The Solís Policy Institute - State : Apply
What We Do

The Dr. Beatriz María Solís Policy Institute (SPI) is a policy advocacy and leadership training fellowship for genderqueer and non-binary people, cisgender and transgender women, and transgender men who want to build their skills to influence public policymaking at the state level.*

*The term ‘cisgender’ describes someone who identifies with the gender they were assigned at birth. The term ‘transgender’ describes someone whose gender identity is different from the one they were assigned at birth.

Solís Policy Institute- State Key Dates

Application Opens

Wednesday, June 21, 2023 9:00 AM PST

Application Deadline

Wednesday, July 19, 2023 5:00 PM PST

Application Information Sessions

  • Informational Webinar #1: 12-1 PM, Thursday, Jun 22, 2023  WATCH
  • Informational Webinar #2: 12-1 PM, Thursday, Jun 29, 2023 RSVP

Program Information & Dates

Mandatory Time Commitment: 

  • 8-10 hours PER WEEK, excluding time allotted for retreats and seminars, September 2023 through September 2024

Mandatory Retreat Dates

  • Retreat 1 (In Person): Tuesday, October 3 – Friday, October 6, 2023
  • Retreat 2 (Virtual): Tuesday, December 5 – Thursday, December 7, 2023
  • Retreat 3 (Virtual): Tuesday, March 5 – Thursday, March 7, 2023
  • Retreat 4 (In Person): Tuesday, May 14 – Thursday, May 16, 2023

Mandatory Seminar Dates

  • Seminar 1: 10-1 PM, Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023
  • Seminar 2: 10-12 PM, Wednesday, Nov 1, 2023
  • Seminar 3: 10-12 PM, Wednesday, November 29, 2023
  • Seminar 4:  10-12 PM, Thursday, February 1, 2024
  • Seminar 5: 1-3 PM, Wednesday, February 28, 2024
  • Seminar 6: 1-3 PM, Thursday, April 4, 2024
  • Seminar 7: 1-2:30 PM, Wednesday, April 17, 2024
  • Seminar 8: 1-2:30 PM, Wednesday, July 17 2024
  • Seminar 9: 10-1 PM, Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024

Eligibility

  • We accept applications from genderqueer and non-binary people, cisgender and transgender women, and transgender men.
  • Individuals who agree to all participation requirements and whose employers agree to all participation requirements.

Criteria

  • Depth of Issue Expertise
  • Collaborative Spirit
  • Commitment to Policy Advocacy Work
  • Organizational Support
  • Commitment to Building Organizational Capacity
  • Time Availability
  • Understanding of and interest in applying anti-racist, intersectional and transgender justice lenses to policy advocacy

Applications are CLOSED.

SPI-STATE ISSUE AREAS

SPI-State will accept applications from representatives of organizations that support the intersection of health and economic security. Specifically, organizations that improve the economic security of Californians and create places where families and communities are healthy and safe.  We know that for people to prosper they must have access to healthcare and family-sustaining jobs. Health has social, cultural and economic impacts on the well-being of communities and is  determined by racial, gender and economic circumstances, with direct ties to the history of anti-Blackness and oppression in our country. We encourage applications especially from grassroots leaders and community organizations that work or support programs that focus on the economic security and health and wellness of individuals impacted by systemic gender-based discrimination. 

The new “Health and Prosperity team” may include policy projects that include, and are not limited to:

  • Boosting funding for and access to quality childcare;
  • Improving Medi-Cal and CalFresh enrollment and alignment;
  • Access to health care/patients’ rights: expanding access (e.g. Affordable Care Act/Health Reform) to quality health care; ensuring patient autonomy over decision- making;
  • Healthy Youth Development: violence prevention, school push-out policies, school- based health/mental health, trauma-informed services.

SPI-State will accept applications from representatives of organizations that work to reduce the negative impacts that violence and harassment, which is often gender-based, has on the lives of Californians. In this context, policy projects may include, and are not limited to:

  • Expanding resources for sexual assault survivors on college campuses;
  • Improving protections for victims of online sexual harassment and cyber-stalking;
  • Protecting the rights of trans people who experience bullying and harassment in the workplace;
  • Strengthening the rights of immigrant cisgender and transgender women and nonbinary people who experience domestic violence;
  • Strengthening existing law and policies that are intended to support survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, or bullying.

SPI-State will accept applications from representatives of organizations that work to support programs that expand and protect the rights of all people to make informed decisions about and exercise control over their sexual and reproductive lives. Reproductive health, rights, and justice policy projects may include, and are not limited to:

  • Promoting policies that are shaped by and responsive to people’s needs and address the right to bear and parent children;
  • Access to safe and legal abortion, contraception and comprehensive sexuality education;
  • The right to bodily autonomy, especially for incarcerated people and BIPOC;
  • The right to express one’s sexuality, sexual orientation/identity, and gender identity/expression; or
  • Intersectional ties with other social justice efforts, including the reproductive health impacts of environmental pollution, the state violence impact on parenting people, and the economic security of youth and families.

While we plan to have a team for this issue area, we are proceeding with an invite-only recruitment process for the 2024 year. The work of this team will be to address the harmful and oppressive impacts that the criminal justice system has on the lives of Californians, especially those impacted by gender injustice. We prioritize fellows from organizations that work to promote racial, transgender, and economic justice. In this context, criminal justice policy projects may include, and are not limited to:

    • Working to reduce the prison population and the numbers of incarcerated transgender people as well as cisgender women in the short- and long-term through prevention, ending jail expansion, and promoting alternatives to incarceration
    • Addressing the causes and reducing the disproportionate incarceration of Black people and people of color
    • Protecting the human and civil rights of incarcerated people
    • Expanding and strengthening rehabilitation and reentry programs for currently and formerly incarcerated people
    • Protecting and supporting the children and loved ones of incarcerated people
    • Expanding access to public programs and benefits for formerly incarcerated people

FAQ

The voices of people impacted by gender-based oppression, violence, and discrimination are often missing or silenced from policymaking processes. The Solís Policy Institute’s goal is to ensure that visionary community leaders, their organizations and their communities can actively shape policies to transform the fundamental conditions that affect their lives and communities. Moreover, the SPI strives to increase the number and capacity of genderqueer and nonbinary people, cisgender and transgender women, and transgender men who are actively engaged in public policy— particularly those from Black, Indigenous, people of color communities, immigrant communities, trans and queer communities, low- income communities, and rural communities.

Our social justice framework focuses on the structural causes of inequities embedded in public institutions such as government. The Solís Policy Institute was developed in response to these structural inequities, and while we will make room to discuss oppressive systems and encourage each cohort to critique institutionalized oppression, the program’s primary objective is to train participants to create progressive policy changes within the current legislative system. We recognize the need to dismantle and transform our political institutions and processes and there are many different means that lead towards liberation. The Solís Policy Institute views policy advocacy as one powerful strategy to solving problems and improving the lives of our communities. It is our hope that after learning the process for what it takes to get a policy win, participants will be better able to continue the work of dismantling systems of oppression within public policy.

Throughout the year-long fellowship, fellows must attend the four mandatory retreats and nine mandatory seminars.

In addition, fellows must allot 8-10 hours per week (30-40 monthly) in order to:

  • Complete homework assignments in advance of, and between retreats;
  • Meet and hold weekly conference calls with their team and continue working on their bill; and, 
  • Allot approximately 30-40 hours a month to the Institute.

Please note that harmful beliefs, practices, and behaviors persist within many sectors of the public policy arena. We do our best to prepare our fellows to respond to these dynamics, to inform our speakers and trainers about our social justice principles and the diversity of our SPI cohorts, and to create as brave an environment as possible for fellows experiencing multiple forms of oppression. Due to the nature of the public policy arena, however, we cannot guarantee that every space you will enter as a fellow—both inside and outside the Capitol, and including retreats—will be safe or that every person with whom you interact, including speakers and trainers, will be trained in anti-oppression and anti-racist principles. If having safety is a requirement for you at this time of your life, the SPI might not be an appropriate program for you.

Applicants will need to create an account for to apply or login to an existing account to submit the application. You may stop and save your application at any time. In addition to the general application, applicants should be prepared to submit a 150-200 word statement from their employer/reference, upload documents such as a 1-page resume, and download & upload other needed forms, which are available to download from the application website. You will be asked questions regarding your experience in the issue area to which you are applying, your relationship to communities, your public policy experience, and more.

First, please keep in mind that our final decisions are based both on individual merit and the overall “fit” of the five people who we have selected for a team. We often receive strong applications from leaders who we would love to admit to the program, but who are not a good fit in the year they applied due to the nature of their interests relative to the rest of the applicant pool, their having recently started a new job, their being in the process of looking for a new job, or other reasons.

Applicants who articulate clear personal and professional reasons for wanting to learn policy advocacy, make a strong case for organizational support, exhibit deep issue area expertise, and are rooted in the community they hope to serve are always strong candidates for the program. If you have any interest or experience working in other issue areas, please mention that in your application as well—we often consider applicants for teams in issue areas other than the one under which they applied. Applicants with varying degrees of past policy experience—from none at all to a lot—will be considered for the program. Good luck!

This year, interviews will take place from Monday, July 31 – Friday, August 11, with the potential for some interviews to take place during the weekend, as well. If you are requested for an interview, the sign-up sheet will be sent via Surveymonkey Apply and you will be expected to sign up within the timeline of July 25 – July 28.  The Solís Policy Institute interviews are conversational and are conducted by the mentors for each respective Issue Area. 

The Solís Policy Institute interviews are conversational. We ask questions that help us better understand your interests within the issue area under which you applied, your experience with policy advocacy, your reasons for wanting to participate in the fellowship, your organization’s relationship to policy advocacy, and the degree to which your organization supports your participation in the program. A good way to prepare is to review your individual narrative as well as the selection criteria and participant requirements.

The Solís Policy Institute shifted to an entirely virtual platform in March 2020. We were able to successfully and safely hold two in-person retreats for the class of 2023, and will intend to do so for the class of 2024. Our in-person programming is subject to change upon county mandates, Covid surges, and overall concerns from our cohort, but if there are no county mandates or covid surges, all fellows will be expected to attend in-person retreats. All of our in-person components include mandatory rapid testing of all fellows and trainers, the use of KN95 masks, and eating outdoors when possible. 

Additionally, the pandemic has had a significant impact on policy making at all levels, both in regards to the process and the landscape of what is possible. We anticipate that as the pandemic continues, we will see more shifts in priorities and the legislative process to adapt to current circumstances, which will require the Policy Institute to be even more flexible.

The fellowship is offered free of charge. The Women’s Foundation California is committed to eliminating all financial barriers to access and we raise approximately $13,000 for each fellow’s participation in the program. In a typical Solis Policy Institute year, we provide stipends and reimbursements for in person retreats if a fellow’s organization does not have available funding for travel and meals (which is the case for the majority of our fellows). 

I’m currently self-employed or unemployed.

The short answer is that you are eligible to apply for the Solis Policy Institute as long as

  1. You are rooted in a community that will benefit (i.e., grow in its ability to do policy work) from your participation in the program and to which you are accountable
  2. You are connected to a non-profit or grassroots organization that endorses your participation, and
  3. Your employment status will remain the same throughout the Solis Policy Institute year.

The long answer is that our model is to invest in the capacity of organizations and communities, not individuals, for engaging in policy advocacy. We do this because

  1. Strong organizations and coalitions should be the driving forces behind public policy advocacy;
  2. We believe that more non-profit and community-based organizations should employ policy advocacy as one of their strategies for social change; and
  3. It would be impossible and impractical to attempt to train every single potential individual policy advocate in California, as our impact increases exponentially if our fellows are taking their training back to their organizations and communities.

Moreover, a change in employment status could impact your ability to stay in the Solis Policy Institute (i.e., your new organization won’t allow you to stay in the program, you move out of state, etc.). If you do not plan to remain self-employed or you are actively looking for work during the Solis Policy Institute fellowship year, this might not be the right time to participate in the Solis Policy Institute. Teams suffer when they lose a member halfway through the program, so it’s important for us to know with a fair degree of certainty that your employer is supportive of your participation and that you plan on being with that employer throughout the Solis Policy Institute year.

We know that COVID-19 has resulted in unpredictable employment for the majority of people in addition to a limited capacity for most individuals and their organizations. Ultimately, you know your own circumstances best, and you are the person who is best equipped to decide whether this is the right time for you to apply. If you choose to apply, please make sure to read the application instructions for a clearer understanding of the time commitment and expectations.

I’m a college student.

If you will graduate before or during the Solis Policy Institute fellowship year and are planning to search for and start a new job, please see the answer to question #3 above. Unless you are certain that your job will be supportive of your participation in the Solis Policy Institute, this may not be the right time for you to apply.

If you will not be graduating before or during the Solis Policy Institute fellowship year, we encourage you to review the retreat and webinar dates and determine whether you will be able to miss class on those days. You may want to speak with an advisor or the chair of your department about whether they can support your full participation in the program, including missing classes and whether retreats fall too close to finals week, etc. If counting your participation in the program as an internship would help secure your time away from classes, please explore that option with your department. We are happy to be supportive of that approach in any way we can.

If you are aware of other applicants in your issue area with whom you would like to be placed on a team if you are both accepted into the program, you will be given the opportunity in the application to list those individuals.

As a general rule, we look for applicants who hold deep issue area expertise and are also willing to work on an issue that might not be a priority for them or their organization/community, or an issue that might not be their primary interest. The reason for this is that our objective is not to get a policy win—it is to teach you the legislative process so that once you graduate, you will know what it takes to get a policy win and you can focus on your specific issue. For this reason, while we encourage teams to pick policy projects that are meaningful to them, we also encourage them to pick policy projects that are moveable for first-time advocates. 

That said, we recognize that our issue areas are broad and that there are countless different subtopics and problems impacting our communities within those issue areas (for example, education as it relates to “Economic Security,” or environmental justice as it relates to “Community Health”). If that’s the case for you, we strongly encourage you to urge as many other people within your field to apply as possible—that way, we are more likely to be able to put together a team of five people interested in working on that particular  subtopic.

This work is powered by you.

The feminist future we are building together in California is going to be built by all of us sharing our time, our money, and our skills.  Please consider contributing today.

Together We Are Unstoppable.

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