The people behind the mission

At Kiva Centers, our team is made up of individuals with lived experience who lead with empathy, integrity, and a deep understanding of what true peer support means. Together, we’re working to build a more connected, compassionate, and empowered community across Massachusetts and beyond.

Pronouns: She/Ella
E-Mail: bvezina@kivacenters.org

Brenda Vezina

Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director

Brenda Vezina is the Chief Executive Officer of Kiva Centers. Kiva Centers’ mission and vision are achieved through her dynamic leadership and close community involvement. She has over 30 years of experience working within communities of people who have experienced mental health issues, substance use, and all traumatic experiences as a program creator, administrator, and direct service worker. She was a founding member of the National Campaign for Trauma-Informed Policy and Practice. Brenda has led the United States in several federal efforts to center an understanding of community-run trauma healing in policy implementation.

Brenda is passionate about Domestic Violence Awareness and is a strong supporter of keeping families together in safe environments. She is also an active advocate in the state of New Mexico with communities wishing to create innovative solutions to enhance personal recovery, voice, and choice.

Brenda is a Board Member of the National Association for Rural Mental Health and an Advisory Committee Member for Brandeis University’s Lurie Postdoctoral Fellowship in Disability and Health Policy. She is the Executive Producer of the 2014 “Voice Award” honorable mention documentary What Happened to You, which speaks to the cause and effect of childhood trauma and public health. Brenda has supported the creation and implementation of peer-run organizations and Clubhouses around the world.
Portrait of Vesper Moore.
Pronouns: He/They
E-Mail: vmoore@kivacenters.org

Vesper Moore

Chief Operating Officer

Vesper Moore serves as the Chief Operating Officer at Kiva Centers. As an Indigenous activist and leader, Vesper is deeply committed to promoting mental health and disability rights through activism, leadership, organizing, public speaking, and education. Their work focuses on cultivating social movements and raising public awareness to foster lasting social change.

Vesper has contributed to the establishment of mental health organizations worldwide and has been an advocate for civil rights in the United States. Through their advocacy, they have brought the perspectives of people with mental health challenges and disabilities to both national and international platforms.

Collaborating with the United States government and the United Nations, Vesper helps shape strategies around trauma, intersectionality, and disability rights. They have been featured on NBC NewsPBS NewsHourPolitico, and at The White House. Vesper is at the forefront of legislative reform, striving to shift the societal paradigm surrounding mental health.

Pronouns: She/Her
E-Mail: dmcassidy@kivacenters.org
Phone: 508-751-9600

Donna Macomber-Cassidy

Director of Employee Services (Human Resources)

Donna is a Certified Psychiatric Rehabilitation Practitioner (CPRP), Certified Peer Specialist (CPS), and person with lived experience with mental health and trauma issues.  Donna has worked in the mental health recovery field since 1992.  Donna was a 2008 Eli Lilly Reintegration Award recipient for Mentorship.  She is currently the Director of Employee Services at the Kiva Centers and is a trained WRAP facilitator and Human Rights Advocate.  Donna is a firm believer in “nothing about us without us.”

Donna’s favorite authors are Jane Austen and Deanna Cassidy, and she likes to spend time with her 5 grandchildren, read, cook, figure out crossword puzzles, and binge watch British Period Dramas (Downton Abbey, Upstairs/Downstairs) and Agatha Christie murder mysteries (Miss Marple, Hercule Poirot), and occasionally a really bad monster movie (such as Tremors and Sharknado).

Pronouns: He/Him
E-Mail: aferriera@kivacenters.org

Aroldo Ferreira, CPS

Certified Peer Specialist Program Director
Aroldo Ferreira is the Director of the Massachusetts Certified Peer Specialist (CPS) Program. He oversees statewide certification logistics and leads the team responsible for developing and delivering training materials that prepare individuals to become Certified Peer Specialists professionals.
Since 2008, Aroldo has been an active leader in the mental health and peer support movement through the Central Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community (RLC), where he served as Program Coordinator and Director of Multicultural Affairs. Using his own lived experiences to inspire hope, he helped introduce peer support practices into most inpatient units across Central Massachusetts and beyond, coordinated Kiva meetings, built peer facilitator teams, and expanded peer support to diverse communities, including Latino, Brazilian, Young Adult, LGBTQIA+, and others.
Aroldo is an experienced multilingual trainer, leading and developing workshops such as Trauma-Informed Peer Support Facilitation, Wellness Recovery Action Plan (WRAP), Parenting Journey, and Trauma and Healing Dialogues.
Aroldo’s approach is guided by clarity, honesty. He is passionate about culture and human connection and values, learning about people’s beliefs, traditions, and lived experiences. His work is grounded in inclusion, mutual support, and creating spaces where every voice is heard and respected.”
Pronouns: She/Ella
E-Mail: jquinones@kivacenters.org

Jasmine Quiñones

Director of Programming & Peer-Run Respite Services

Jasmine Quiñones has been with the Kiva Centers for several years. Jasmine oversees the Kiva Centers Peer-Run Respites and has been a central part of the critical impact they have in communities throughout Massachusetts and supporting the inspiration these Peer-Run Respites offer to communities around the world.

She received the Angel Award in the Massachusetts South County Community Health Networking Area for two years in a row for excellence in community collaboration. She has been recognized by the Salvation Army for her collaborative community work as well as being recognized as an “unsung hero” of the Salvation Army’s Disaster Relief team. Jasmine has had the honor of working alongside ASSMCA Puerto Rico’s Services Administration for Mental Health and Addiction bringing the Kiva Centers model of Trauma-Informed Peer Support to their populations in need. Because of Jasmine’s coaching and dedication to the cause, Puerto Rico will soon be opening peer-run centers inspired by the Kiva Centers model throughout many areas of Puerto Rico. Outside of work, Jasmine is a mother of two wonderful children, who she loves to dote on. The beach is her happy place, where she goes to recharge her soul.

Pronouns: He/Him/His
E-Mail: cbassett@kivacenters.org

Cole Bassett

Director of Alignment

Cole Bassett serves as the Director of Alignment at Kiva Centers, where he works across the organization to ensure that trainings, support groups, community centers, and internal systems reflect Kiva’s mission, values, and trauma-informed best practices.

He brings his background as a Certified Peer Specialist (CPS) to this work, supported by training in psychology, disability studies, and public administration. Cole focuses on developing learning systems, operational processes, and knowledge infrastructure that strengthen program consistency and broaden impact.

His leadership centers on sustainability and cohesion across the organization. Cole’s vision is to empower recovery communities by building programs and systems that are unified in purpose, accessible in practice, and grounded in the lived experiences of the people they serve.

E-Mail: sacevedo@kivacenters.org

Shulamith Acevedo

Director of Development

Shulamith Acevedo is the Director of Development at Kiva Centers, where she leverages her lived experience and background in health care leadership to advance trauma-informed, peer-led, and equitable systems of care. She began her career as a Peer Bridger, supporting individuals re-entering the community after psychiatric incarceration.

Shulamith was instrumental in developing and securing funding for Kiva’s “Model A” peer respite—an innovative, community-integrated alternative to hospitalization centered on self-determination, healing, and continued support beyond crisis.

In addition to her program development work, Shulamith has coordinated with Brandeis University and the Disability Policy Consortium to study and improve access to long-term support coordinators for individuals dually enrolled in MassHealth and Medicare (OneCare). She has also designed and delivered multiple trainings for the peer workforce and for clinicians seeking to learn from lived experience, including Living with Suicide, Peer Supervision, and Cultural Humility trainings.

Shulamith holds a Master’s in Healthcare Leadership from Brown University. Outside of her professional work, she is a writer, avid hiker, martial artist, and lifelong seeker of joy.

Pronouns: She/her/hers
E-Mail: yalejo@kivacenters.org
Phone: (508) 751-9600 x203

Ydelca Paredes-Alejo

Director of Worcester RLC

Ydelca Paredes-Alejo, the Worcester RLC Program Director, is a dedicated mental health advocate. She is a Certified Peer Specialist (CPS) with experience in corrections and immigration, as well as supporting individuals with developmental disabilities, substance use issues, and trauma. Born in the Dominican Republic and raised in an immigrant family, Ydelca is committed to empowering others by tutoring Spanish-speaking individuals preparing for their naturalization tests.

Outside of her professional work, Ydelca is a passionate food lover who enjoys reading psychological thrillers, traveling, and spending time with her beloved Maltese, Lilly, along with her family and friends. Her diverse experiences and genuine compassion make her a strong force for positive change in her community.