A Family Planning Legend Moves On to Support the Next Generation
Abstract
It was mid-June when we got to sit down with Dorothy Mann, who was set to retire from 33 years at the Family Planning Council at the end of that month. Dorothy admitted it was hard to believe it had been 33 years, observing, “I reinvent my job every two years” to create growth and diversity. But, Dorothy also allowed, “I’m retiring from the Family Planning Council, but not from work, because I found something I really want to do next.” Before Dorothy would spill her beans about her new and exciting endeavors, we sat down to interview a phenomenal woman leader and legend in her own right.
When you think about Title X and family planning, the first person who comes to mind for those of us in health care is Dorothy Mann. Dorothy took over the Family Planning Council (FPC) in 1977 and took it from a small nonprofit agency to the fifth-largest agency of its kind in the country. “We see 155,000 patients, and only California, New York, Texas and Florida state planning programs surpass us in size.” The FPC’s growth has not happened by accident. Dorothy steered her organization’s growth and success by successfully creating very deliberate and thoughtful partnerships. She operates by instinct and gut, and it’s paid off. “Mutual trust is the key ingredient to all relationships, and at the end of the day relationships are everything,” she says. It is how Dorothy has been so successful in finding partners that enhances the mission of the FPC. And “once you are in [as an FPC partner], you’re in.” In Dorothy’s more than three decades with the organization, only once was a partner agency defunded.
Dorothy says that if a program struggles or is failing, it’s not the program’s fault; in her estimation, in that situation, the FPC is not doing its job to support the organization. Throughout her tenure, she has advocated for her partner agencies on issues ranging from securing funding to changing a state or local policy. And those who have worked with Dorothy over the years know that, when she wants something, she is impossible to resist. She proudly admits, “I will jerry-rig to get to yes, whatever it takes.”
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Copyright (c) 2011 Tine Hansen-Turton, Nicholas Torres (Author)

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