Early life
Penney was born in Oceanside, New York, the daughter of Arthur Penney and Audrey Stiefel Penney. Her mother was a teacher and her father was a civil engineer. She graduated from Empire State College, and in 1980 earned a master's degree in library science at the University at Albany.Career
Penney, who identified as a psychiatric survivor, was the first Director of Recipient Affairs at the New York State Office of Mental Health when the position was established in 1992. She was a founding member of the National Association of Consumer/Survivor Mental Health Administrators in 1993. In 1997, she was keynote speaker at a conference of the New Jersey Self-Help Clearinghouse. As director of historical projects from 2001 to 2003, along with photographer Lisa RInzler and psychiatrist Peter Stastny, Penney worked to preserve and study hundreds of stored suitcases left behind by patients of the defunct Willard Psychiatric Center. Together they created an exhibition, "Lost Cases, Recovered Lives: Suitcases From a State Hospital Attic", which was first mounted in the New York State Museum in 2004, and later thePublications
Penney work was published in academic journals, including ''Public Library Quarterly,'' '' Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal'', '' American Psychologist,'' '' Evaluation and Program Planning'', and '' American Journal of Bioethics''. She was also a poet; her work was published in several collections. With her husband, she co-founded and co-edited a literary journal, ''The Snail's Pace Review'', and a small press, The Snail's Pace Press.Personal life
Penney married Kenneth Denberg in 1988. He died in 2018. She died from cancer in 2021, aged 68 years, at a hospice in Albany, New York.References
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