Pauline
M. Seitz is the Director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Local Funding Partnerships (LFP) program office, located at the Health Research and Educational Trust (HRET) of New Jersey. She has extensive experience building partnerships within the philanthropic community.
From 1987 to 1994 Seitz worked at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) as a program officer and then as a senior program officer. During her tenure she was responsible for a portfolio of grants including multi-site programs on nursing and school-based health centers. She also helped create the foundation’s original local funding partnerships program.
Seitz left RWJF in 1994 to become the program’s fulltime director. From1995 to 2001 Seitz also assumed the directorship of New Jersey Health Initiatives, another RWJF program office that was co-located at HRET.
Earlier in her career Seitz was director of the Nurse-Midwifery Faculty Practice at Case Western Reserve University School of Nursing, where she served as an instructor and clinical instructor.
She is past president of the Council of New Jersey Grantmakers and a former member of the National Board of Directors for the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers.
Seitz received a bachelor’s in nursing from Georgetown University, a master’s in midwifery from Columbia University, and a Master of Public Administration degree from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. She was a 1998 Leadership New Jersey Fellow.
Curtis
E. Holloman became a Deputy
Director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Local Funding Partnerships (LFP) in 2006.
Previously he served as Deputy Director of the
Southern Rural Access Program, another RWJF national
program office, where he worked on improving access
to health care in rural underserved communities.
During that time he was also the principal consultant
for the Health Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA) Delta States Initiative, a federal grant-funded
effort to help improve the health of people who
live in the Mississippi Delta region.
Earlier in
his career Holloman served as local Health Director
in two North Carolina counties. Among many issues
he worked to provide infant and child health care,
safe drinking water, and access to obstetrical care for low-income and migrant
women. He created public and private health partnerships and worked with non-profits
and faith-based organizations to prevent and treat chronic and urgent health
conditions in local communities. He was formerly Associate Director of Operations
for Robeson Health Care Corporation, a consortium of community health centers.
Holloman
was a legislative intern with the US House of Representatives.
He studied public administration and political science,
earning his master’s degree
at Appalachian State University and his bachelor’s at the University of
North Carolina at Pembroke.
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