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The Quaker Voice Legislative Fellowship Program encourages the active engagement of fellowship holders in the state legislative process through mentorship, skill development, and partnering with legislative advocates in their work. Participants do not need to be Quakers. The program provides a $500 stipend.

Quaker Voice Legislative Fellows are young adults ages 16-35 who live or study in the state of Washington. Each Fellow joins a group working to support action in the state legislature on issues in environment, police and prisons, healthcare, affordable housing, and other justice concerns. Within the scope of that group, the Fellow develops background materials and tracks legislation, in partnership with an experienced Quaker Voice citizen advocate. Each fellow has an opportunity to see in depth how a lobbyist works by shadowing Paul Benz, our Senior Legislative Advocate, for a day. Travel costs to Olympia for Quaker Lobby Day and the shadow day are covered by the program. 

For more on Quaker Voice on Washington Public Policy, see our website. You can watch the final reports of the fellowship holders from previous sessions here:

This year’s program begins November 22, 2024, and ends April 30, 2025.

Applications are being accepted until November 15. See below for more information.

Application and selection:

To apply, submit an application form, including a short essay (100 – 200 words) about why you want to participate. The deadline for application is November 15. Decisions are expected by November 20. 

As part of the selection process, the committee finds a member of the relevant working group who can commit to mentoring the fellowship holder.

Expectations for the participants include:

  1. Attend the Quaker Voice Annual Meeting (November 23, online), and Quaker Lobby Day (February 12, 2025, participation can be online or in person in Olympia).
  2. Attend the relevant working group meeting online, once a month December through April. Make a short report on legislative action in the area the participant is tracking at each meeting.
  3. Participate in a half-hour meeting at least monthly with the mentor. Raise questions with the mentor and legislative advocates as needed.
  4. Create one public outreach effort during the program. This might be a letter to the editor, op-ed piece, or social media post on their issue. It must be publicly available.
  5. Make a short verbal report on the experience to an online wrap-up session that is open to all Quaker Voice activists.
  6. The program also hopes that participants will bring new people into Quaker Voice, particularly young adults. The participants might do this, for example, by bringing Quaker Lobby Day to their attention.

 

 

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