Palmerston North While living in Palmerston North, Tanguay is credited with establishing the Ethkick football tournaments, which had the specific aim of "promoting diversity and intercultural friendship." Soon after moving to the area, Tanguay took on the role as head of Palmerston North's
Red Cross, became involved with community issues and set up a network of social activists that met most Sundays in her home. When this group asked her to represent them, her political career began when she ran for the Palmerston North City Council in 1995. Tanguay and her husband moved to Auckland in 2013 to be close to their daughters and grandchildren. She recalls that the shift to Auckland was "tinged with the same excitement" they had when moving from Masterton to Manawatu in 1987, but that they had "no intention of retiring" when they got to Auckland.
Auckland In Auckland, Tanguay established the Glen Eden Residents Association. In 2016, building on the work she had done in Palmerston North, she organised the Ethkick West football tournament, noting: "It's not just a football tournament, it's a celebration of diversity in the west. Everybody can play out there together and build a bridge between their communities." In 2018, Tanguay took a lead role in establishing three free roadside pantries in
Glen Eden as a part of the Pataka
Kai (food pantry) movement. Local Board member, Greg Presland noted that the initiative is
[a] "resident-led, grassroots, crowdsourced solution to helping locals that are in need..
[while]..at the same time, it builds and strengthens community." A 2018 petition, organised by Tanguay, entitled 'To save our precious waterways', was presented to the
New Zealand House of Representatives. The response was
[that] "currently, the
Minister of Local Government is leading a cross-agency review of New Zealand’s three waters system—drinking water, stormwater, and wastewater...
[and]...we note that the scope of the review includes the concerns raised by the petitioner." Over the course of eight years between 2013 and 2021, Tanguay and her husband Jerry have restored the Milan Bush Reserve through founding the association 'Friends of Milan Reserve'. Initiatives have included native vegetation planting, pest trapping, stream restoration, rubbish removal, and the installation of paths with botanical signs. Their efforts won them the RĀTĀ AWARD at the 2020 Ecomatters Love Your Place Awards. Tanguay is president of local charity 'Give a Kid a Blanket', which provides warm clothing and bedding for families in need. ==Honours and awards==