Wendi Anderson
2007 Prize Winner
McCoy Village is a nondescript apartment complex on the busy intersection of Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Prescott Street. But walk inside its double doors and theres a large room filled with a dozen kids ages 7 to 13 busy doing their homework.
This is the office of the Giving Tree, a Portland-based nonprofit dedicated to providing disadvantaged, low-income people access to the arts, culture and recreation.
Founded in 2006 by Wendi Anderson, the Giving Tree already serves at least 50 to 70 people a week. Anderson spends 30 unpaid hours each week visiting people who are moving from homelessness into single-room occupancy housing.
When theyre in transition, they are given the basics, says Anderson, 34. A room with a bed, a dresser, clothes, food boxesbut thats just surviving.
Its the first time that theyve had four walls around them, she says. Its not the social environment that theyre used to, and they dont realize what is out there for them.
Andersons mission: to take those people out of their rooms to experience Portlandto First Thursdays, parks, the Oregon Zoo. The Giving Tree also provides a space for kids to come after school and do their homework. And in the summer, the Giving Tree hosts an all-day program with as many as 22 kids supervised by Anderson, who got into social services through her work as human-services coordinator for a property-management company.
One of the most rewarding parts of my job is seeing their eyes light up when they recognize somethingand get it, she says. They just arent surviving, theyre living.
The Giving Tree aims to expand its scope in the future. But what Anderson is really anticipating is watching the kids she is working with grow up.
Ive helped a couple apply to college, she says. But its so hard to get older kids to come, because theyre like, Its not cool.
When she talks to the younger kids about college, she doesnt say, If you go to college.
I say, When you go to college, she says. And talk like its reality.