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Leadership & Staff

Robert H. McNulty
President and Founder, Partners for Livable Communities
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Jessica Scheuerman
Executive Director and Founder, Partners for Livable Omaha
Vice President, Partners for Livable Communities
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Penny Cuff
Vice President, Programs and Administration, Partners for Livable Communities

Laura Lee
Vice President, Finance, Partners for Livable Communities

Melanie Bourne
Communications, Partners for Livable Communities
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Irene Garnett
Senior Associate, Partners for Livable Communities

Noreen Banks
Executive Assistant to the President, Partners for Livable Communities

 

Robert H. McNulty

Robert H. McNulty, founder and president of Partners for Livable Communities, is known primarily for persuading local officials to view public and private partnerships as a resource for revitalizing cities in the Americas. He has a distinguished background in design and planning, having been a Loeb Fellow in 1973-74 at the Harvard Graduate School of Design; lecturer, adjunct professor, and acting Director of the Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at Columbia University’s School of Architecture. He formerly sat on the Alumni Council of Harvard’s Graduate School of Design.

For the past 40 years, Bob has led Partners to become the national leader on issues of livability and better communities. A network of over 1,000 organizations ranging from the World Wildlife Fund to the Urban Land Institute, Partners embodies the diversity and consensus-building needed in the recovery of the American city.

Bob, a fourth-generation Californian, grew up in Oakland. He graduated from business school at the University of California-Berkeley with a focus on real estate. After working Safeway Stores as a property-acquisition planner, he graduated from law school at Boalt Hall, University of California, Berkeley, in 1965 and joined the California bar that same year. He went on to serve in the U.S. military forces in Germany from 1966-67. He and his wife thereafter traveled extensively in North Africa and Eastern Europe.

In 1968, upon returning to the States, Bob joined Colonial Williamsburg as an archeological assistant to Ivor Noel-Hume, dean of historical archeology in this country. He then moved to the Smithsonian Institution, where he became the research assistant to Daniel Boorstin, Director of the National Museum of American History. Two years later, Bob became Director of Environmental Programs at the General Services Administration, charged with establishing compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act in areas ranging from historic preservation to control of pollution sources from federal properties. In 1972, he transferred to the National Endowment for the Arts where he became Assistant Director of NEA’s Architecture and Environmental Arts Program, pioneering the series of small grants to local municipal authorities to improve the climate of economic well-being in their communities. These grant programs—variously described as City Edges, Livable Cities, Neighborhood Conservation—set a new tone for the role of aesthetics and amenity in community economics and social concern. The programs led the Chairman of the Endowment, Nancy Hanks, to collaborate with Bob in 1977 on forming Partners for Livable Places, a nonprofit organization that advances the economic and social resources of design, planning and quality of life to improve communities.

Partners has become the national leader on issues of livability and better communities. A network of over 1,000 organizations ranging from the World Wildlife Fund to the Urban Land Institute, Partners embodies the diversity and consensus-building needed in the recovery of the American city.

Robert McNulty has been a frequent writer, editor and contributor on urban strategies over the last twenty years. He served as researcher/writer on the “urban” section of Use of Land in 1972; editor of By Design published in 1976. McNulty was guest editor of the Journal of Architectural Education of the American Institute of Architects on historic preservation in America in 1976; co-editor of Neighborhood Conservation in 1976; editor of the Economics of Amenity in 1985 and the Return of the Livable City in 1986 and the Entrepreneurial American City in 1986. He was editor of the Better Cities Book in 1989. McNulty contributed a chapter to Henry Cisneros’ book, Interwoven Destinies on quality of life in 1993; and was writer and co-editor of the State of the American Community report in 1994.

Robert McNulty has also written for the Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, the Atlanta magazine, and the California Monthly magazine.

Bob has traveled extensively in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Pacific, Australia and the Caribbean. He is an accomplished speaker and has been a lead presenter at such diverse gatherings as a Public-Private Partnership Forum held by the Chamber of Commerce of Istanbul and the Ditchley Forum on Urban Affairs between the United States and UK.

Jessica Scheuerman

Jessica Scheuerman is a placemaking consultant, nonprofit founder and writer. Her expertise includes the animation of public space, arts-based economic development within underutilized commercial districts, and the social and economic wellness of communities undergoing demographic change. In 2020, she founded the Omaha-based nonprofit Partners for Livable Omaha and serves as its executive director.

In 2010, Scheuerman began developing neighborhood-based placemaking projects aimed at transforming vacant retail spaces into cultural and commercial destinations in Washington, D.C. In 2012, she returned to her hometown of Omaha to manage the launch of the Carver Bank project, with internationally recognized artist Theaster Gates, Chicago-based Rebuild Foundation and the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts.

Scheuerman is also vice president of Washington, D.C.-based Partners for Livable Communities, where she began her career in 2007. With Partners for Livable Communities, she has written extensively concerning creative responses to America’s aging crisis and is the editor of Mobilizing Arts and Cultural Resources for Community Development.

Scheuerman's work has been supported by ArtPlace America, the D.C. Office of Planning, MetLife Foundation, Kresge Foundation, the National Endowment of the Arts, The Sherwood Foundation, and numerous Nebraska-based sponsors. She is the founder of the Mayberry Neighbors neighborhood association in Midtown Omaha. She has a Master of Science in Urban Studies from the University of Nebraska at Omaha and a Certificate in Project Management from Georgetown University. 

 

 

 
 
 
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