Everyone wants to have an impact. Yet all too often, there’s no need to bring your conscience to the office. At PennEnvironment, our interns can put their ideals front and center.
That’s because interns with PennEnvironment work to achieve concrete, practical changes that benefit the public, on issues ranging from air and water pollution to preserving open space in Pennsylvania.
Our staff of attorneys and other professionals give new interns significant responsibilities. Here’s our approach:
• Working side by side with the staff of PennEnvironment in either summer or school-year positions, interns focus on real problems that affect people in their daily lives.
• As a PennEnvironment intern, you help our staff develop a program around one or more of these issues. You help study the problem and then break it down into a manageable project, one in which the outcome can be influenced by the right combination of careful research, a smart political strategy, and demonstrable public support.
• While much of each PennEnvironment’s work centers on the legislative arena, PennEnvironment take their issues to whatever forum offers the best hope of winning concrete results. We file lawsuits. We testify at administrative hearings. We sponsor shareholder resolutions. We do whatever it takes to get things done, often against stiff opposition from powerful corporate lobbyists or entrenched politicians.
This approach requires each intern not only to develop expertise in public policy, but also to become skilled in the political process. You become expert at:
• Creating new policy ideas. The problems are easy to identify, but practical, feasible solutions are harder to come by. A PennEnvironment intern helps our staff survey the current best thinking on the issue and think through the best policy options.
• Devising an effective strategy. Whether a PennEnvironment proposal becomes public policy is often a matter of how the problem is framed for public debate, who is seen to be for and against the proposal, and whether we have made a persuasive case to the public. A PennEnvironment intern helps our staff combine these elements into an effective environmental campaign.
• Conducting investigative research. Facts, figures and examples are the bedrock of any intelligent public policy debate. A PennEnvironment intern pulls together the research on an issue in order to illustrate the problem, and demonstrate the viability of the proposed solution.
• Drafting legislation. The devil, as they say, is in the details, and nowhere more so than in the legislative process. A PennEnvironment intern helps craft legislation and keeps an eye out for unfriendly amendments.
• Lobbying. Whether it is a U.S. senator or a state representative, each decision-maker must be convinced on the merits, in person whenever possible. The style of advocacy employed by PennEnvironment was best summed up by Washington Post columnist David Broder many years ago: "politely persistent."
• Media outreach. The spotlight of media attention helps to inform the public, offer new perspectives on old problems, and put decision-makers on notice that the public is watching their actions. A PennEnvironment intern works to get our issues and opinions covered by the media, through news releases, press conferences, interviews, " op-eds," new Web sites, and more.
• Organizing political support. When environmental proposals meet special interest resistance, public support can provide the push to overcome political opposition. A PennEnvironment intern helps to broaden the constituency for our proposals, building a coalition that can help sway decision-makers.
What qualities and abilities does being a PennEnvironment
intern require?
A strong commitment to environmental issues. The ability
to frame a debate on your own terms. The ability to engage others, whether one-on-one
or in a group. The ability to think strategically. A willingness to engage in
creative conflict, to persevere, and to lead by example.
Most PennEnvironment interns are graduate students in law, public policy or environmental studies, but students in any area of study may apply. Intern supervisors provide ongoing training. Previous campaign and/or advocacy experience is a plus.
For more information on these or other internships, as well as volunteer opportunities, contact PennEnvironment’s Philadelphia office at (215) 732-5897 or e-mail us.
To apply, e-mail us your cover letter and resume or send it to PennEnvironment, 1420 Walnut Street, Ste. 650, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
