As NeighborWorks America highlights stories about the work of individuals and nonprofits in our network, those stories may sometimes relate painful or traumatizing experiences. Isay Gulley's personal narrative includes her experience with threats and racism, which led to her determination for homeownership not only for her family, but for others in her community.
Isay Gulley believes you have to have more than a job; you have to have a goal and mission in your

Her memory of that time begins on the front porch of her home in Shorter, Alabama, with her mother and her sister. Two men, members of the Ku Klux Klan, had stepped onto her front porch, too. ”They told my mom she had 24 hours to vacate the premises or they were going to burn the house down,” relates Gulley. "In 24 hours, we were on a truck with as much as we could carry to a farmhouse about five miles away.”
Gulley's parents, who were separated at the time, had been in the process of buying their property. "I still have the deed,” she says. Instead, she, her sister and her mother began working on a plantation in order to cover the rent of a tiny house that never felt like their own. They picked corn and cotton. Shaken and angry, Gulley would tell herself: "Whenever I get grown, I want to buy a home and raise my kids up in their own place.”
It would be a safe place, too. Gulley and her husband realized those hopes with a starter house in Safety Harbor, Florida, and then a larger house in Clearwater, Florida. She helped build safe places for other families, too, as a leader and then executive director of Clearwater Neighborhood Housing Services, Inc. (CNHS).
A Coast Guard reservist, Gully spent the bulk of her career with the NeighborWorks network

When she started as an outreach officer in 1980, communities in Clearwater faced a host of challenges, including code issues and the displacement of individuals who had lost their jobs. Banks were redlining. "Community pride was low,” she says.
CNHS was charged with fostering change, with Gulley at the helm. She is quick to point out that the achievements in Clearwater didn't come just because of CNHS. "We couldn't do it by ourselves. We joined forces with the public and private sectors, the business community and the community-at-large.”

One day, as she was taking leaders from Bank of America on a tour of properties, a leader asked if there was anything else Bank of America could do to help achieve revitalization. "I drove the van right into the complex and I stopped,” Gulley says. "One of the bankers asked: 'Do people really live here?' At that very time, a little old lady walked out the front door. It put a spark in the banker's heart.” The bank became one of the revitalization effort's seven partners, which included NeighborWorks America. NeighborWorks provided $200,000 to CNHS so it could be a partner with ownership interests. CNHS was able to register the development with NeighborWorks' multi-family initiative.
Gulley is proud that "What made it easier to stay all those years is partners like NeighborWorks America,” Gulley says. "I wouldn't have stayed this long if I didn't have the support. There are a lot of people I got close to over the years.” That includes NeighborWorks CEOs across the country – she believes she knows every one of them. And that includes Regional Vice President Donald Phoenix.

Gulley's "lessons learned” from her time as CEO include:
- You have to be mission-driven. "Something has to connect you to the mission to make you want to drive that train,” Gulley says. "You've got to have your motivational factors from within.”
- Patience and more patience. "One of the things I tag in my life is the serenity prayer: You have to accept the things you cannot change, change the things you can, and have the wisdom to know the difference. I live by that.”
- Share your successes. "Share those successes and bring others along to celebrate.”
- Overcome your fear of failure. "Some leaders don't want to try because they think, 'What if I fail?' You've got to overcome that. You've got to learn endurance.”
"I told my kids my motto is 'I want to live, not just exist,'” she says. "You live and you give of yourself to help others.”