite breaks), contributing the important perspective of a former employee to critical board conversations and decisions, and raising funds through the Walk-A-Thon. She was indeed elected to the role of board chair.  Under AC’s leadership the board managed the most significant thing a board can do: seamlessly oversee the major transition of NWPP’s long time Executive Director to new leadership.

“NWPP isn’t just a highly respected and influential community gem that does amazing work for the folks it serves, and that I’m proud to be associated with,” A.C. says. “It’s also been an experience of family for me, where I have met some of the most important people in my life, people I love and respect and admire. NWPP has helped make me who I am today, and I am so grateful I have had a chance to be part of the community there.” 

 

Merrill Weyerhaeuser and Pat Welly

Northwest Pilot Project is at the heart of Merrill’s and Pat’s relationship.  Why?  Because they met at NWPP!   In 1990, Pat joined NWPP for a one-year internship through the Holy Cross Associates program.  Merrill joined NWPP in early 1991 to fulfill a practicum for her master’s degree.  Pat was asked to show Merrill the housing in downtown Portland to get to know the area and to meet with clients.  The rest, as they say, is history!

Merrill was drawn to work with the disenfranchised and wanted to learn about the mental health of people who were homeless. “The plight of seniors with housing instability was less visible to me than the younger folks I tended to see on the streets,” Merrill said. “So I was curious about that and wanted to work in an organization that was small enough to have accountability and yet big enough to get the job done.”

Pat decided to spend a year doing social service work after graduating from college and loved the idea of working with seniors.  “I had the opportunity to work with some amazing clients,” Pat said. “One in particular was a blind woman who taught me how to can peaches and make zucchini relish.  She had so much dignity and class. Her generosity of spirit was inspiring.”

After starting a life together and beginning their respective careers, Merrill and Pat stayed connected with NWPP and the organization’s work. They raised their kids on the annual Walk-A-Thon event. Merrill served on the NWPP board, used NWPP to inform her dissertation, and they’ve provided meaningful, ongoing support that has enabled NWPP to help hundreds of seniors to live in safe and stable affordable housing. 

Both Merrill and Pat hold NWPP in high esteem.  “NWPP continues to hold a special place in my heart,” Pat says.  “It’s where I met Merrill which was the ultimate gift.” For Merrill, it was the gift of “witnessing the pervasive belief that each human being has dignity.” Merrill continued: “everyone of NWPP’s clients was treated with respect and compassion. I am grateful to have experienced that deeply ethical stance in all employees —from the executive director to all the frontline workers—and volunteers, as well.

 

Thank You all for inspiring us and supporting the work of NWPP!

Check out our Summer 2021 Newsletter

Bobby Weinstock, Housing and Advocacy champion retires after 32 years with NWPP.  Read more about Bobby’s career in our Summer 2021 newsletter. In honor of Bobby’s long service to NWPP and our community, a generous donor is offering to match all gifts up to $32,000! If you would like to help honor Bobby’s career, we encourage … Read more

Read our Winter 2021 Newsletter

As the pandemic continues, it’s very clear to NWPP that low-income seniors with underlying chronic health conditions are at the highest risk for COVID-19, especially seniors who are part of the BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) communities. They are also at a high risk of losing their housing as the economy remains on-hold. As we … Read more

NWPP Appreciation Awards

NWPP Appreciates You!

Since NWPP’s founding in 1969, volunteers, community partners, donors, funders and business partners have been critical to the success of this agency.  Our annual Appreciation Awards celebrate and show special gratitude to some really extraordinary people and groups whose contributions have been critical to the work of the agency this past year.  NWPP is so fortunate to have a multitude of supporters without whom it would not be possible for us to fulfill our mission.  Thank you to each and every one of you!

 

Program Impact Award: recognizes a significant contribution to our Senior Housing Program

 

Melinda Thompson

NWPP’s Housing Team works collaboratively with many community partners and housing specialists throughout Multnomah County. Our success as an organization comes from the strength of our relationships with these partners, which allows NWPP to effectively access affordable housing options for hundreds of clients every year. Over the last six years, NWPP has had the good fortune to work with Melinda Thompson, a Housing Occupancy Specialist with the organization Relay Resources. As an organization, Relay Resources owns and operates twenty-one properties in it’s portfolio as part of its mission to create opportunities for people to overcome barriers, achieve independence, and realize a stronger sense of purpose. Part of Melinda’s role as a Housing Occupancy Specialist is to facilitate the complicated application process required to secure an affordable housing unit through Relay Resources.

Over the years, the NWPP Housing Team has appreciated the compassionate and responsive nature Melinda brings to her role, and her flexibility to work with sometimes tricky client circumstances. Her sense of teamwork and collaboration makes the often herculean task of securing housing for our low-income senior clients much more manageable and usually ensures that NWPP’s clients get off the streets and into safe, affordable housing within a matter of days.

In response to being honored with the NWPP Program Impact Award, Melinda shared:“We all are working towards the goal of housing people in need as quickly and efficiently as possible, making their lives more complete.  Thank you so much for the honor of this recognition, but it is definitely a team effort between Relay Resources and NWPP.”

 

Community Impact Award: acknowledges the engagement of volunteers in supporting NWPP clients and services

 

Youth Charity League

Northwest Pilot Project has always relied on community support to meet our organization’s mission of offering opportunities for a life of dignity and hope to very low-income seniors. Throughout the first several months of the COVID-19 pandemic, our organization relied heavily on our network of partners as we continued to find affordable housing for our senior clients, the most critically affected population, and also provided essential items to our senior clients already in housing. 

Thankfully, during this period of chaos and quarantine, NWPP had the support of the outstanding family-oriented volunteer organization Youth Charity League (YCL). Founded by Portland mothers who wanted to create a sense of community service and civic responsibility in their children by modeling that behavior and engaging in volunteer activities together, this multi-generational organization became a valuable in-kind supporter of our low-income seniors. Over the last few months, the families of Youth Charity League have provided our seniors with furniture, essential cleaning supplies, and helped re-stock NWPP’s supply of hygiene items for our seniors living at zero income. This windfall of support was so impactful to NWPP during a time where everyone is struggling.  It speaks to how incredibly invested Youth Charity League is in supporting their community during a crisis.

In response to being honored with the NWPP Community Impact Award, YCL co-founder Kate Begonia shared: “The partnership between YCL and NWPP was an instant fit. YCL works to grow the next generation of inspired, positive change makers by fostering a commitment to community service in youth and modeling that behavior in our own lives. With NWPP’s partnership, we have had the opportunity to serve the most vulnerable in our community and also learn about the positive impact just one bedding kit or a dozen care kits make to the seniors in our community. We are excited about future service projects with NWPP, thank you!”

 

Steve Cox

I so appreciate this Community Impact Award,” Steve shared with us, “but I know there are many others out there doing so much more who deserve the recognition.” We disagree!!  For those of us at NWPP, we see in Steve what we would like to see in ourselves: compassion, caring, and a great sense of humor.  Steve served for six years on the NWPP board, bringing a strong understanding of community engagement, public relations (he was honored in 2013 by the Portland Metro Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America) and a love of seniors. Steve continues to support NWPP as a volunteer and fundraiser for NWPP’s annual Walk-A-Thon; and participates and manages the employee-led PGE/NWPP volunteer collaboration, Take a Senior to Lunch Program, which is how Steve connected with NWPP many years ago. It is because of his dedication to the seniors in the Take a Senior to Lunch Program that NWPP has chosen to honor him with the Community Impact Award.

In March 2020, when COVID-19 made in-person lunches impossible for the Take a Senior to Lunch Program, Steve took it upon himself to continue providing a delicious meal to the seniors. Every month since March, Steve has contacted each senior for their order, placed the order, picked it up at the restaurant, and then delivered the meal in a physically-distance manner to each senior’s apartment. It is an extraordinary act of kindness for a group of isolated seniors who don’t have much contact with the outside world.  

Steve shared with us why he does this: “I truly believe there is no better way to pay it forward than to extend a helping hand to our elders. At some point in our future lives, we will all need a friendly hand to steady us, even if just for a moment. I accept this on behalf of the many seniors who have brightened my life over the years with their wisdom, their perseverance, their vigor, and vulnerability.”

 

Agency Impact Award: recognizes a significant contribution that provided a transformative opportunity for NWPP

 

Mary and Tony Wawrukiewicz

Mary and Tony have been part of the NWPP family for over 30 years.  Tony is a retired physician and a passionate philatelist, collecting, researching, and writing about the history of US stamps.  Mary is a community activist and volunteer, who in 1999, received the Spirit of Portland award.  Both Mary and Tony are community-minded and generous, supporting multiple organizations critical work to help vulnerable populations, especially seniors.  Mary volunteers at the Senior Center at Neighborhood House, doing mending and jewelry repair.  The ongoing support from the Wawrukiewicz’s has enabled hundreds of seniors to live in safe and stable affordable housing.  We are so grateful to Mary and Tony for their belief in our values, vision and mission and of their support of Northwest Pilot Project and the seniors we serve. 

Mary and Tony told us they“are proud of our ability to facilitate housing the elderly in Portland.”

 

The PGE Drive Change Fund

PGE has long been a partner of NWPP, providing funding for our services and volunteers for our board.  In the summer of 2019, PGE provided the community with an outstanding opportunity through the newly created Drive Change Fund: the chance to secure funding to purchase an electric vehicle and charging station.  After a competitive application and interview process, NWPP received the grant award that allowed us to buy an electric car to replace our aging van for regular, daily rides. 

Dan Janosec, Grants Manager at PGE, says, “We are honored to receive the Agency Impact Award! Only by working together will we build a clean energy future for all Oregonians. We are grateful to the Northwest Pilot Project for their partnership and the services they provide to seniors in need of safe, reliable, and (now) electric transportation. This recognition signifies that the PGE Drive Change Fund is building strong community partnerships so needed to further transportation electrification in our most vulnerable populations. Ultimately, this work would not be possible without PGE customers and the Oregon Clean Fuels Program, and we thank them for their support.”

 

Thank You all!

Northwest Pilot Project’s Commitment to Racial and Social Justice

Northwest Pilot Project strongly condemns the brutal police killing of George Floyd, and we recognize that his death was tragic, unnecessary, and preventable.   We realize that his murder, along with the extrajudicial killings of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and countless others, are among the many examples of systemic repression and disregard for Black lives … Read more

NWPP Partners with Metro 300

Northwest Pilot Project (NWPP) is pleased to announce that we will be a partner in housing low-income seniors in Multnomah County as part of the “Metro 300” project funded by Kaiser Permanente.  The project was announced January 20, and will launch in late January/early February 2020. Kaiser’s total investment of $5.1M in this project will provide … Read more

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