Twice a year Friends who are in business – and their friends who are interested in Quakers – gather for dinner and a lecture sponsored by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. The talk is often by a Friend who shares his or her experience of Quakerism and business and their intersection. Sometimes the speaker is a person who is not a Friend but has been impacted by our faith. In November 2017 John Bogle, the founder and chief executive of The Vanguard Group, addressed Friends in Business at Arch Street Meeting House. In his talk he shared that Quaker values inspired his work and his life. John Bogle died this week and QuakerSpeak shared a short video of these remarks.
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting
Families Sharing Stories in the Christmas Season
“Parents are their children’s first and most important teachers,” was wisdom I learned from my mother, who was an advocate for children and families in all her work. It was some of the most important learning I took into the classroom with me as a teacher. It is of course true as well in religious education, though I would widen the role to include grandparents and other caregivers helping to raise a child. Stories often provide common ground across generations for sharing what’s in our hearts and teaching about our faith.
Amy Owsley from Third Haven Friends Meeting shares how families in the meeting came together to share the Christmas story with their children, and with one another. In a season often focused on worldly delights and diversions, how could the time before Christmas — a day that Friends did not traditionally celebrate as a holiday — also be about exploring the “meaning and relevance of the Christmas story in our lives today.”
Last September at a First Day School family open house, the PYM Youth Engagement Coordinator, Melinda Wenner Bradley, spoke to us about “Children, Families, and the Quaker Community.” One of the resources she shared was a story about the Advent season, adapted for Friends from the Godly Play story. It was just one of a whole batch of rich resources, but the idea of this particular story caught the heart of several families. We wondered if we could use this story to imbibe the busy, hectic Christmas season with more meaning? And we could we do this individually with our families at home, but in a way that built community among our families in the Meeting?
Right after Thanksgiving, several families gathered together with reams of felt, little wooden peg figures, paint and sewing needles to make the materials needed to tell the story. One our Meeting members, Susan Claggett, began the evening by sharing with the parents a Faith & Play story, and giving us some pointers on storytelling at home. Together we then made a handful of “Advent story kits” that we could take home. The kits are humble little collections — not a bit of polish to them! They are simple, made with heart, and carry our collective hope for creating connection and quiet in our lives during the holiday.
The Advent story can be told in four parts, so on each of the four Sundays of Advent, we share one more part of the story with our family at home. Then we informally share our experiences the next Sunday among our group at Meeting. The weeks unfold the Christmas story from the perspectives of the knowing prophets, the waiting and journeying of the holy family, the shepherds in the fields who are first to receive the news of the baby’s birth, the travels of the three Magi, and then the animals who witness the wonder of the birth of Jesus. We are finding such magic in a quiet moment with our families each week, dwelling on the meaning and relevance of the Christmas story in our lives today. Again, there isn’t any elegance or perfection here, as we are all fumbling a bit as we learn . . . but somehow this imperfection makes the experience sweeter and accessible, as our kids deepen their curiosity about the mystery of Christmas, and we parents deepen our kinship with others in the Meeting.
General Secretary Report to Councils
General Secretary Report on Staff Activity to Councils
Mid November – Mid December 2018
Business and Finances:
- Your Part Time Controller has PYM’s accounting work in hand. Check writing and payroll have run smoothly, as have all Aging grants which are sent out at the beginning of each month.
We received the 2018 Audit from our auditors, Kreischler Miller. It is a clean audit, without remarks, and was accepted by the Audit Committee on December 10th. It will be presented to the Administrative Council on the 15th. - We took first steps toward reviewing our cybersecurity systems and practices.
- The beautiful December appeal was mailed on November 26 and our incoming mail has been pleasantly heavy. The new database automates a five-year giving report for each donor and compares income year over year. An analysis of current donors shows we are generally matching or exceeding their prior years’ giving. We will shift to reaching out to lapsed donors in January and February.
- Weekly emails with the theme of ‘the 25 Gifts of Yearly Meeting’ are going out weekly, extending the December appeal electronically. At the close of the year PYM also reminds donors to make a gift to their monthly meeting in its final electronic appeal.
- After Administrative Council approved the establishment of a Development Committee in its care the Admin Governance Committee took steps toward peopling it effectively. It established a Sprint to work with staff to thresh the most pressing questions and to lay the groundwork for the launching of a full-fledged, effective committee.
Program and Ministry:
- Friends in Business hosted the Governor of Pennsylvania, Tom Wolf, at a dinner event on December 5. Enrollment was at a record high of about 90 people it a tremendously successful evening. It was a blessing to get him and he was a knowledgeable, compelling speaker. His brother went to Westtown School!
- Youth staff and Quaker Life Council are populating the Youth Programs Advisory Committee.
- Staff met with Quarterly Meeting Coordinators to learn about their work and explore ways of supporting them with yearly meeting resources. They also discussed PYM Youth Program events with Friends Schools.
- Community Engagement has completed their second Zoom call with Friends of other yearly meetings – it is wonderful to be in relationship together as we continue to develop a strategic direction for our work.
- We have been preparing applications from members for review at the semi-annual meeting of the PYM Greenleaf Granting Group. The Greenleaf Granting Group makes grants to aging Friends of modest means in need of financial support for medical and/or residential expenses. In this granting cycle, approximately twenty applications will be reviewed.
- We are drafting a harassment policy for use at yearly meeting events and the PYM community. The Quaker Life Council will move it forward from the draft.
- Program & Religious Life staff are currently working with other PYM staff, Friends General Conference, Friends Journal, Pendle Hill and Friends Committee on National Legislation on several projects related to outreach:
- Pendle Hill: PYM staff are working with the Education Coordinator at Pendle Hill to plan a Quaker Skills institute. See the Pendle Hill Website for more information. Pendle Hill also produced a series of suggested program evaluation metrics (funded by a Shoemaker grant) that we will integrate into our own program evaluation work in April.
- Friends Committee on National Legislation: We are working with Christine Ashley at FCNL to imagine how our community might creatively and collaboratively use FCNL’s new Quaker Welcome Center.
- Friends General Conference: FGC’s Spiritual Deepening Program has a focus related to welcoming newcomers and inclusion. PYM staff are meeting monthly with FGC staff Holly Baldwin, members of the QLC Program Committee, the PYM Membership Development Granting Group, and members from New York Yearly Meeting who are focused on outreach.
- Friends Journal: We are working with Jon Watts of QuakerSpeak to produce four videos that can be used as resources for monthly meetings around welcoming newcomers.
- We have invited FGC staff Holly Baldwin and Friends Journal staff Jon Watts to lead sessions at the February 9 Outreach and Communications Thread Gathering to be held at Abington Monthly Meeting. Please mark your calendars!
Communications and Technology:
- WordPress, our website content management system released a major upgrade. Our Website Manager is in the next stage of modifying the back end of the website to ensure a seamless transition. This is a complicated and ongoing project.
- 2018 State of the Meeting reports have been posted to the website. Previous years’ reports are in the process of being added.
- Positive feedback on the website gets stronger every month and Friends are expressing appreciation of the changes.
- Staff are planning the next Faith in Practice newsletter which will focus on the religious experience within our community.
- The third party that processes our online payments, Acceptiva, renovated their software platform. There were some significant bugs in the update which led to credit card processing errors and restricted PYM’s administration access. The CEO of Acceptiva posted an open apology to all of its customers on its website. Things seem back on track now.
- We had already decided to move from Acceptiva to another platform, Click and Pledge, which integrates well with Salesforce and have now determined an earlier start-date for that transition.
- We will be switching our email platform form Constant Contact to Mail Chimp and expect this change in February. Mail Chimp will allow us to automatically integrate data from outgoing emails into the database.
- Verification of the information in our new database, Salesforce, continues. We have removed duplicated records and deleted old contact and other peripheral information. All deleted data was archived first as a precaution.
Staff and Administration:
- We are nearing completion of staff annual reviews and subsequently revising staff goals.
- Legal review of the revised staff handbook is nearing completion.
- The data entry position was posted – we have a large applicant pool and one internal candidate.
- We successfully completed open enrollment for benefits with a combination of staff and consultant support. Distributing, completing, reviewing and processing the necessary documents and answering all questions is a big job that came at a time of some staff turnover. The team effort was led by our new Director of HR and Inclusion and included our accountant, an HR consultant, and our brokers.
- We now have a draft of an individualized on-boarding plan, an organizational on-boarding document, and a process to support employee improvement plans.
- A staff person has been identified to lead a selection committee for the staff liaison to the personnel committee.
- The General Secretary and Director of HR and Inclusion have recommended to staff that we eliminate the staff voice policy, because its goals can be addressed more robustly with attention to culture and processes in staff and, additionally, because a separate policy can be restrictive and experienced as oppressive by some. A series of meetings with staff have begun to thresh that recommendation.
- The office was closed for two days for Thanksgiving and many staff took advantage of the slow week and took vacation. The office will be closed for two days for Christmas and one for New Year’s in the coming month and many staff will again be out of the office for a week or more at this slow time.
Inclusion and Anti-Racism:
- Zakia Williams is compiling information received from individual PYM staff interviews and looking for themes and trends. This information will be reported back to staff at staff meeting and we will seek input on next steps.
- Zachary Dutton attended, for the second time, Beyond Diversity 101 training at Pendle Hill led by Niyonu Spann. Zachary served as an intern at this training which is a step toward being a facilitator in the work.
- Christie Duncan-Tessmer attended the training by Philadelphia Quarter titled A Friendly Response to ‘Fight, Flight or Freeze’ Feelings – An Interactive Workshop
- Christie Duncan-Tessmer attended the annual consultation of the Conference of National Black Churches (CNBC). This year’s them was “Unearthing the Effects of Racism: A Pathway to Hope in a Time of Hate.” The CNBC has invited the board members of the National Council of Churches to attend and Christie was one of about 6 communions who responded.
Visits:
- Christie Duncan-Tessmer and Zachary Dutton, Associate Secretary for Program & Religious Life, attended the FCNL annual meeting in Washington DC. There is a report in PYM’s Web News.
- Christie Duncan-Tessmer, Grace Sharples Cooke, Associate Secretary for Advancement and Relationship, Linell McCurry, Associate Secretary for Business & Finance, and Meg Rose, Young Adult Engagement Coordinator, attended Friends in Business with Governor Wolf.
- Grace Sharples Cooke attended worship at Centre Meeting in Delaware and met with the clerk afterwards to talk about the life and work of the meeting.
- Wendy Kane visited Greenwich Monthly Meeting and was warmly welcomed by the community.
Pennsylvania’s Governor Wolf Addresses Quaker Business Community
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s business community recently hosted Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf for a talk on the evening of December 5 at the Acorn Club. Newtown Meeting’s Norval Reece and Joseph Evans and London Grove’s Mark Myers organized the event with logistical support from PYM. The talk, “Reflections on William Penn’s Holy Experiment from a Business Perspective,” was followed by a Q&A period.
The governor mingled at cocktails before speaking to 87 legal, professional, and financial Friends for 30 minutes. He shared his personal beliefs concerning ethical business practices rooted in trust and discussed his long-term engagement as a businessman on the boards of charities and civic institutions such as the Chamber of Commerce.
When he retired, Governor Wolf felt led to participate in the political process and launched his campaign for governor despite polls that showed only 1 percent of the population knew who he was. He still believes that most of that 1 percent likely confused him with author, Tom Wolf, but he persisted in running and won the governorship.
Governor Wolf believes that PA’s unique characteristics as a leader in building a diverse and business-friendly civic society with strong educational institutions go back to William Penn’s holy experiment. It was the creation of a commonwealth where the values of fairness, inclusion, and trust were uppermost in Penn’s mind that led to a successful colonial society. Economically Pennsylvania benefited from this vision, with strong ports, cities, and universities. The trust and diversity William Penn laid the groundwork for generated a dynamic Pennsylvania economy and society—despite Penn’s documented weaknesses as an administrator and the fact that his vision was not fully realized.
Pennsylvania, according to the French writer Voltaire, was the freest place in the world. This, Governor Wolf noted, was even though not all colonial business began on equal footing with equal apportionment of resources. Later, under Benjamin Franklin’s leadership, our Pennsylvania constitution was the first to offer voting rights to adult males, independent of property ownership.
Today, fairness, diversity, and trust still matter. The old saying; ‘do well by doing good’ highlights the essential role of trust and business integrity in a free-market economy.
Governor Wolf believes that in the geographically and politically diverse state that Pennsylvania continues to be today fairness, inclusion, and trust still matter. He cautioned that he’s happy to take feedback about things that need to change, but with advocacy also comes the responsibility to serve as more than a critic. It is important to seek solutions that lead to better conditions and outcomes.
Friends found the governor’s talk—with messages of fairness, diversity and trust—a bright spot given the current politicization of governments.
As he left the Acorn Club that evening, the governor made sure to pause for a brief stop in the kitchen to greet the Acorn Club’s chef and manager, thanking them for their fine work.
“Love Knows No Borders” Witness
Join the Call for Migrant Justice!
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting (PYM) is partnering with American Friends Service Committee (ASFC) to stand in solidarity with the asylum seekers, the migrant caravan, and all who seek refuge in the US. Faith leaders and communities around the country will take part in AFSC “Love Knows No Borders” days of action which begin on December 10, 2018 (International Human Rights Day) through December 18 (International Migrants’ Day). In the PYM community, Young Adult Friends have lifted up the concern about immigrant justice and AFSC has been present at the US-Mexico border in recent weeks. We are called as a faith community to be present to this issue.
“Together, we are calling on the U.S. to end the detention and deportation of immigrants, respect the human right to migrate, and end the militarization of the border.” – AFSC website.
Days of Action: December 10-18, 2018. All are welcome!
There will be a daily vigil at Friends Center in Philadelphia on Monday-Friday, December 10-13, and Monday and Tuesday, December 17 &18. All are welcome to gather from 12:00-12:15pm for worship to hold in prayer the asylum seekers and those called to witness at the border.
Following the vigil on December 14 at 12:00pm, we will walk from Friends Center to the Thomas Paine Plaza at City Hall and stand in support of the migrants. We will proceed to the historic Arch Street Meeting House where we will have open discussion and worship, which will end by 2:00pm. Please join us for any part of this witness that afternoon.
Resources for Organizing
This is a great opportunity to organize a local event, and AFSC has created a “toolkit” for ideas and resources on how to do this as a meeting, individual or group.
For more information: “Love Knows No Borders”: https://migrantjustice.afsc.org/
Toolkit: https://migrantjustice.afsc.org/sites/default/files/Caravan-Solidarity-Action-Toolkit-11-30b.pdf
Friday at FCNL – Tools for 400 Quaker Lobbyists
Thanks to training by Friends Committee on National Legislation (FCNL), several hundred more Quakers are now well-prepared for lobbying congress. Yesterday and today, FCNL held its Public Policy Institute in advance of the annual FCNL meeting, providing visiting Friends all the tools they need to effectively meet with congressional representatives and senators. [Read more…] about Friday at FCNL – Tools for 400 Quaker Lobbyists
Friends Convene in Washington to Lobby for Bipartisan Legislation with FCNL
As Quakers from across the United States descended on the capital today, the density of the Quaker population increased significantly in Washington, DC. Friends came to the Friends Committee on National Legislation (FCNL) to talk about faith and witness, sharing their Quaker beliefs and work in support of civic society. [Read more…] about Friends Convene in Washington to Lobby for Bipartisan Legislation with FCNL
General Secretary Report to Councils
General Secretary Report on Staff Activity to Councils
Mid-October Through Mid-November 2018
Business and Finance:
- As shared in the written GenSec report to Continuing Sessions, PYM operations ended FY18 in a solid, positive position. Lower covenant and annual fund contributions year-over-year were mitigated by higher investment income and by expense reductions. The balance sheet remained strong. There was little change in net assets apart from investment gains, which are posted once a year at the FYE.
- Completed audit preparations and welcomed the auditors who have been in the office all week.
- Completed and signed an access agreement between PYM and US Construction, developer of a townhome project next door to the Arch Street Meeting House. The agreement sets out terms for scaffolding and lift access on the Arch Street property so work on the townhouse facades can be completed. US Construction will rebuild at their expense a failing section of the non-historic brick wall closest to 3rd Street, which is currently braced.
- Completed the process for supporting teachers’ retirement funds in small schools and for providing tuition aid for PYM students in Quaker schools.
- Completed a compelling December appeal mailing and sent it to the printer. It will be mailed shortly after Thanksgiving. It includes a message that is personalized to the giving history of each of about 6,500 households. We designed and sent a “no-ask” alternate version to 400 households that have requested not to be solicited. This way they still access the information included in the mailing.
Program and Ministry:
- Continuing Sessions: 160+ Friends gathered for Continuing Sessions on Saturday November 3rd, filling the Arch Street Meeting House with children, families, and Friends coming together for business and Quaker conversations. All of the reports and meeting materials can be found on the continuing sessions webpage and the minutes are online.
- Launched Bridge Contacts! Bridge Contacts are those identified by their meeting or other constituency to serve as a communications and relationship bridge between the activity in their meeting (or other constituency) and the activity in the yearly meeting and monthly meetings. We launched at Continuing Sessions and met our two-month goal in one day and are nearly 50% of our way to our mid-fiscal year goal.
- Launched One Quilt One Yearly Meeting! This initiative invites every yearly meeting constituency – monthly meetings, collaboratives, any group that identifies as part of our community – to complete a fabric square which will be sewn together in a single quilt. The staff produced a video to share with meetings and others to encourage their participation.
- Initiated a conversation of coordinated outreach and communications efforts across Quaker organizations.
- Began the process of updating support for monthly meeting background checks with a more holistic view toward supporting child safety with meetings
- Began developing a first draft of a harassment policy for PYM Friends.
- At the invitation of the organizers, took part in a multi-faith news conference held at Friends Center following the shootings at the synagogue in Pittsburg and outside the church in Kentucky
- Collaborated with the staff of Arch Street Meeting House to support the Monthly Meeting of Friends of Philadelphia in their ministry to provide safe space during an anti-Semitic rally in Philadelphia.
- Published a summary of the State of the Meeting reports on our news feed.
Communications and Technology:
- Began developing a communications and publicity plan for Annual and Continuing Sessions. This has been on the Wish List for so long and we now have the capacity to jump start it.
- Communicated to all PYM Friends about what happened at Continuing Sessions at lightning speed – by the next morning it was posted as a news story and sent out by email.
- Completed entering database backlog of updates and fiscal data so it is now functional.
- Made huge headway on reorganizing the data migrated from the old database so it accurately reflects the household configurations.
- Redesigned the website’s home page so it now loads in 2 seconds, includes a more robust calendar and a reconfigured and well-populated news section.
- Completed six months of technical background work on the website so that when WordPress updates our website will still function.
Staff and Administration:
- Finalized a draft of annual goals for staff, built upon strategic directions and staff plans for the coming year. All outcomes and objectives were reviewed and approved by responsible staff. PYM governance leadership reviewed them, and staff has had a first opportunity to review them as well.
- Our Controller, Cliessa Nagle resigned effective Friday, Nov. 16, the last day of the audit. We’ve made arrangements for short-term interim support for the controller responsibilities with Your Part Time Controller (YPTC) which provides nonprofits with highly skilled controller-level accountants on a temporary basis.
- Renewed our relationship with the consultant who provided HR support to PYM for six months earlier this year to ensure that the benefits management is well supported during this time of transition.
- Hired an Assistant in the Young Friends Program following an extensive search process and interviews with several finalist candidates, PYM Youth Programs are delighted to welcome Aeryn Luminkith. She will begin her work with Young Friends at their Christmas Gathering.
- The part time data entry position was posted.
- Selected and approved staff health plan benefits for 2019. There are minimal changes in the benefit coverage and no changes in the way in which employees contribute to the plan (2% of base salary for the employee plus 1% for each dependent to a max of 5%). The increase in cost to PYM is slightly below budget.
- Met twice to discuss the staff voice policy and what we want to have in place to meet our needs in terms of policy, procedure and culture.
- The Director of HR and Inclusion is wrapping up final staff interviews to understand individual roles and determine concerns and suggestions for HR.
Inclusion and Anti-Racism:
- The Director of HR and Inclusion is reviewing the impact of past antiracism work on staff as well as planning for next steps with staff.
- All staff were invited to register in the coming year for a multi-day anti-racism training if they haven’t yet done so.
- Provided support for stepped-up communications for the Multicultural Audit Steering Committee.
Visits:
- Staff were invited to attend holiday events at monthly meetings on staff time.
- Grace Sharples Cooke, Associate Secretary for Advancement & Relationship worshiped at Woodstown meeting and met with Friends there about their fundraising.
- Christie Duncan-Tessmer, General Secretary, attended the FGC Central Committee meeting
- Christie and Lynne Calamia, Executive Director of Historic Arch Street Meeting House, worshiped at Chester meeting and attended an event about its history at which there were more than 50 people from many meetings and from the community.
- Christie worshiped at Darby Meeting
- Christie attended the Philadelphia Interfaith Leadership Council meeting
- Christie attended Friends Historical Association Annual Meeting and Lecture
A Year of Civil Conversations
Inspired by Krista Tippet’s On Being podcasts and the Civil Conversations Project, Interfaith Philadelphia has launched A Year of Civil Conversations throughout the Greater Philadelphia region. Engaging over 50 organizations and 1,000 people, Interfaith Philadelphia will offer multiple opportunities to learn how to “speak together differently in order to live together differently.” PYM is a member of Interfaith Philadelphia and PYM Friends have participated in many of their programs in the past.
These grassroots civil conversations will take place within communities throughout the region that build a thriving religiously diverse democracy. They began in September and will continue through May 2019. Their purpose is to increase understanding and challenge the divisive dualism of today’s public discourse by building civic muscles for speaking with passion and listening with openness. This will empower participants to be curious, venture out, welcome in, stand tall, and stand with.
At the heart of this project are local conversations — grassroots dialogues on a range of topics that encourage us to share and listen across difference. The model for these conversations is inspired by Krista’s interviews with poets, scientists, pastors, authors, psychologists, activists, and more. These conversations give us the opportunity to gather for meaningful dialogue designed to increase our understanding of each other, in the midst of times and voices that would have us turning away from one another. They give us the chance to practice, in the words of Krista Tippett, “speaking together differently in order to live together differently.”
To join a conversation, check out the Local Conversations page of the Interfaith Center’s website.
Would you like to host a conversation? There are four trainings for facilitators scheduled. These sessions offer community leaders and “bridge people” techniques for grassroots civil conversations that support a thriving religiously diverse democracy. Participants will also receive a Civil Conversations facilitator kit to use in their own work going forward.
- Sunday, December 9th | 2:00 – 5:00 pm
- Thursday, January 17th | 9:30 am – 12:30 pm
- Tuesday, February 5th | 5:30 – 8:30 pm
The trainings are all held at Interfaith Philadelphia’s office, 100 West Oxford Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122. The fee is $25 for individuals, $15 for groups and free for students.scholarships are available
Register for a training on Interfaith Philadelphia’s website. If you host a conversation, please post it on PYM’s calendar.
One Quilt One Yearly Meeting
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtXDQVy350Q
Things are getting quilty…
One Quilt, One Yearly Meeting brings us together across local meetings, collaboratives, youth programs, Young Adult Friends, councils, Friends schools, and other groups in PYM. Each entity will design and contribute a ten-inch quilt square, which will be gathered into a “quilt skirt” to wrap around the clerk’s table when we gather, holding them in the care of the body and witnessing to our gathered community.
One Quilt, One Yearly Meeting is an opportunity to gather with your local community — your local meeting and other groups in PYM — to create a representation that will become part of the larger whole. Out of many, one.
What you need
- 10” cotton square (provided by PYM)
- Conversation and discernment! How can this be an opportunity to explore the queries: What connects us? What differences enrich us? What images or words illustrate who we are collectively?
- Materials used to create an image on your square
Your Square
Where to start? Begin with creating a space to explore the queries and thresh ideas for your design. What are your stories, and where do they intersect? The design may be of your meetinghouse, a Friend out of history, an image related to witness and work today, a poem or quotation, or an abstract design. Since the quilt itself is a symbol of our commonality, the design of your square does not need to be specific to a theme or idea.
Community
Please be intentional about including all voices! Where appropriate, consider how to make this a multigenerational project, but not one that’s handed over to the Children’s religious education committee. While one quilt square is the product, how can your process be one that is inclusive and brings together Friends in unity?
Timeline
- One Quilt, One Yearly Meeting launches at Fall Continuing Sessions, November 3
- Bring the finished square to Spring Continuing Sessions on March 23, 2019, or, deliver/mail to the PYM office: 1515 Cherry Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102 before March 23.
- Squares will be assembled by quilters in the community, and our PYM Quilt will be revealed at Annual Sessions, July 24-28, 2019!
Questions? Contact a member of the Community Engagement Team, including Olivia Brangan, Community Engagement Coordinator, Melinda Wenner Bradley, Youth Engagement Coordinator, and Meg Rose, Sessions Coordinator.