
Wayne Ho
Chinese-American Planning Council
(he/him)
Wayne Ho is the President and CEO of the Chinese-American Planning Council (CPC), the nation’s largest Asian American social services agency. With a mission to promote the social and economic empowerment of Chinese American, immigrant, and low-income communities, CPC serves over 80,000 community members in the areas of education, family support, and community and economic empowerment at 35 locations throughout New York City. During his tenure, CPC has opened a new mixed-use building with over 200 affordable housing residences and a community center for expanded services to over 15,000 community members in Manhattan, co-led successful advocacy efforts to secure $30 million from the State and $5 million from the City to promote Asian American recovery and safety, overseen campaigns to promote living wages for human services and home care workers, and been quoted in over 500 news stories. Previously, Wayne served as Chief Strategy and Program Officer for the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies (FPWA), an association of 200 community and faith-based member agencies aiming to promote upward mobility of underserved New Yorkers, from 2013-2017, and was the Executive Director of the Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF), the nation’s only pan-Asian children’s advocacy organization, from 2004-2013. Wayne has been recognized by City and State in the inaugural Asian Power 100 in 2020, in the inaugural Nonprofit Power 50 in 2018, and as a 40 Under 40 New York City Rising Star in 2014. He was one of 10 leaders invited to meet with President Obama during the White House’s Asian Pacific Islander Heritage Month Celebration in 2011. Wayne serves on numerous nonprofit boards, including the Human Services Council and Coro New York Leadership Center, and is appointed to several New York City and State advisory boards, including the NYS Not-for-Profit Contracting Advisory Committee and NYC Independent Budget Office. Wayne received his Bachelor of Arts from UC Berkeley and his Master in Public Policy from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.