Font Size
100%
Archive
The Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy rallies at the State Capieal in Richmond VA
The 2024 Priorities of the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy
February 22, 2024
Kim Bobo and Anne Murphy join to talk about why the oldest state-wide multifaith policy organization in Virginia continues to grow and diversify,
Kim Bobo. Photograph courtesy of the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy.
“We Don’t Want to Tilt at Windmills” February 22, 2024
This week, Kim Bobo, executive director of the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy, joins to discuss the 2024 legislative agenda and how the 42-year-old organization continues to grow and expand its base across the Commonwealth.  Bobo, a faith-based advocate who started her career working to build solidarity for workers’ rights in Chicago in the 1980s, talks about how the network is adapting to create space for unaffiliated young people and those training in Virginia seminaries.  From avoiding controversial and divisive issues to creating new online social engagement strategies, Bobo is committed to building political power and amplifying the voice of faith-based communities that go beyond the usual suspects.

Kim Bobo: Nationally known promoter of social justice who leads VICPP’s advocacy, outreach, and development work. She also founded and served as executive director of Interfaith Worker Justice, the nation’s largest network of people of faith engaging in local and national actions to improve wages, benefits, and conditions for workers.
“Climbing Out of Poverty Takes a Network” February 22, 2024

During the January 17, 2024, Day of All People, the CEO and President of the Richmond Memorial Health Foundation, Reginald E. Gordon, spoke to hundreds gathered about the need to be poverty abolitionists, echoing the call to action of Princeton sociologist Dr. Matthew Desmond.  Among the hundreds of volunteers preparing to lobby lawmakers was Anne Murphy, a Catholic retiree and resident of Northern Virginia.  In this conversation, she describes why she has attended these annual lobbying events with the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy.  Over the decades, the gathering has become a reunion as well as an opportunity to build relationships with diverse members of the faith community. This is why pressing for structural change goes hand in hand with her charity work. For Murphy, the process of creating change requires resilience and a belief that the incremental change is making a difference in people's lives.

Anne Murphy has been a long-time Catholic activist for social justice.

The Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy bill tracker can be found here.

You can also read their fact sheet on Limiting Attack Dogs in Prisons.

Limiting Attack Dogs in Prison
Limiting Attack Dogs in Prisons
Courtesy VICPP


This week's closing music, New Hope, by Audiobinger, is 
used under a Creative Commons By Attribution 4.0 license.

All additional music by Blue Dot Sessions.


Remixes by Dissimilation Heavy Industries.