Skip to content

Can We Be Friends? Yes We Can.

Evergreen turns to THRED to help students with disabilities form bonds

By Seattle Mag June 16, 2025

Adults from the Evergreen Transition Program, including students with disabilities, sit and stand around a table working on an art project with markers in a classroom setting.person
Photo courtesy of Bellevue Schools

This article originally appeared in the May/June 2025 issue of Seattle magazine.

When Aaron Chasan isn’t running around Seattle wearing a bear suit giving out hugs to help quell the Seattle Freeze, he’s busy running THRED, a company that helps people develop meaningful relationships based on shared interests.

Among his favorite and most important clients is the Evergreen Transition Program, a public school that provides services to students with disabilities ages 18-22 in the Bellevue School District, including vocational training and life skill support.

THRED created structured, interest-based connections for students, including holding several events (a Valentine’s party and group connection party) complete with prizes for participation. Activities revolved around “stitch stations” to determine common interests. Research shows that social connection is particularly important for students with disabilities once they’re on their own.

Learning how to create and maintain those relationships made all the difference for Evergreen students Samuel Wong and Magen Glasgow.

“I want to keep connecting with (my stitches),” Wong says. “They are really nice and match my energy too.” Adds Glasgow: “After I graduate, I’m going to contact (my stitches) to hang out and go see a movie.”

THRED has had a major influence on Evergreen students’ social connections, says Adina Rosenberg, a special education teacher.

“Students who never would have talked to each other otherwise are doing activities together at our parties,” she says. “My hope is that this leads to students eating lunch together, inviting each other on outings, and hanging out outside of school.”

Follow Us

Learning to Pivot

Learning to Pivot

Liz Galloway, the founder of Brand Sanity Media, spent the past 15 years learning to grow and adapt within her industry’s changing landscape.

In public relations, you have to stay on your toes. This is a lesson that Liz Galloway, founder of Brand Sanity Media, has encountered many times over the years. “I have a lot of admiration for anyone who is consistent and resilient,” says Galloway, who in addition to launching her own PR firm six years…

Innovative Energy

Innovative Energy

Pioneer Square’s neglected metropole building gets a second life—and a sustainable upgrade—as a nonprofit hub.

After more than a decade lying vacant and in ruins, the Metropole, as its name implies, is once again a vibrant center of culture, industry, and influence. Located in the historic Pioneer Square neighborhood, the Metropole building was constructed in 1892 as the first major commercial project of Henry Yesler, the city’s wealthiest resident during…

Fresh Catch

Fresh Catch

With more than 30 years of marine-protection advocacy under her belt, Seattle Aquarium’s new CEO wants to spark a greater interest in conservation.

Peggy Sloan has long felt a draw to the Pacific Northwest. In the early ’90s, while working as a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration fisheries observer (a specialist who spends time on commercial fishing vessels to collect data), Sloan counted Seattle as her home base. So, when the opportunity arose more than 30 years later…

Resistance Turned to Resilience

Resistance Turned to Resilience

The Seattle Chinatown International District Preservation and Development Authority is celebrating 50 years of lifting up a neighborhood besieged by challenges from all sides.

On November 2, 1972—after a steady overnight rain cleared to leave a construction site near the King Street Station thick with mud—about 200 people gathered for the official groundbreaking of the Kingdome. A project that had seen its funding rejected several times by voters, the Kingdome was finally on its way, with the hopes that…