Nancy Amidei (1942-2025)

We’ve lost another great pillar of wisdom, strength, inspiration, and leadership. Nancy Amidei spent her life as a public servant, teacher, and social worker advocating for food, housing, and public health justice. From ‘saving brain cells’ through her work helping defeat Reagan’s attempt to make ketchup a vegetable in school lunches, through thousands of classes and workshops (and one book) on Advocacy 101, enticing young people to monthly meetings of the Partnership for Youth by bringing bags of chocolate (and bananas), organizing a ‘save public health’ Seattle group during the Great Recession–the only time I ever heard her tell us that she was pessimistic), to her wildly engaging and instructive ‘butter as votes’ story–oh how we admire and miss her.

I’ve already written about how and why Nancy motivated me to move across the country in 1994 to live and work in Seattle, a decision I’ve never regretted. I got to know and work with Nancy for over thirty years. I hope I have absorbed some of her passion, drive, and commitment to doing what’s right. I cannot remember why I took this photograph, but it is representative of the good feeling of having Nancy looking over my shoulder. Here is the podcast of my oral history interview with Nancy. We all have work to do…

Additional photographs of Nancy Amidei in action.

[image error]
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 13, 2025 15:09
No comments have been added yet.