Thursday, August 13, 2009

Sarah W, Northeast PA

I can’t believe this is it…


Last Saturday we table at NEPA PrideFest in Kingston. On a serious note, it was a really great experience and we got lot of post cards signed for both Sex Ed and Health Care. However, there were some very comical parts too. My favorite was this little five year old girl that just walked up to the edge of our table and just stared at me. Obviously she thought that we had candy or toys to pass out, however; all I had was a huge basket of condoms—definitely not appropriate for a 5 year old! So she just kept staring at me for what felt like an eternity. Finally her mom came over. This little girl looked up at her mom, pointed to the condoms and said "Mommy, what's that?" (Perhaps she thought I was holding out on her and really did have candy?). In response all her mom said is "Honey, those are for adults, and hands her a lollipop." It was great.


Yesterday, Anne came up for her final visit. I cannot believe that it has already been 10 weeks. I am optimistic that the work that we did on Sex Ed and Healthcare will be effective.


I also want to say ‘Thank you’ to Anne, Sara and the other staff members that helped make this internship possible. And I want to say “Hey” to the other interns, even though we weren’t all together; we’re working together for the same thing! I wish everyone the best of luck in everything they do!

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Sarah P, Southeast PA

As we reach the end of our internship, our focus has made an exciting shift to include Health Care Reform as well as sexuality education. Taking on this new campaign has meant doubling our efforts: now we do two phone banks a week, one for sex ed and one for health care reform, and we have divided up our canvassing and tabling as well. HCR calls two weeks ago to "spank" legislators who had let us down were tough, while calls last week to urge people to attend town hall meetings went a little better, despite problems in Southeastern PA with Activate. At the Locust Street Center in Philadelphia we have also been doing other miscellaneous health care reform activities, such as making and decorating boxes for people in our health centers to put HCR postcards into. The other interns and I enjoyed about two hours of arts and crafts with this activity, cutting up information and images and other PP paraphernalia to decorate the boxes. We are planning on a HCR visibility event this coming Thursday, after the phone bank. However, sex ed is still central to our internship. We've continued to phone bank determinedly: during the latest phone bank I reached a woman who told me her daughter was in 4th grade so promptly that I thought this meant she was going to yell at me, but as it turns out she wanted her daughter to start learning sex ed as soon as possible.

For our latest canvass in Barbara McIlvaine-Smith's district we were rained out but were able to call through all of our walk sheets, which felt great. One woman who signed a postcard for me before the rain told me that she is a practicing minister with 5 kids who wants to come be a patient escort for us, as the protestors at the West Chester office are so vocal and aggressive. She said that she wanted the people who come to protest in the name of religion to see a religious person on the other side of the issue. Clarissa and I have also gotten several people who've selected the "make a contribution" box on their sex ed postcards. The support is exhilarating.

Tomorrow is the last late night phone bank, and I am definitely geared up for it and for the last week of the internship in general. It will be sad to have it end, but I feel like I've learned so much and have really developed my passions to extend to other areas of my life. I know that I will always care about and do what I can for sex ed and for health care reform, and I'm so grateful to Planned Parenthood and this internship for that!

Friday, August 7, 2009

Gemma, Northest PA

Sarah W and I are going into the last week of our internship in Northeastern PA. This summer went by so fast! We’re both really excited to be tabling NEPA Pridefest this Sunday. We haven’t been able to table an event yet, so I think this is going to be a great experience. We’ve still been having some challenges with our ability to go out and canvass (namely the weather). It’s been so frustrating to go to a turf and knock on doors for about an hour and then have it start raining. Other than that, Sarah and I have had fun and it has definitely been a great experience. I will miss having conversations at someone’s door about comprehensive sex ed and hearing a person’s story about why they support the issue. It’s really exciting to know that there are so many supporters out there and that people appreciate and are positively affected by the work Planned Parenthood does. It has been a challenging and very rewarding experience.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Juliana, Southeast PA

Everyone likes house parties…so what could be better than a SEX ED house party? The Southeast Interns hosted one at Haverford College last week. We publicized it through Facebook, had to reschedule once because of thunderstorms (what else is new?) but ended up having a very fun and successful evening! We managed to obtain over 25 signatures on our petitions for comprehensive sex ed. We also had a bunch of activities. First was a piñata filled with candy and condoms, but it was hit open on the second try – unfortunately, the participant in question was a baseball player. We also played Sex Ed Quizzo to educate guests about our political work in Pennsylvania, and we offered “Women’s Health Matters” T-shirts as prizes! Two of our supervisors, Alisa and Audrey, surprised us by showing up – needless to say, they won the Quizzo game, but graciously agreed to relinquish their trophies. Finally, we had a condom blowing-up contest – whoever could fill a condom with the most air and tie it off would win. However, the contest quickly converted into a game of condom volleyball. The Southeast interns also showed off our cooking skills – we made homemade spicy bean dip, hummus, salsa, and lemonade. All in all, it was a great way to involve our friends in the work we’ve been doing all summer – we highly suggest hosting one in your area!

Friday, July 31, 2009

Rachel, Western PA

Last week, Anna and I trekked to Westmoreland County to canvass in the towns of Mt. Pleasant and Ligonier. We are spoiled, as we are interning at an urban affiliate, mostly covering turf that lies less than 10 miles from the office, with semi-reliable public transportation to get us there. So a distant, more rural canvass was a bit of a shock to our city-scuffed shoes. After a terribly fraught journey to our meeting point for the Mt. Pleasant canvass, we decided that the pouring rain was not going to let up, and so our first taste of canvassing, Westmoreland-style, came the next day, in the small quaint town of Ligonier.

I had hoped that we would find more people at home than we typically do in Pittsburgh. It was a chilly day, threatening rain, and I reasoned that in a small town like Ligonier, there would be… well, less to entice people to leave their homes on a Saturday afternoon. I was wrong; the percentage of knocks that went unanswered was no less than in our many Pittsburgh canvasses. For the people we did speak to, however, there was an important difference.

Pennsylvania has no statewide guidelines for the teaching of sex ed (hence this internship) and from what I gathered, the education young people receive at schools in Ligonier is spotty at best. Mothers could break out with personal stories about the inadequacy of their children’s’ education. On the other hand, Pittsburgh public schools are required to provide comprehensive sex education, and try as we might, this fact stole the urgency from our conversations. Women in Pittsburgh would listen to my story, but then say “Well, my kids already get good sex ed, so I’m not interested,” or “I’m happy with the status quo in Pittsburgh, so I won’t sign.” Woman after woman produced something along these lines: “My kids are out of school,” “I don’t have kids,” “I teach my kids about sex myself.”

I try not to get frustrated, but I sometimes want to interrupt with “But what about all the other kids in Pennsylvania?” What about those kids stuck in a high school much like my own, that in lieu of a real sex education program, offers gruesome pictures of advanced STDs and a few quips about abstinence? I have encountered hardly any hostility towards my message, little denial of the benefits of comprehensive sex ed. But for some people, their thinking stops there, at their doorstep, at the boundaries of their school district. I wish I could inspire everyone with the passion I heard from those Ligonier women, somehow make them see that elsewhere in the state, children just like their own are being denied the education they need and deserve. But I guess that’s the point.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Anna D, Western PA

In the past seven weeks, I have learned a lot about how to communicate effectively and openly with people about politically charged issues like sex education and health care reform. Canvassing has been most interesting, mainly because of the interactions I have with our targets, but also because being on foot for hours at a time in concentrated sections of the Pittsburgh area gives me a new perspective on my hometown. It’s amazing the difference a few miles makes when it comes to the overall disposition of people towards Planned Parenthood.

Because Rachel and I have been mainly canvassing on Fridays and Saturdays, it is especially striking when we are in a rural or suburban area one day and a city neighborhood the next. Overall, we tend to get more positive responses from people closer to the city, and more "not home’s/refusals" from suburban and rural folks (of course there are exceptions). Personally, I most enjoy canvassing in what are stereotypically viewed as “depressed” or “bad” areas of town. My interactions in such areas have been for the most part with very supportive and kind people who seem genuinely interested in helping to get our bills passed. One of my favorite memories from one such canvass is this: after a really enthusiastic young woman signed my petition, we talked for several minutes about her views on the issues and the importance of sex education. She mentioned her toddler daughter several times, and said that as a mother she was especially grateful for the resources Planned Parenthood provides for young people. She even gave me a bottle of water as I was leaving. After I had walked several blocks, I stopped on a street corner to look at my map. A man came up to me and tapped me on the shoulder, asking “Are you Anna?” When I said I was indeed, and asked what I could do for him, he told me that his wife had ordered him to chase me down so that he could sign my petition too!

I really enjoy the work that I have been doing, both because I am excited to be working for a cause I believe in so strongly, and also because it can be so much fun! I have met so many great people and had such engaging conversations; my internship with Planned Parenthood of Western PA has truly made this summer a memorable and very rewarding experience.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Anna M, Southeast PA

Madeline, Juliana, and I just returned from our second trip to Washington D.C. this summer. After an 8 AM early morning train on Wednesday, we squished 8 people into a cab and made our way to L'Enfant Plaza hotel - the site of the conference. We were all extremely tired, but check-in wasn't for another five hours so we decided to explore the hotel a little before heading to the opening ceremony (where we met Cecile Richards!).

After that we shuffled to our respective break-out sessions on everything from the legislative process to using the media to your advantage. Juliana and I attended 'Campaigning from A to Z,' where by far the most useful information was the advice on how to start a Vox chapter at our school. It was an exhausting day of traveling and absorbing information so I didn't feel too lame when I called it a night and went to sleep at 10.

The next day was a whirlwind of Senatorial and Congressional lobby visits regarding community providers' roles in the new HealthCare Reform bill. Most staff that we met were encouraging yet realistic. They agreed that it would be an uphill battle when the issue of "federally funded" abortion emerged. Currently about 80% of insurance providers cover abortion procedures, and we just hope that after healthcare reform women aren't worse off than they are now.

On Friday, Madeline, Juliana, and I skipped out on the morning plenary session, hopped on the subway and tried to go get tickets to the Sotomayor hearings. Unfortunately we were one day too late, and all that was left of the long lines and ticket booth was a sad looking folded up white tent. Disappointed, we breezed through the senate buildings, hoping to run into Al Franken on our way back to the hotel.

The last three days offered an insightful look into the frustrating and long process of creating and passing a bill. When a piece of legislation is over 1,000 pages (as the Healthcare reform bill is) it's almost impossible for laymen/citizens to understand. And this is why grassroots organizing is so vital. Communities and individuals have to truly understand the impact that Washington DC has - and the impact that they have on Washington DC. It's easy to get caught up and discouraged by the political jargon, but it's important not to.

Sarah W, Northeast PA

I started this internship with ominous words from Representative John Yudichak—“Good luck with my constituents.” These words, for me, foreshadowed 10 weeks of doors slamming and completely unreceptive people.

The reality of the internship has been the opposite. (Ironically our most successful turf is in Nanticoke, Yudichak’s hometown.) People have been receptive to what we have to say about Sex Education. One of my favorite responses; “It’s against my religion, but I’m a pediatric nurse and I’ve seen how important it is. I’ll sign.”

It’s also been great to meet like minded people. This past weekend Gemma and I visited the Unitarian Universalist Church of Wyoming Valley, located in Kingston PA. The congregation was very welcoming, and many people approached us after the service with questions about both Sex Education and Health Care Reform!

Our time at the UU church really drove home the idea of it being a small world out there. I had recently contacted the director of NEPA PrideFest about the possibility of tabling at the event. At the end of the service, a gentleman approached me and asked if I was the same Sarah that had emailed him! We went on to have a great conversation and cannot wait to table at PrideFest! We also met a member of the board of directors of PP Northeast-MidPenn. Perhaps, in the most ironic twist of fate, someone mentioned that Todd Eachus, the representative for Hazleton, used to be a member of the congregation! It just so happens that Eachus’s district is one of our primary focuses for the internship!

Going into these last 4 weeks Gemma and I have a big challenge. We initially cut gigantic turfs—I’m talking 200 plus. So we are going to have to race to get them all done. We’ve worked out a system where every time we finish a turf we treat ourselves (in the form of a delicious snack). So hopefully, in the weeks to come there will be a lot of snacking!

Finally, on a more serious note:

To all the parents who read this blog,

Please, talk to your children about safety when they are home alone. I have repeatedly had children ranging from the age of 7 and up answer the door and tell me their parents aren’t home. Not only this, but they continue on to give me detailed information about where and when their parents will be back.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Sarah P, Southeast PA

During our first day at the Planned Parenthood office in Southeast PA, I was told by a protestor that I should be ashamed to work there. Of all the things protestors and opponents have said to me, this was possibly the hardest not to respond to, because I am so proud to be working for Planned Parenthood, especially on the issues of sexuality education and health care reform.

What makes me so proud, besides the utter import of our causes, is the wonderful group of women who intern with me, each with her own capabilities and strengths that make our team in Southeast PA so strong. I am also so proud of all the hard work that we do. We have been canvassing, phone banking, tabling, doing clinic advocacy and escorting until we can do it our sleep.

On Monday the interns in Southeast did crowd canvassing for the first time in Center City Philadelphia. Anna M. and I were so frustrated at first that no one would stop to talk to us, until we decided to approach people at bus stops- “captive audiences”. This worked so well, men and women were grabbing for the clipboards after they heard our explanation of the bills. One woman asked if she could list everyone she thinks would benefit from the bills. We were filled with confidence and encouragement, brushing off rejection and learning to relinquish our sense of shame- as Sara Reed told me would happen at action camp. Canvassing today, a man told Madeleine and me that we needed to “get educated” about eugenics and Hitler, but we refused to engage and we moved on, inspired by the importance of comprehensive sexuality education and by all the people who say, “We need it”. So far in this internship, I’ve developed my pride and been inspired. Let’s see what the second half brings.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Clarissa, Southeast PA

Recently we have been doing a lot of phone banks to strike up support for protecting women's health during the current health reform debate. These calls can be difficult as we usually don't know what we are calling about until a few minutes before the call and don't get a lot of time to prepare for the script. Furthermore, we use a computer program called "Activate" that dials all the calls for us and weeds out the answering machines. When working correctly, phone banking becomes pretty fast paced and there's not a lot of time to regroup and prepare before the next call. This of course can be frustrating, especially when we are talking to someone who has a lot of questions about whatever bill or amendment we are pushing for.

Despite all this, the most interesting thing about phonebanking can be the random responses from the callers. A surprising amount of women have already heard about these issues and have already contacted their representatives on their own. A few women have even mentioned that they prefer to work on the health care reform issue in their own community, and see following our requests as a conflicting action to whatever work they have already done.

There are also the women who are surprisingly receptive to our awkward scripts and genuinely listen to what we say. One woman was so quiet after I spoke that I was worried she had hung up on me, only to hear, "hold on....I'm thinking...okay yes, I'll do it!"

Of course, there are always the people who are ready to say "no"
before we've told them what we're calling about. One woman apparently said to one of our interns, "Honey, I'm Catholic and would do anything to stop you." The negative responses also seem to vary based on the area we're calling. While calling people in Pennsylvania, I received a considerable amount of hang ups. However, while calling Indiana, I had one woman take a full two minutes to apologize and excuse herself from making the two minute phone call to her representative. These responses can vary based on the time we're calling too. For example, last week we were phone banking during the Michael Jackson memorial service, and we definitely got a few women who said they were in the middle of watching it and honestly too emotional to help us out at the moment.

Sometimes we won't even get a chance to speak to the person we're calling on a count of her calls being screened by a controlling spouse. You'd be surprise how often these guys turn up, both in phone banking and canvassing. I don't know whether or not they feel they are doing their partner a favor, but just so you know, fellas, when you tell us "she's not interested," we don't take that as an answer until we hear it from the horse's mouth. Of course, not all of the men we reach are like this. A few men during our last phone bank called their representatives about women's health even when their wives or girlfriends declined.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Elissa, Harrisburg/York

Throughout the course of this internship, I have been met with minimal resistance. I have talked to only a small handful of anti-choice or abstinence only supporters. Some people remain very polite when discussing our differing beliefs, while at others have been extremely hostile. One person I met avoided saying the word “abortion” like the plague. Rather, she talked around “abortion” itself, and used the context of “pre-1973” (oh, the anti-choice glory days) and “post-1973” to describe her stance on Planned Parenthood.

Yet, I am continually impressed and surprised with the wide range of support I’ve received for real sex education and Planned Parenthood. There’s nothing more gratifying than receiving a c4-opt in from a pro-choice Catholic with a Virgin Mary statuette displayed in her front lawn! With such overwhelming support and after talking with dozens and dozens of people, I’ve noticed that my conversations usually go something like this:

Elissa: “Do you think students should learn both abstinence and prevention methods like condoms and birth contr---“
Target Person: “Yes, both!”

Often times, I can’t even finish the question before people so eagerly answer. I suppose it’s obvious---comprehensive sex education is the answer!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Madeline, Southeast PA

As one of the larger affiliates, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern PA has a lot of areas to reach and incredible numbers of supporters to gain. The thought of not only having to contact so many people, but also having to convince them of the importance of these two bills, was daunting at the beginning of this internship. Fortunately, we have all been able to meet people who need and appreciate our services, which have definitely made the large task at hand seem more manageable.

The sheer scale of our turf guarantees that we come into contact with people from a wide variety of backgrounds. Witnessing the differences in attitudes and knowledge-levels about reproductive health has really highlighted the desperate need for comprehensive sex education in Pennsylvania, especially in Philadelphia. Last weekend we tabled at a local community fair in northern Philadelphia, and I can’t even count how many times I was asked, by adults, what is was that we were handing out (they were condoms). One man of about fifty looked at our “swag” and asked if we were handing out teabags. I was shocked; how could adults not recognize a male condom?

It isn’t just in inner-city neighborhoods where our services are needed, either. When Anna and I were canvassing in a pretty wealthy town we met a mother who was caring for her drug-addicted daughter’s four children. Before she allowed her grandchildren to see their mother again, this woman wanted her daughter to have a complete bill of health, and was extremely interested in the services Planned Parenthood could provide her. This goes to show that our services and advocacy efforts are not only needed in the poorer neighborhoods of large cities like Philadelphia, as I’m sure many assume, but in more affluent and seemingly “better off” areas as well.

Susquehanna Health Fair: Lisa, Southeast PA

So far in this internship, the most interesting people I have met were from tabling at the Susquehanna Health Fair on the campus of Temple University. In my experiences canvassing and phone banking, many women were incredibly pressed for time. While they politely answered questions and produced emails, these women always seemed to be in a rush to get back to their lives. At the health fair, however, life seemed to move along at a slower pace. Although most of the people who stopped by the table were uneducated about comprehensive sex ed and contraception, many were curious and took the time to stop and ask thorough questions. One woman grilled me about both of the bills, and another wanted to know why comprehensive sex ed is such a pressing issue. Most of the people at the health fair seemed to be impartial about sex ed, never before realizing its importance in their lives or in their communities. Despite this neutrality, few were apathetic. Upon hearing about the statistics of comprehensive versus abstinence only sex ed, many of them began to recall shortcomings of their own sex education and eagerly signed the petition. While there were few who came to the table already passionate about sex ed, it was incredibly interesting to witness people’s realizations about the importance of it.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Investing In Our Youth: Rachel, Western PA

Garfield is one of those neighborhoods that straddles the vague line between “safe” and “unsafe” parts of the city of Pittsburgh. On one street, pedestrians stride smartly along leafy sidewalks, and students crowd into bohemian coffee shops, and a few blocks away, 60-year-old row houses crumble into decrepitude.

Canvassing here is an adventure. On the late-June afternoon when we walked these streets, several times I raised my hand to knock at a house, matching the number to my list, only to find the door plastered with eviction notices, gas shut-offs, maybe even a formidable “CONDEMNED” sign that made me drop my hand and scrawl “moved” onto my paper.

Our grassroots organizing activities this summer are touched deeply by the current recession. We have encountered an unusual number of defunct addresses and phone numbers; leading us to disconnected phones, boarded-up houses, or confused new occupants bewildered by the names we ask for.

These constant reminders motivate me to work harder; in times of economic turmoil, the attention of the public and the politicians often drifts far from health and education. These fields are often painted as soft and insubstantial, at least compared with the meatier business of trade and finance. The Pennsylvania state budget has bowed to these perceptions, slashing dozens of valuable education and health programs.

Our work is even more vital in times like these. How can we ensure the continual viability of our country and its people? The answer is a little cliché, but no less critical for this: invest in our youth. Young people today need a full and honest – in a word, comprehensive – education to prepare them to be contributing members of society. Pennsylvania’s schools are denying students this preparation for life, robbing them of the education that will help them lead a healthy, safe sexual life. If our young people are not healthy, how can they revitalize our ailing economy?

A lot of people will tell me that this is a stretch; that connecting the Healthy Youth Act to our country’s economic well-being is a political wordgame. But our day canvassing in Garfield convinces me otherwise. From the 62-year old lady who described in a low voice the young people – the children, really – who were getting pregnant or contracting STDs in the neighborhood; to the 25-year old women with the 8-year old son who, this early in her career, is already playing catch-up, the people I talked to provided compelling evidence that comprehensive sex education is essential for our country’s well-being. And that’s worth knocking on a hundred empty houses.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Gemma, Northeast PA

Sarah and I just finished the third week of our internship and so far it’s been complicated but very rewarding. We’ve realized flexibility is one of the most important parts of grassroots organizing. For example, we planned to go door-to-door three times during our second week, but it rained almost every day and we were only able to canvass once. Instead, we made phone calls and switched around the day of our data entry. One of my favorite parts of the internship (and one of the most frustrating) is that you have to think on your feet and be ready for anything. We’re also discovering that the more challenging something is, the more rewarding it is. On our first day out, almost no one was home and we had a high number of refusals. However, when we got our first petition signed, it felt amazing.

So many people have been supportive. It is so wonderful going to someone’s door and hearing her personal reasons behind supporting Planned Parenthood and comprehensive sex education. This past week, I spoke to a school nurse who works in the Hazleton school district and she told me nearly 70 students in the high school were pregnant last year alone. She’s been struggling with the school for most of her career to put comprehensive sex education into the curriculum and was very supportive of Planned Parenthood’s work. Its women like her who makes me proud to intern for Planned Parenthood and to play a role in making a positive and lasting change for students in Pennsylvania.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Week 2: Juliana, Southeast PA

“This has been a disastrous first couple of weeks.” That’s what Madeline just said after the other Chester County interns and I spent the day cutting six turfs, not realizing that our list of doors somehow included EVERYONE who lived in the area as opposed to just our target (women aged 25-60). So we recycled hundreds of sheets of paper and are now starting over.


I’m learning that grassroots organizing is just that – messy, complicated, but also so important. It’s been frustrating learning how to use the computer programs, forgetting to enter data, getting lost canvassing – and yet we’ve received so much positive feedback for our efforts. We tabled at the gay pride parade in Philadelphia and got 250 petition signatures while also meeting some really enthusiastic people. Certain individuals have stuck with me: the 60 year old grandmother I phone banked who had never heard of Planned Parenthood, but after I explained the services we offer, replied, “Well…you’re just trying to help people, right? …Then of course I support you.” The young mother in the health center who looked us in the eyes and thanked us for our work. The woman who assured us that she had her legislator’s phone number on speed dial and would call him immediately to urge him to vote for our sex ed bills.


For every frustration, there has also been gratification, and that’s what makes this work so worth it.

Monday, June 22, 2009

The first two weeks...: Anna, Western PA

Anna D from Pittsburgh here, two weeks into my Grassroots Organizing Internship with PPWP. I am very excited with how much on-the-ground work Rachel and I have already done: three canvasses, a phone bank, and tabling at Pittsburgh’s Pride festival! Canvassing has been quite rewarding so far-- the vast majority of people I’ve spoken with have been very receptive and supportive. Pride fest was loads of fun (and everyone loved the free chapstick and colorful condoms), it was like tabling at a giant party! I’ve had a few surreal conversations (on the phone: “No, comprehensive sex education actually does not include handing out condoms at elementary schools…”), been seriously scared by some aggressive Rottweilers, and got several compliments on my YNT t-shirt. Based on the successes of these first few weeks, I am looking forward to a busy and productive summer!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Healthy Youth Summer 2009

Throughout this summer, thirteen PPPA interns spread throughout Pennsylvania will be blogging to tell the story of their grassroots organizing internship experiences.

Twelve interns have been placed around PA to gather active support for comprehensive sex education:

Anna D & Rachel in Western PA
Sarah W & Gemma in the Northeast
Michelle & Elissa in Central PA
Lisa, Juliana, Sarah P, Madeline, Anna M, & Clarissa in the Southeast.

One public affairs intern, Rhiannon, works in the state public affairs office in Harrisburg, the state capitol.