Sometimes a Great Podcast

The Big Picture Pod: The Many Roles of Michelle Sumner in D6 and Douglas County

29 min · 6 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Big Picture Pod: The Many Roles of Michelle Sumner in D6 and Douglas County

Descripción

Season 1, Episode 73: May 6, 2026 Length: 29:22 This week, we’re in Roseburg in Douglas County’s District 6 with Michelle Sumner, a resource developer in Child Welfare—and the mayor of nearby Sutherlin. Her work sits at the intersection of formal systems and informal networks, where relationships often matter as much as resources. The role of resource developer reflects a gap between what systems can provide and what families actually need. Through partnerships, grants, and local knowledge, Michelle helps bridge that gap by connecting families to support that doesn’t always fit within traditional structures. In a place like Douglas County, those connections are not abstract—they’re built on trust, familiarity, and presence in the community. That same network extends into her role as mayor, where many of the same challenges: housing, transportation, and access to services, appear in a different form. Rather than separate spheres, the two roles overlap, reinforcing each other. Community leadership becomes a way to translate lived experience into action, whether that’s improving transit access or coordinating responses to homelessness. Across both roles, one pattern stands out: credibility shapes access. It’s about trust built over time. Through conversation, consistency, and shared investment in place, all of which opens doors that systems alone cannot. In Douglas County, public service isn’t confined to a single title. It moves through relationships, adapting to what communities need and what individuals can offer. Credits Host: Dr. Bethany Grace Howe, Communications Produced by: Dr. Bethany Grace Howe Contact: bethany.g.howe@odhs.oregon.gov

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Season 1, Episode 78 — May 27, 2026 Length: 23:28 This week, The Big Picture comes from Grants Pass in Josephine County, where we sit down with Tanner Moss, achild welfare coaching and training specialist, and Brynn Orr, an intake worker in District 8, to talk about child welfare work in Southern Oregon and the distance between what people imagine rural communities are like and what lifethere actually is. The conversation explores the differences and similarities between Jackson and Josephine counties, from geography and road systems to small-town culture, farming communities, Cave Junction lore, and the everyday realities of traveling remote roads to meet families where they are. Tanner and Brynn describe a region that is often simplified from the outside, but much richer, more complex, and more surprising up close—sometimesincluding attack geese. They also talk about how assumptions shape the work. Whether it is the mythos around Cave Junction, stereotypesabout rural Oregon, or the natural skepticism some families may feel when child welfare staff arrive at the door, the episode returns again and again to the importance of humility, respect, and listening before deciding what a place—or a person—is. For Tanner and Brynn, the work means recognizing the power imbalance that comes with representing the state, beinghonest about it, and still approaching each family with dignity. It means remembering that a report may be missing context, that every interaction has nuance, and that trust is built by showing up as a person first—not as a stereotype, a title, or a government system with a clipboard. In the end, the conversation is about Southern Oregon as it actually is: beautiful, complicated, funny, resilient,misunderstood, full of good food, strong community, and people making a life in places others too often reduce to punchlines. From Grants Pass to Cave Junction and beyond, it is a reminder that understanding a community requires presence, curiosity, and respect—all while keeping people in focus in… The Big Picture. Credits  Host: Dr. Bethany Grace Howe, Communications Produced by: Dr. Bethany Grace Howe Contact: bethany.g.howe@odhs.oregon.gov

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Season 1, Episode75 — May 13, 2026Length: 25:18 This week, The Big Picture comesfrom Klamath Falls, where we sit down with Bethany Pillow, a public benefits specialist in District 11, to talk about eligibility work in a rural community. The conversation explores how the same job description can look very different depending on where the work happens. InKlamath County, transportation, job availability, changing program requirements, and limited access to services all shape the way people experience public benefits. A policy may be statewide, but its impact is local. Bethany describes the importance of community knowledge in eligibility work: knowing which partners to call, whichresources exist outside formal directories, and which supports may only be visible through word of mouth, Facebook pages, or relationships built over time. When someone is not eligible for ODHS benefits, that local knowledge can help make sure “no” is not the end of the conversation. The episode also reflects on the emotional weight of eligibility work—especially when people are losing benefitsor asking for help with deeply personal needs. In those moments, the connection between ODHS staff and community partners becomes essential. Gaps areidentified, networks respond, and sometimes new resources emerge because enough people notice the same need. In Klamath Falls, public service depends not only on policy, but on presence: listening closely, knowing the community,and helping people find support that may not be written down anywhere. Because sometimes the most important resource is the person who knows where to look—in the big picture.' CreditsHost: Dr. Bethany Grace Howe, CommunicationsProduced by: Dr. Bethany Grace HoweContact: bethany.g.howe@odhs.oregon.gov

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