Executive Director, Age-Friendly Rhode Island

headshot of Catherine Taylor

Catherine Taylor is an aging and dementia policy expert, seasoned administrator, and advocate for older adults and people with disabilities. She worked for the last four years as Senior Advisor for Policy, Partnerships and Community Engagement at the George & Anne Ryan Institute for Neuroscience and the Rhode Island Geriatric Education Center (RIGEC) at the University of Rhode Island. She continues to serve as project advisor at the U.S. Health Services and Resources Administration (HRSA)-funded Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program at RIGEC. She has also worked as a clinical specialist at Seven Hills RI, consulting on a U.S. Administration for Community Living grant to make the system that serves individuals with intellectual disabilities dementia-capable. She is a Commissioner of the Rhode Island Governor’s Commission on Disabilities, and a member of the board of directors of the National Association for Geriatric Education.

Ms. Taylor, a two-time candidate for statewide office, is the former director of the Rhode Island Division of Elderly Affairs, and former owner of a small business, LangTaylor, that specialized in strategic consulting for government, nonprofit and corporate clients. She previously served for 20 years as a legislative assistant and speechwriter for Senator John Chafee and later Senator Lincoln Chafee. Ms. Taylor is an active community volunteer, currently serving as president of the board of directors of FirstWorks and as trustee of the Church of St. Sebastian. She is a graduate of Yale University. Ms. Taylor and her husband, attorney Robert Taylor, are the parents of four children and live in Providence.

Catherine has strong ties with RIC going back many years, having guest lectured in classes and spoken at campus events on aging issues, worked closely with RIC faculty affiliated with the RI Geriatric Center, and originated the collaboration between the School of Nursing and the RI Office of Healthy Aging (formerly the RI Division of Elderly Affairs) that taps RIC nursing students as volunteer respite providers for frail elders, adults with disabilities, and children with special health care needs.