The Community for Positive Aging has been successfully working to improve our capacity to increase our direct support for low-income + BIPOC seniors.
Our Equity Journey
As we thoughtfully work to be a more culturally inclusive and just organization, we recognize the complexities involved to bring about systemic change within our own organization.
We approach this important work with honest reflection and openness, hold ourselves accountable to move toward necessary change, and commit to:
Serve more BIPOC communities, starting with our absorption of the Giving Tree and Asian Food Pantry, and more broadly as we expand case management and other direct services.
Identifying, addressing and working to change institutional oppression within our organization so that staff, volunteers, the Board of Directors and those who partner with us will experience our work as inclusive.
Working to become more aware of whose voices shape our decisions and what voices are not heard. We must actively work to bring these voices to the forefront through board and staff recruitment, community partnerships, and other opportunities.
Holding ourselves accountable through transparency, evaluation and sharing our progress toward diversity, equity and inclusion goals.
Continuing regular meetings of our Equity and Inclusion Team and revising our equity statement and plan on an ongoing basis.
CFPA offers a message of solidarity
We are committed to making the necessary space to process and grieve these losses, and to do the work necessary for real change to take place.
Our Progress
Aging should never be a barrier to connecting people and resources.
Our board and staff represent the communities we serve, and we will work with our advisory council to guide us in our work. Over 60% of our board/staff are seniors. More than 50% of our volunteers have a disability & 95% are seniors. Our Senior Advisory Council is 90% senior run with 30% BIPOC, 10% immigrant or refugee, 70% people with disabilities, 10% LGBTQ, and 90% low-income - with 2 positions that overlap with the board. Our staff is 50% BIPOC, LGBTQ and/or with a disability. 35% of staff are over 50.
Three Advisory Council positions overlap with the board, reporting on the priorities and needs of the communities they represent. We provide support in English, Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese, Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian languages to interface with the many immigrant residents & clients we serve. Our diverse and representative team oversees that our programs are culturally and linguistically accessible (addressing the unique needs of our participants) and empowers CfPA to respond quickly to emerging needs.
60%
of our staff and board at CFPA are seniors
95%
of all volunteers with our organization are seniors
60%+
of volunteers identify as having a disability
Our Senior Advisory Council, a senior empowerment council representing and striving to be reflective of the greater community, is 90% senior run with 10% people of color, 10% immigrant or refugee, 70% people with disabilities and 10% LGBTQ.
We take this opportunity to thank the original caretakers of this land.
We acknowledge the land on which we sit and which we occupy at The Community for Positive Aging rests on traditional village sites of the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Bands of Chinook, Tualatin, Kalapuya, Molalla, and many other tribes who made their homes along the Columbia River creating communities and summer encampments to harvest and use the plentiful natural resources of the area (Portland Indian Leaders Roundtable, 2018).
To learn more about Portland’s diverse and vibrant Native community, please read Leading with Tradition, a document created by the Portland Indian Leaders Roundtable.
We recognize the sovereignty of Indigenous Peoples. Indigenous Sovereignty arises from Indigenous Traditional Knowledge, belonging to each Indigenous nation, tribe, first nation, and communities. It consists of spiritual ways, culture, language, social and legal systems, political structures, and inherent relationships with lands, waters and all that is upon them. Indigenous sovereignty exists regardless of what the nation-state does or does not do. It continues as long as the People that are a part of it continue. What is: Indigenous Sovereignty and Tribal Sovereignty.
Indigenous Peoples are the traditional stewards of this land and the enduring relationship that exists between Indigenous Peoples and their traditional territories. We acknowledge that we occupy the lands of the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Bands of Chinook, Tualatin, Kalapuya, Molalla, and other tribes.
CFPA commits to taking the following actions:
We will challenge and reject all stereotypes about Indigenous People. We will resist and challenge settler colonialism as a structural system.
We commit to learning accurate histories, cultures, and contemporary lives of the Indigenous People whose territories we occupy.
We will inform ourselves about issues impacting the local Indigenous communities and speak up.
We will insist that Indigenous Sovereignty be respected and upheld.
More information
Leading with Tradition: Native American Community in Portland
Beyond Land Acknowledgment: A Guide—Native Governance Center
A Call to Action-Oriented Land Acknowledgments in CBGL
A Guide to Indigenous Land Acknowledgment | The National Environmental Education Foundation (NEEF)
Rethinking Land Acknowledgments—Anthropology News
A Guide to Indigenous Land Acknowledgment—Native Governance Center
Hailey Tayathy (livestream)—Town Hall Seattle (Indigenous Land Acknowledgement Art Presentation)
To recognize the land is an expression of gratitude and appreciation to those whose territory we reside on, and a way of honoring the Indigenous people who have been living and working on the land from time immemorial. It is important to understand the long-standing history that has brought us to reside on the land, and to seek to understand our place within that history. Land acknowledgement does not exist in a past tense, or historical context: colonialism is a current ongoing process, and we need to build our mindfulness of our present participation. Colonial settlers who invaded and still occupy this land disrupted Indigenous societies and deployed all forms of violence to eliminate the first peoples. In acknowledging the painful history of genocide and ongoing attempted cultural erasure of Indigenous People, we have a responsibility to take action.
Financial Transparency
Dedicated to creating safe spaces and opportunities for older and low-income community members to thrive. We are committed to raising public awareness, transcending the stigmas associated with aging, and moving toward a more intergenerational future together.
Hollywood Senior Center dba Community for Positive Aging is a 501c (3) tax-exempt organization. Your donation is tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.