Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 City Year volunteers head leadership council

- ERIC E. HARRISON

City Year Little Rock is matching a baker’s dozen young women, age 18-24, emerging into the workforce with experience­d female mentors in a new program called the Women’s Leadership Council.

The launch for the program, “designed to enhance profession­al developmen­t for the education nonprofit’s AmeriCorps members who identify as female,” according to a news release, is March 8 (Internatio­nal Women’s Day) at the Women’s City Club in downtown Little Rock.

The program’s co-chairs, Dr. Creshelle Nash, medical director for Health Equity and Public Programs at Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield, and Stephanie Streett, executive director of the Clinton Foundation, are both among the mentors.

“I’m looking forward to learning something from these young women,” Streett says.

The inaugural class includes 13 AmeriCorps members; mentors come from the worlds of business, law, health care, education and other fields, “at various stages of their own careers,” Nash says.

Streett and Nash say their role is matching mentors with City Year participan­ts, “then create an atmosphere in which to break the ice and start relationsh­ips.”

“Mentees” will interact with their mentors at least once a month over a fourmonth period in the workplace and casually, each pairing taking place on its own terms.

For the first year, Nash explains, “We wanted to keep it organic.”

“We don’t want to overstruct­ure it,” Streett adds.

The idea, she says, is for the young women to spend “one-on-one time with people in positions in which they can see themselves,” build relationsh­ips, following which the young woman can “utilize those skills in other aspects of their careers.”

Streett, who co-chaired the City Year Little Rock board for 11 years, is now “just a member” of the board, “and

happy to be one.”

She served for eight years in the administra­tion of former President Bill Clinton, who, she explains, first encountere­d City Year in Boston while running for the White House in 1992 and wished to create an Arkansas branch. When she left the administra­tion in 2001, she helped put Clinton’s wish into effect with the help of Little Rock City Manager Bruce Moore.

Streett notes the approach of the 30th anniversar­y of Clinton signing, in 1993, the National and Community Service Act, which among other things led to the creation of AmeriCorps.

Nash, meanwhile, has been “a great friend of City Year” for many years, Streett says. The daughter of Clinton friend and associate Bob Nash, she was “top of mind” when it came to recruiting a “strong, dynamic woman would give of herself,” as Streett describes her.

Nash, who got her medical degree at the the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore in 1994 and earned a master’s degree in public health from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in 1998.

Back in Arkansas, she has worked for the Clinton School of Public Service, the Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and at UAMS’ College of Medicine.

She’s leading Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield’s efforts to address health disparitie­s in Arkansas and support the Blue Cross Blue Shield Associatio­n on its recently launched National Health Equity Strategy.

“My passion is health equity,” she says. “The core of that is education.”

City Year’s long-term relationsh­ip with the Little Rock School District is critical to its success, Streett adds: AmeriCorps members deliver one-on-one academic interventi­ons and whole-school support as student success coaches to students at Mabelvale Middle School, Stephens Elementary, Cloverdale Middle School and J.A. Fair K-8 Preparator­y School. The Women’s Leadership Council will now become part of their yearlong leadership developmen­t program.

Streett, a graduate of the University of Arkansas, now oversees the strategy and management of the Clinton Presidenti­al Center and the Clinton Foundation’s Presidenti­al Leadership Scholars program. She and husband Don Erbach are the parents of three teenage daughters.

The idea for the program, she explains, arose out of discussion­s with City Year executive director Jennifer Cobb, “because we recognized the importance mentorship has been in our own careers.”

Nash, who says she is still in regular touch with a mentor she has had for more than 40 years, says the goal is “planting the seed that grows into giving back.”

The launch of City Year Little Rock’s Women Leadership Council takes place 9:30-10:30 a.m. March 8 — Internatio­nal Women’s Day — at the Junior League of Little Rock, 401 Scott St. Visit cityyear.org/little-rock.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins) ?? Stephanie Streett (left) and Dr. Creshelle Nash co-chair City Year Little Rock’s new Women’s Leadership Council.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins) Stephanie Streett (left) and Dr. Creshelle Nash co-chair City Year Little Rock’s new Women’s Leadership Council.
 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins ?? Dr. Creshelle Nash (left) and Stephanie Streett are helping match 13 young AmeriCorps members with mentors in business, law, health care, education and other fields as part of City Year Little Rock’s new Women’s Leadership Council.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins Dr. Creshelle Nash (left) and Stephanie Streett are helping match 13 young AmeriCorps members with mentors in business, law, health care, education and other fields as part of City Year Little Rock’s new Women’s Leadership Council.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States