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Full-time

Human Resources and Finance Coordinator

Organization Info

International Child Resource Institute (ICRI)

Overview
Headquarters: 
Berkeley, CA, United States
Founded: 
1981
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

International Child Resource Institute, a nonprofit organization, works to improve the lives of children and families around the world. We emphasize early childhood care and education, children’s rights, empowerment of women and girls, maternal/child health, and grassroots community development.

ICRI only goes where we are invited, and all programs advance local leadership and promote community collaboration. Since 1981, the year ICRI was founded, we have developed or operated over 300 programs in over 50 countries, with the goal of empowering the village to raise the child.

Programs: 

We bring our comprehensive, neuroscience-based educational experiences to programs around the world in order to nurture and build independence and creativity in children, educate parents on child education and wellbeing, and engage communities in caring for children and families. 

We operate and/or oversee the following programs: 

  • Hearts Leap and Hearts Leap North preschools in Berkeley, CA
  • Hearts Leap Lakeview preschool in Oakland, CA
  • Hearts Leap Beginnings infant/toddler care in Berkeley, CA (opening January 2018!)
  • El Nuevo Mundo bilingual preschool in Richmond, CA
  • Project Commotion in San Francisco, CA
  • Early childhood programs through our international ICRI offices in Ghana, Nepal, Kenya, and Zimbabwe
  • Stanford University Children's Centers, including Arboretum Children's Center, Madera Grove Children's Center, and Stock Farm Road Children's Center

We are currently hiring early childhood and infant/toddler educators for all three Stanford University centers and infant/toddler educators for Hearts Leap Beginnings. 

Why Work For Us?: 

ICRI provides highly sought-after early childhood and infant/toddler Emergent Curriculum programs, based on child-directed, Reggio-inspired and developmentally appropriate practices. We are looking for individuals who can enhance our programs with their unique talents and gifts. Each ICRI Center provides teachers with a supportive team environment, competitive salaries, and exceptional benefits. 

Connect With Us

Elementary Assistant ( Receptionist )

Organization Info

VOICE Charter School

Overview
Headquarters: 
New York, NY, United States
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Programs: 

VOICE Charter School (http://www.voicecharterschool.org/) is an elementary and middle school located in Long Island City, Queens that serves about 650 students across grades K-8. We are located just minutes from Manhattan (two stops outside of Manhattan on the F, N, and W train lines) and Long Island City’s growing waterfront district, thriving arts community, and rapid residential growth. We are looking to identify extraordinary educators and administrators committed to urban education who wish to join a dynamic professional learning community.

Our mission is to create a safe and healthy learning environment that will nurture, motivate and challenge all of our children to achieve the highest level of academic excellence and to develop into mindful, responsible, contributing participants in their education, their community and the diverse society in which we live.

What makes VOICE different?

At VOICE, it’s not just about the music. It’s about the people. It’s about what you can be. It’s about using your passion. It’s about relationships. It’s about having the opportunity to choose. It’s about caring enough. It’s about each individual child and adult.

We believe in efficacy. At the core of our academic culture is the idea that all students are capable of doing well in any discipline. At VOICE, all students will learn – being smart is not something that you are, it is something you become. At VOICE, you will be pushed to become more.

We support and develop the effectiveness of our teachers. We believe that teachers need time to collaborate to build their practice, so we provide our team with over two hours of planning time a day as well as additional days for collaborative thought partnership and planning during the school year.

We promote participation in music and the arts. As music and art help develop problem solving and critical thinking skills and open children's imaginations, all VOICE students participate in and learn from daily activities in the arts including rigorous choral training. We design our arts-integrated curriculum to bring joy and wonder to the lives of our children, providing them with the skills necessary to forge their own path.

All Staff at VOICE:

  • Love and nurture all of our students as they become deeply caring and responsible individuals;
  • Take personal responsibility and work collaboratively to ensure that all students achieve and grow, understanding that the performance and progress of our students is directly under our control;
  • Ask questions and empower students to exercise curiosity and wonder about the world around them;
  • Hold themselves to the highest standards;
  • Push and support themselves, their students, and their colleagues;
  • Proactively seek and incorporate feedback;
  • Help each individual child gain the opportunity to choose what his or her future will be.

Lead Community Organizer in GAMALIEL OF ILLINOIS/IOWA

Organization Info

Pilsen Neighbors Community Council

Overview
Headquarters: 
Chicago, IL
Annual Budget : 
$100-500,000
Size: 
1-10 employees
Founded: 
1954
About Us
Mission: 

Pilsen Neighbors Community Council is a non-profit, community-based organization whose mission is to develop new community leaders through leadership training to bring about civic engagement and action in Pilsen and Southwest areas of Chicago.

Communications Officer – Treatment Action Group

Organization Info

Treatment Action Group [TAG]

Overview
Headquarters: 
New York, NY, United States
Annual Budget : 
$1-5M
Size: 
11-50 employees
Founded: 
1992
About Us
Mission: 

Treatment Action Group (TAG) is an independent, activist and community-based research and policy think tank fighting for better treatment, prevention, a vaccine, and a cure for HIV, tuberculosis, and hepatitis C virus.

TAG works to ensure that all people with HIV, TB, or HCV receive lifesaving treatment, care, and information.

We are science-based treatment activists working to expand and accelerate vital research and effective community engagement with research and policy institutions.

TAG catalyzes open collective action by all affected communities, scientists, and policy makers to end HIV, TB, and HCV.

Programs: 

TAG’s Project Areas include HIV basic science, vaccines, prevention, treatment, and cure; HCV; and TB:

  • HIV – TAG works with the HIV community, scientists, government, and the pharmaceutical industry to advance the discovery, development, and delivery of safe, tolerable, and effective biomedical prevention and HIV treatment modalities across the globe, and to support the science necessary to find vaccines and cures for the disease. TAG is working with advocates, policymakers, researchers, health care providers, and government officials to identify frameworks for ending HIV as an epidemic on national and state levels, through collaborative focus on the National HIV/AIDS Strategy; continued engagement in, and replication of, the New York State Plan to End AIDS; and a commitment to comprehensive HIV prevention service delivery for at-risk populations. TAG is also developing a series of case studies evaluating models of effective community mobilization in the U.S., to help identify best practices associated with increased demand for prevention and care services and grassroots advocacy, and to ensure the longevity of these programs in the era of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).       
  • Basic Science, Vaccines, and Cure: TAG’s Basic Science, Vaccines, and Cure Project works with HIV community members, scientists, and policy makers to enhance public understanding of the basic science of HIV infection; address gaps in HIV research; critique research efforts; foster cross-disciplinary collaborations; accelerate research into HIV pathogenesis; and speed the development of effective immune-based therapies, preventive medicines, a vaccine, and a cure.
  • Hepatitis and HIV: TAG’s Hepatitis/HIV Project works with the HCV and HIV communities, scientists, government, and drug companies to make lifesaving information along with safer, more tolerable, and more effective hepatitis C treatment available to all who need them. New treatments for HCV are changing the standard of care, and TAG is providing leading-edge community information and educational materials targeted to people with HCV, as well as those coinfected with HCV and HIV, while leading global campaigns for lower drug prices and universal access to curative treatment.
  • Tuberculosis and HIV: TAG’s TB/HIV Project works to strengthen global and U.S.-focused advocacy to increase funding and ensure ambitious and improved research, programs, and policy to ensure universal access to quality services for people with TB and HIV; to catalyze global leadership to accelerate momentum toward universal access for high-quality TB and TB/HIV services; to accelerate and increase funding and progress in R&D for better tools to prevent, diagnose, and treat TB; and to accelerate progress in program scale-up and research to eliminate TB as a global public health threat. The worldwide effort to control TB is failing. The ongoing spread of TB, including drug-resistant strains, presents a grave threat, especially to HIV-positive people in countries with high rates of both diseases. HIV infection makes a person much more susceptible to TB disease, and it fuels the increase in TB cases, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Furthermore, the spread of TB that is drug-resistant demonstrates the failure of established strategies for TB control. Due to the inadequacy of current TB diagnostic tools and treatments, as well as poor coordination of TB and HIV services, TB still is the leading cause of death for HIV-positive people globally.
Why Work For Us?: 

Treatment Action Group is an independent AIDS research and policy think tank fighting for better treatment, a vaccine, and a cure for AIDS, TB and hepatitis C virus. TAG works to ensure that all people with HIV, TB and HCV receive lifesaving treatment, care, and information. We are science-based treatment activists working to expand and accelerate vital research and effective community engagement with research and policy institutions. TAG catalyzes open collective action by all affected communities, scientists, and policy makers to end AIDS and its prevalent coinfections.

The Treatment Action Group had its origins in the AIDS activist organization, ACT-UP (the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power). In January 1992, members of the Treatment and Data Committee of ACT-UP left the parent group to create a nonprofit organization focused on accelerating treatment research. During the early 1990s, TAG members advocated with government scientists, drug company researchers, and Food & Drug Administration officials to speed the development of new HIV therapies. The group produced an influential policy report on government investment in basic science, which recommended increasing funding to the U.S. National Institutes of Health and reorganizing the national AIDS research effort. Following approval of several effective antiretroviral drugs in 1995, TAG pressed the government and the pharmaceutical industry to conduct research to understand the long-term effects of the new drugs.

TAG also raises awareness of the impact that TB and hepatitis C have on people with HIV in the developing world, fighting for better treatments and access. 

TAG is a non-profit corporation with 501c(3) status.

Deputy Executive Director – Development and Operations

Organization Info

Treatment Action Group [TAG]

Overview
Headquarters: 
New York, NY, United States
Annual Budget : 
$1-5M
Size: 
11-50 employees
Founded: 
1992
About Us
Mission: 

Treatment Action Group (TAG) is an independent, activist and community-based research and policy think tank fighting for better treatment, prevention, a vaccine, and a cure for HIV, tuberculosis, and hepatitis C virus.

TAG works to ensure that all people with HIV, TB, or HCV receive lifesaving treatment, care, and information.

We are science-based treatment activists working to expand and accelerate vital research and effective community engagement with research and policy institutions.

TAG catalyzes open collective action by all affected communities, scientists, and policy makers to end HIV, TB, and HCV.

Programs: 

TAG’s Project Areas include HIV basic science, vaccines, prevention, treatment, and cure; HCV; and TB:

  • HIV – TAG works with the HIV community, scientists, government, and the pharmaceutical industry to advance the discovery, development, and delivery of safe, tolerable, and effective biomedical prevention and HIV treatment modalities across the globe, and to support the science necessary to find vaccines and cures for the disease. TAG is working with advocates, policymakers, researchers, health care providers, and government officials to identify frameworks for ending HIV as an epidemic on national and state levels, through collaborative focus on the National HIV/AIDS Strategy; continued engagement in, and replication of, the New York State Plan to End AIDS; and a commitment to comprehensive HIV prevention service delivery for at-risk populations. TAG is also developing a series of case studies evaluating models of effective community mobilization in the U.S., to help identify best practices associated with increased demand for prevention and care services and grassroots advocacy, and to ensure the longevity of these programs in the era of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).       
  • Basic Science, Vaccines, and Cure: TAG’s Basic Science, Vaccines, and Cure Project works with HIV community members, scientists, and policy makers to enhance public understanding of the basic science of HIV infection; address gaps in HIV research; critique research efforts; foster cross-disciplinary collaborations; accelerate research into HIV pathogenesis; and speed the development of effective immune-based therapies, preventive medicines, a vaccine, and a cure.
  • Hepatitis and HIV: TAG’s Hepatitis/HIV Project works with the HCV and HIV communities, scientists, government, and drug companies to make lifesaving information along with safer, more tolerable, and more effective hepatitis C treatment available to all who need them. New treatments for HCV are changing the standard of care, and TAG is providing leading-edge community information and educational materials targeted to people with HCV, as well as those coinfected with HCV and HIV, while leading global campaigns for lower drug prices and universal access to curative treatment.
  • Tuberculosis and HIV: TAG’s TB/HIV Project works to strengthen global and U.S.-focused advocacy to increase funding and ensure ambitious and improved research, programs, and policy to ensure universal access to quality services for people with TB and HIV; to catalyze global leadership to accelerate momentum toward universal access for high-quality TB and TB/HIV services; to accelerate and increase funding and progress in R&D for better tools to prevent, diagnose, and treat TB; and to accelerate progress in program scale-up and research to eliminate TB as a global public health threat. The worldwide effort to control TB is failing. The ongoing spread of TB, including drug-resistant strains, presents a grave threat, especially to HIV-positive people in countries with high rates of both diseases. HIV infection makes a person much more susceptible to TB disease, and it fuels the increase in TB cases, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Furthermore, the spread of TB that is drug-resistant demonstrates the failure of established strategies for TB control. Due to the inadequacy of current TB diagnostic tools and treatments, as well as poor coordination of TB and HIV services, TB still is the leading cause of death for HIV-positive people globally.
Why Work For Us?: 

Treatment Action Group is an independent AIDS research and policy think tank fighting for better treatment, a vaccine, and a cure for AIDS, TB and hepatitis C virus. TAG works to ensure that all people with HIV, TB and HCV receive lifesaving treatment, care, and information. We are science-based treatment activists working to expand and accelerate vital research and effective community engagement with research and policy institutions. TAG catalyzes open collective action by all affected communities, scientists, and policy makers to end AIDS and its prevalent coinfections.

The Treatment Action Group had its origins in the AIDS activist organization, ACT-UP (the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power). In January 1992, members of the Treatment and Data Committee of ACT-UP left the parent group to create a nonprofit organization focused on accelerating treatment research. During the early 1990s, TAG members advocated with government scientists, drug company researchers, and Food & Drug Administration officials to speed the development of new HIV therapies. The group produced an influential policy report on government investment in basic science, which recommended increasing funding to the U.S. National Institutes of Health and reorganizing the national AIDS research effort. Following approval of several effective antiretroviral drugs in 1995, TAG pressed the government and the pharmaceutical industry to conduct research to understand the long-term effects of the new drugs.

TAG also raises awareness of the impact that TB and hepatitis C have on people with HIV in the developing world, fighting for better treatments and access. 

TAG is a non-profit corporation with 501c(3) status.

Campaign Director to Protect Consumers

Organization Info

The Public Interest Network

Overview
Headquarters: 
Denver, Colorado, United States
Size: 
201-500 employees
Founded: 
1979
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

The Public Interest Network runs organizations committed to our vision of a better world, a set of core values, and a strategic approach to getting things done.

The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.
Mission: We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

We've won hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels, and because of these laws and policies, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air.

Programs: 

Wind power for America

American wind energy is powering the equivalent of nearly 13 million homes, avoiding as much carbon pollution as if 13 million cars were taken off the road, and supporting more than 70,000 American jobs. Thanks to President Obama and Congress, critical tax credit for wind power were extended on January 3, 2013.

Stop Fracking Our Future

Across the country, fracking is contaminating drinking water, making nearby families sick with air pollution, and turning forest acres into industrial zones. Yet the oil and gas industry is pushing to expand this dirty drilling—to new states and even near critical drinking water supplies for millions of Americans. We need to show massive public support to stop the oil and gas industry from fracking our future.

Solar for All

Millions of Americans are ready to go solar so we can power our lives and our communities with clean, renewable, local energy. Yet some utilities and other special interests want to throw new obstacles in the way. Our Solar for All campaign is working to knock those barriers out of the way.

No Bees, No Food

Millions of bees are dying off, with alarming consequences for our environment and our food supply. We rely on bees to pollinate everything from almonds to strawberries to the alfalfa used to feed dairy cows. What happens if the bees disappear? It’s simple: No bees, no food. Let's give bees a chance. 

21st Century Transportation

Better infrastructure and more efficient transportation for our future. 

Defend the Consumer Financial  Protection Bureau

Standing up for consumers against reckless banking and financial practices.

Democracy for the People

Stanching the flow of special interest money in our elections.

Why Work For Us?: 

We’re The Public Interest Network—a group of people who share a vision of a better country, a set of core values about our work, and a coordinated strategic approach to getting things done.

We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers, as well as all of us, to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

How do we preserve irreplaceable resources like air, water and a livable climate for our grandchildren? How do we transform vast systems of transportation and energy that were designed to meet the needs of a different century? How do we produce food for a growing world in ways that won’t threaten human health and destroy the environment? How do we sustain the democratic ideal of the United States, as civic participation is diminished by consumerism and the rise of corporate personhood?

Questions like these drive all of our work. The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.

Take global warming. Environment America has fought for and won state and federal policies that clean up polluting power plants. U.S. PIRG has worked in dozens of states and cities for better public transportation. Bold Alliance has organized citizens to protest dirty oil and gas pipelines in so-called “red states.” Green Century Funds has led the charge for fossil fuel free investing. Frontier Group, our think tank, has researched the vast potential of renewable energy. And that's just one issue, and just some of our groups.

Over the past 45 years, this coordinated strategic approach has helped us win hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels. Because of the laws and other policies we’ve won, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air ... the list just goes on.

But every day brings a new challenge or new opportunity. No matter how big the challenge, we know how to break down problems to a manageable size; set ambitious but achievable goals; work like crazy to win; and build the resources we need to win the next campaign.

We believe that organizing, and the power of bringing people together to call for change in one voice, will always be at the heart of successful efforts to solve America’s problems.

Development Associate

Organization Info

The Public Interest Network

Overview
Headquarters: 
Denver, Colorado, United States
Size: 
201-500 employees
Founded: 
1979
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

The Public Interest Network runs organizations committed to our vision of a better world, a set of core values, and a strategic approach to getting things done.

The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.
Mission: We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

We've won hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels, and because of these laws and policies, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air.

Programs: 

Wind power for America

American wind energy is powering the equivalent of nearly 13 million homes, avoiding as much carbon pollution as if 13 million cars were taken off the road, and supporting more than 70,000 American jobs. Thanks to President Obama and Congress, critical tax credit for wind power were extended on January 3, 2013.

Stop Fracking Our Future

Across the country, fracking is contaminating drinking water, making nearby families sick with air pollution, and turning forest acres into industrial zones. Yet the oil and gas industry is pushing to expand this dirty drilling—to new states and even near critical drinking water supplies for millions of Americans. We need to show massive public support to stop the oil and gas industry from fracking our future.

Solar for All

Millions of Americans are ready to go solar so we can power our lives and our communities with clean, renewable, local energy. Yet some utilities and other special interests want to throw new obstacles in the way. Our Solar for All campaign is working to knock those barriers out of the way.

No Bees, No Food

Millions of bees are dying off, with alarming consequences for our environment and our food supply. We rely on bees to pollinate everything from almonds to strawberries to the alfalfa used to feed dairy cows. What happens if the bees disappear? It’s simple: No bees, no food. Let's give bees a chance. 

21st Century Transportation

Better infrastructure and more efficient transportation for our future. 

Defend the Consumer Financial  Protection Bureau

Standing up for consumers against reckless banking and financial practices.

Democracy for the People

Stanching the flow of special interest money in our elections.

Why Work For Us?: 

We’re The Public Interest Network—a group of people who share a vision of a better country, a set of core values about our work, and a coordinated strategic approach to getting things done.

We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers, as well as all of us, to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

How do we preserve irreplaceable resources like air, water and a livable climate for our grandchildren? How do we transform vast systems of transportation and energy that were designed to meet the needs of a different century? How do we produce food for a growing world in ways that won’t threaten human health and destroy the environment? How do we sustain the democratic ideal of the United States, as civic participation is diminished by consumerism and the rise of corporate personhood?

Questions like these drive all of our work. The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.

Take global warming. Environment America has fought for and won state and federal policies that clean up polluting power plants. U.S. PIRG has worked in dozens of states and cities for better public transportation. Bold Alliance has organized citizens to protest dirty oil and gas pipelines in so-called “red states.” Green Century Funds has led the charge for fossil fuel free investing. Frontier Group, our think tank, has researched the vast potential of renewable energy. And that's just one issue, and just some of our groups.

Over the past 45 years, this coordinated strategic approach has helped us win hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels. Because of the laws and other policies we’ve won, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air ... the list just goes on.

But every day brings a new challenge or new opportunity. No matter how big the challenge, we know how to break down problems to a manageable size; set ambitious but achievable goals; work like crazy to win; and build the resources we need to win the next campaign.

We believe that organizing, and the power of bringing people together to call for change in one voice, will always be at the heart of successful efforts to solve America’s problems.

Partnership Outreach Director

Organization Info

The Public Interest Network

Overview
Headquarters: 
Denver, Colorado, United States
Size: 
201-500 employees
Founded: 
1979
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

The Public Interest Network runs organizations committed to our vision of a better world, a set of core values, and a strategic approach to getting things done.

The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.
Mission: We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

We've won hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels, and because of these laws and policies, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air.

Programs: 

Wind power for America

American wind energy is powering the equivalent of nearly 13 million homes, avoiding as much carbon pollution as if 13 million cars were taken off the road, and supporting more than 70,000 American jobs. Thanks to President Obama and Congress, critical tax credit for wind power were extended on January 3, 2013.

Stop Fracking Our Future

Across the country, fracking is contaminating drinking water, making nearby families sick with air pollution, and turning forest acres into industrial zones. Yet the oil and gas industry is pushing to expand this dirty drilling—to new states and even near critical drinking water supplies for millions of Americans. We need to show massive public support to stop the oil and gas industry from fracking our future.

Solar for All

Millions of Americans are ready to go solar so we can power our lives and our communities with clean, renewable, local energy. Yet some utilities and other special interests want to throw new obstacles in the way. Our Solar for All campaign is working to knock those barriers out of the way.

No Bees, No Food

Millions of bees are dying off, with alarming consequences for our environment and our food supply. We rely on bees to pollinate everything from almonds to strawberries to the alfalfa used to feed dairy cows. What happens if the bees disappear? It’s simple: No bees, no food. Let's give bees a chance. 

21st Century Transportation

Better infrastructure and more efficient transportation for our future. 

Defend the Consumer Financial  Protection Bureau

Standing up for consumers against reckless banking and financial practices.

Democracy for the People

Stanching the flow of special interest money in our elections.

Why Work For Us?: 

We’re The Public Interest Network—a group of people who share a vision of a better country, a set of core values about our work, and a coordinated strategic approach to getting things done.

We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers, as well as all of us, to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

How do we preserve irreplaceable resources like air, water and a livable climate for our grandchildren? How do we transform vast systems of transportation and energy that were designed to meet the needs of a different century? How do we produce food for a growing world in ways that won’t threaten human health and destroy the environment? How do we sustain the democratic ideal of the United States, as civic participation is diminished by consumerism and the rise of corporate personhood?

Questions like these drive all of our work. The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.

Take global warming. Environment America has fought for and won state and federal policies that clean up polluting power plants. U.S. PIRG has worked in dozens of states and cities for better public transportation. Bold Alliance has organized citizens to protest dirty oil and gas pipelines in so-called “red states.” Green Century Funds has led the charge for fossil fuel free investing. Frontier Group, our think tank, has researched the vast potential of renewable energy. And that's just one issue, and just some of our groups.

Over the past 45 years, this coordinated strategic approach has helped us win hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels. Because of the laws and other policies we’ve won, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air ... the list just goes on.

But every day brings a new challenge or new opportunity. No matter how big the challenge, we know how to break down problems to a manageable size; set ambitious but achievable goals; work like crazy to win; and build the resources we need to win the next campaign.

We believe that organizing, and the power of bringing people together to call for change in one voice, will always be at the heart of successful efforts to solve America’s problems.

Environmental Defense Campaign Director

Organization Info

The Public Interest Network

Overview
Headquarters: 
Denver, Colorado, United States
Size: 
201-500 employees
Founded: 
1979
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

The Public Interest Network runs organizations committed to our vision of a better world, a set of core values, and a strategic approach to getting things done.

The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.
Mission: We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

We've won hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels, and because of these laws and policies, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air.

Programs: 

Wind power for America

American wind energy is powering the equivalent of nearly 13 million homes, avoiding as much carbon pollution as if 13 million cars were taken off the road, and supporting more than 70,000 American jobs. Thanks to President Obama and Congress, critical tax credit for wind power were extended on January 3, 2013.

Stop Fracking Our Future

Across the country, fracking is contaminating drinking water, making nearby families sick with air pollution, and turning forest acres into industrial zones. Yet the oil and gas industry is pushing to expand this dirty drilling—to new states and even near critical drinking water supplies for millions of Americans. We need to show massive public support to stop the oil and gas industry from fracking our future.

Solar for All

Millions of Americans are ready to go solar so we can power our lives and our communities with clean, renewable, local energy. Yet some utilities and other special interests want to throw new obstacles in the way. Our Solar for All campaign is working to knock those barriers out of the way.

No Bees, No Food

Millions of bees are dying off, with alarming consequences for our environment and our food supply. We rely on bees to pollinate everything from almonds to strawberries to the alfalfa used to feed dairy cows. What happens if the bees disappear? It’s simple: No bees, no food. Let's give bees a chance. 

21st Century Transportation

Better infrastructure and more efficient transportation for our future. 

Defend the Consumer Financial  Protection Bureau

Standing up for consumers against reckless banking and financial practices.

Democracy for the People

Stanching the flow of special interest money in our elections.

Why Work For Us?: 

We’re The Public Interest Network—a group of people who share a vision of a better country, a set of core values about our work, and a coordinated strategic approach to getting things done.

We work on issues that speak to the need for a new kind of politics. Our campaigns challenge decision-makers, as well as all of us, to stop tolerating problems that are increasingly absurd in an age of advancing technology and growing abundance.

How do we preserve irreplaceable resources like air, water and a livable climate for our grandchildren? How do we transform vast systems of transportation and energy that were designed to meet the needs of a different century? How do we produce food for a growing world in ways that won’t threaten human health and destroy the environment? How do we sustain the democratic ideal of the United States, as civic participation is diminished by consumerism and the rise of corporate personhood?

Questions like these drive all of our work. The 16-plus groups in The Public Interest Network each strive for solutions on their own, while the force of our combined strategies builds pressure for change across the political and economic spectrum.

Take global warming. Environment America has fought for and won state and federal policies that clean up polluting power plants. U.S. PIRG has worked in dozens of states and cities for better public transportation. Bold Alliance has organized citizens to protest dirty oil and gas pipelines in so-called “red states.” Green Century Funds has led the charge for fossil fuel free investing. Frontier Group, our think tank, has researched the vast potential of renewable energy. And that's just one issue, and just some of our groups.

Over the past 45 years, this coordinated strategic approach has helped us win hundreds of victories at the local, state, national and corporate levels. Because of the laws and other policies we’ve won, people are buying healthier and safer products, getting more of our energy from the sun and the wind, drinking cleaner water and breathing cleaner air ... the list just goes on.

But every day brings a new challenge or new opportunity. No matter how big the challenge, we know how to break down problems to a manageable size; set ambitious but achievable goals; work like crazy to win; and build the resources we need to win the next campaign.

We believe that organizing, and the power of bringing people together to call for change in one voice, will always be at the heart of successful efforts to solve America’s problems.

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