November 6, 2024


We’re not going to ask you to be resilient. Not today. Too often, resilience is an expectation placed upon us without any acknowledgment of the burdens we carry. Today, we hold a moment of space for the weariness that comes from constantly pushing forward, the exhaustion from striving to navigate a world that does not fully support or acknowledge our existence. This isn’t a call for resilience; it’s an invitation to recognize the steadfast strength you have continued to show and to allow yourself the grace to process and navigate at your own pace.

Whether you’re someone who’s ready to move forward at full speed, or someone who needs a moment to pause and catch your breath, we’re here—to be alongside you, to share the load when it’s too much, and to uplift each other. Election results give us a clearer pathway of the possibilities ahead and what we must continue to fight for.

We learn from our New Leaders Council alumni every day.

Whether that is Marta Hanson (NLC San Francisco), National Programs Manager of Power The Polls, who ensured that polling locations were fully staffed to safeguard everyone’s right to vote. Or Vincent Evans (NLC Tallahassee), Executive Director of the Congressional Black Caucus, who works to build a more inclusive environment in halls of power or those of you who ran for office and left everything on the field. While it’s bittersweet to experience some losses, along with some wins and even some of you head into runoffs for your own elections, you all have sparked inspiration for changemakers across the country and you inspire me to wake up every morning and keep fighting for what I love – all of you.

At NLC, we are committed to creating spaces that don’t require constant resilience but foster mutual care, support, and connection. In a world that too often asks us to keep going no matter the cost, we choose to stop, breathe, and recognize our humanity.

Whether you need support, camaraderie, or just a reminder that others recognize and value your experiences, NLC is here. Where we channel our strength, amplify your voices, and build on the commitment to creating a more just and inclusive future. Each step forward, every action taken, brings us closer to the vision we share.

Together, we’ll keep pushing boundaries, breaking down barriers, and working for a world where everyone has the opportunity to thrive. Here, you are part of a network that celebrates who you are and is beside you, whether or not you feel resilient today.

Karen Pandy-Cherry
Acting President & CEO of New Leaders Council

View this message on our social media page by clicking here.

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September 5, 2024


I love us!! New Leaders Council alumni are forging progress and change in rooms across the country. We are a Community Leadership Movement built on the relationships of over 13,000 alumni from across identities, industries, and issue areas. As one of our donor partners put it “NLC talks to everyone, everywhere, all the time”. For this, and so many other reasons, I am honored to be the new Acting President & CEO of New Leaders Council.

When I applied to NLC Broward in 2016, I was looking for a way to magnify and multiply my efforts to effect positive change in my community. I was doing it for one of the most basic reasons I believe we all share. I wanted my children and loved ones to be safe and have access to every opportunity they desired. From school massacres, to police involved murders of black people, and the epidemic of fake news, I was looking for a place to trade in my anxiety for action. I found NLC.


Although my titles have changed over the years: Mentorship Chair, LEAD Trainer, Millennial Compact Author, Black Caucus Co-Founder, Spark!Talk Presenter, Coach, Vice President of Programs…my passion and commitment remain the same. The challenges facing us today are complex, but I believe in the collective power of the NLC community to create solutions. My intention for NLC is to be the engine that drives forward the new kind of leadership our loved ones and communities desperately need – leadership that is bold, innovative, compassionate, and, most importantly, grounded in equity.

My vision for NLC is ambitious: to scale our work in a way that deepens our impact while expanding our reach and strengthening our brand. We’ve already begun laying the groundwork for this, with programming that speaks to the urgent needs of today and prepares our Fellows for the evolving landscape of tomorrow. 

We’ll continue refining our flagship NLC Institute, offering thoughtful, equity-centered leadership training that is both accessible and inclusive. But we’re not stopping there. I’m committed to ensuring NLC becomes a lifelong resource for our alumni, offering continuing education, leadership coaching, and networking opportunities so that we become the essential community for progressive leaders. In the coming weeks we will launch new alumni engagement campaigns including NLC100, #IAmNLC, and NLC Tracks. 

To everyone reading this: I invite you to join us on this journey. Whether you’re a current or prospective Fellow, an alumni, a supporter, or simply someone who believes in the power of inclusive leadership, your role in this movement matters. Together, we can create a future where every voice is heard, every community is valued, and leadership reflects the true diversity of our world.

Let’s trade our anxiety for action. Let’s build the future together.

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March 5, 2024

Our community needs a different kind of leader – NOW – people with the same challenges we face on a daily basis. New Leaders Council believes that to create the equitable country we aspire to be, we must build power among the leaders closest to their communities’ lived experiences. These leaders do not remain complacent in a world full of injustice and inequality and, although they have immense potential, they have been historically excluded from leadership pipelines. These leaders are the people who change the world! These leaders are NLC!

NLC Fellows and alumni are the kind of people our world needs: those committed to promoting inclusion, diversity, and equity; those who center their values; those who work collaboratively with diverse groups of people. They engage, inspire, and motivate others. They are a new kind of leader.

In 2023, NLC’s Programs and Operations team expanded its procedures to create deeper and more intentional support for volunteers and alumni in chapters all across the country. Support came in the form of better financial tracking, improved resources for chapter boards to run the NLC Institute, one-on-one conversations that supported chapters in local board management, and streamlining a variety of processes to increase sustainability.

In 2023 NLC HQ also prioritized rest and denounced systemically oppressive hustle culture by shifting our programs to meet chapters at their level of capacity. The unofficial theme for the Programs and Operations team for the year was “go small, to grow big”. We made the strategic decision to create new categories for chapters, including energize (chapters in a year of rebuilding) and legacy (chapters with alumni, but no active board)*.

The NLC Programs and Operations team is excited to continue building programs and systems that put our leaders first. We thank our amazing volunteers, alumni, and supporters who continue to give their time and resources to further NLC’s mission. With the problems our country faces, our community doesn’t have the luxury of waiting for one type of leader – some hero – to save us. So we stopped waiting for a hero, and we built a movement.

Together we will continue to build a new kind of leadership.

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June 24, 2023

Recently, on a beautiful spring day in Little Rock, Arkansas, I sat on a bench in front of Central High School listening to the wind rustling through the trees. I closed my eyes and imagined what it must have been like for members of the Little Rock Nine who walked bravely among an angry, screaming mob sixty-five years ago. I imagined what sage advice those nine teenagers would tell us today about our fight against fear, hate, and injustice.

This summer, the NLC community won’t have to imagine what that advice would be. We will have the immense honor to hear directly from Dr. Terrence Roberts, one of the original Little Rock Nine students, during NLC Convention this August 3-6th.

Karen Pandy-Cherry & Chad Cherry on the steps of Little Rock Central High
Fifteen-year-old Dr. Terrence Roberts denied entrance to Little Rock Central High School by the Arkansas National Guard.

Dr. Roberts was just 15 years old in 1957, three years after the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling of 1954, which signaled the end of racial segregation in U.S. schools. He was one of over a hundred students who raised their hands to volunteer to become the first Black Little Rock high school students to enroll at Central High.

Terrence Roberts, Ernest Green, Minnijean Brown, Elizabeth Eckford, Thelma Mothershed, Melba Pattillo, Gloria Ray, Jefferson Thomas, and Carlotta Walls, dubbed the Little Rock Nine, moved against hate and injustice, in spite of their fear. In September 1957, the Nine attempted to enter the high school but were blocked by the Arkansas National Guard and a mob of violent white residents.

The Little Rock Nine, all teenagers, faced verbal and physical attacks daily as well as consistent hate mail and threatening calls to their homes. The violence was so bad that National Guardsmen were assigned to walk each of the Little Rock Nine from class to class, standing outside the classrooms during class time.

Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division escorting the Little Rock Nine students into Central High School in Little Rock by order of President Eisenhower
With over 1,200 U.S. soldiers on campus, they were escorted to and from school in a military station wagon



In a 2013 interview, Dr. Roberts said, “I had an ongoing relationship with fear. I had never been that fearful in my life. I went to school fearful and remained fearful all day. I went home with fear. After a time I figured out that, if I’m going to survive this thing, I better make a real acquaintanceship with fear. I began owning it. Once I owned the fear, it dissipated a little bit. I was able to go where I wanted to go with the fear. I developed a mantra, ‘Fear will not interfere with goal-directed behavior.’”

Fast forward almost 66 years later and there is so much for us to fear in the present day United States. Black people are still being murdered at the hands of those who should protect us, a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body is being criminalized, the truth of history is being silenced, and hate legislation is being peddled openly across the United States.

And yet – there is hope. Legacy builders like Dr. Roberts, and the Little Rock Nine, paved the way for trailblazers like you, me, and NLC alumni all across this great country.

This year, at the 2023 NLC Convention in Little Rock, Dr. Roberts will join attendees to share his wisdom, remind us of our power-filled history, and inspire us to continue our fight for progress.

During our inaugural New Legacy Tour on August 4th, NLC alumni will be guided through a learning experience to Central High School, the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center, and the Clinton Library. Join Dr. Roberts and your fellow NLC alumni in Little Rock, Arkansas August 3-6th, as we continue to Create Change Where Change is Needed.

Dr. Terrence Roberts then and now.

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National

A Love Letter and Call to Action to NLC Volunteers

Apply for the Senior Programs Advisory Committe (SPAC)


May 1, 2023 //Karen Pandy-Cherry

Dear New Leaders Council volunteers, 

You train the people who change the world. At home in your chapters, you drive our community leadership movement, working every day to build trust, center equity, and make local change one Fellow at a time. 

It’s not easy to run Institute for six months – and you do so much work in the background to prepare for each year’s class of Fellows, including nominate, encourage, and select each class. As a current volunteer with NLC Orlando with my husband Chad, I know it takes the hard work of every board member to make Institute run smoothly. What looks so well orchestrated to our Fellows requires so much behind the scenes magic: collaborating with creativity, problem-solving with your team, creating safe and inviting spaces, planning and executing events and fundraisers, connecting with community members to book speakers and plan activities, finding venues, ordering lunch and supplies, making donor calls, organizing chapter board meetings – you do it all! 

After your day jobs, you choose to devote your excellence to NLC. You give us your weekends at Institute, your evenings for board meetings, your mid-week lunch hours for answering Fellow emails. For your chapters, you have kindly devoted your free time, creative energy, listening ears, and kind hearts. You’ve given years of service to hundreds of local NLC Fellows and alumni, impact that multiplies far beyond what we can fathom. Thank you.

The reality is, you’re the kind of people that our world needs: those committed to promoting inclusion, diversity, and equity; those who center their values, in particular equity and continuous growth; those who work collaboratively and effectively with diverse groups of people and through strong communication and interpersonal skills. You engage, inspire, and motivate others. You are adaptable, practicing balancing between competing priorities – able to adapt to changing circumstances and be flexible in approach to problem solving. You are self-reflective and adept at listening and receiving feedback as a part of continuous growth. You are a new kind of leader.

Thank you for choosing to continue your individual leadership development with us. The hours you put in – your ideas, perspectives, talents –  strengthen the NLC network. By volunteering, you help not only in your local chapter, but also scale our impact to make progress go farther and farther nationwide. You, along with more than 400 others in chapters from the Pacific Northwest to South Florida, train nearly 1,000 new Fellows every year.  You are a leader in your chapter and your local community.

With all that gratitude, I pose a new opportunity: I invite you to go beyond your important local role and scale up nationally by serving on NLC’s brand new advisory group, the Senior Programs Advisory Committee (SPAC). SPAC will work collaboratively with NLC HQ to provide strategic guidance, mentorship, and advisory support to chapters and caucuses. The senior volunteer group will be responsible for creating an inclusive and supportive environment that fosters learning, growth, and leadership development within the NLC community. 

I’ve included more information about SPAC below. We formed SPAC as a new phase in NLC’s continuous growth. While both the National Programs Committee (NPC) and National Diversity Committee (NDC) were sunset in March, they were the scaffolding that helped build what NLC is today. Now, with our support strongly in place, NLC’s SPAC can continue and accelerate the organization’s capacity both internally and externally.

NLC’s NPC and NDC worked with NLC HQ to create the structure and strategy to fully bloom. Their members worked diligently to develop the organization, forming  who we are today. With their help, NLC launched its first equity statement; incorporated diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) more consistently into its programs; established more effective feedback and evaluation systems; all while upgrading the Curriculum Guide, recruitment efforts, and many other Institute improvements. Thank you to the members of the NPC and NDC for helping us build capacity in order to meet this moment. 

Now in our next phase of continuous growth, we have been able to automate more of our day to day chapter support and shift our focus to larger scale programming. Enter SPAC. SPAC will work alongside NLC HQ’s programming team and regional coordinators to look ahead more expansively into the future. SPAC members will help ensure that DEI continues to be  woven through NLC programming, map our path into the future,  and hold the organization accountable to its strategic plan and vision. SPAC will also provide leadership development support through projects like chapter director training, orientation and onboarding.

Thank you for being NLC’s champions every day. Thank you for being you, and for allowing us the privilege to learn and grow beside you. Thank you for lending us your joy, your tact, and your beautiful ability to build strong relationships among the NLC community. 

With love and gratitude,

Karen Pandy-Cherry


Learn more about the SPAC below, see eligibility requirements, and apply by May 15, 2023!

  • Community: 
    • Serve as ambassadors to chapters to foster strong community culture aligned with NLC values
    • Provide insight to staff on strategic questions or challenges facing chapters/ volunteers
    • Provides the organization’s national and local leadership with cutting-edge DEI expertise across a wide variety of identities and communities
    • Support HQ and chapters in recruitment and selections process
  • Leadership: 
    • Support HQ in providing leadership development training to chapter volunteers
    • Support the grievance process between Fellows and chapters and among chapter board members
    • Coach chapter directors in effective chapter board management
    • Support staff with a specific chapter, Caucus, or volunteer who is unsuitable or values misaligned in their role
    • Advise HQ on infusing DEI into all programs & project plans
    • Coaching and mentoring chapters boards on implementing DEI in their local programs and operations
  • Movement: 
    • Support HQ in ensuring chapter, caucus, and alumni efforts are aligned with the strategic plan
    • Support Programs & Operations team in creating opportunities for collective impact among chapters, volunteers, and alumni
    • Support NLC in its movement toward progress including introducing new strategic partnerships and other opportunities as they arise
National

Amplifying Alumni Impact in Capstone Clash Initiative

Seven Alumni Participate in First-Ever Promotion


April 21, 2023

After sharing seven inspiring alumni Capstone projects (our “Significant Seven”), three rounds of voting, and more than 2,300 total votes from our community, we’re excited to announce the winner of our Capstone Clash, NLC’s promotion to earn $500 in prize money to further an alum’s Capstone project. 

With 472 final-round votes on Instagram, the winner of our Capstone Clash is Sunny Williams’ Capstone, Tiny Docs! Tiny Docs is an interactive web app that creates cartoons to educate kids about health in a fun and easy to understand language. The interactive children’s health platform is packed with educational videos, activities, and resources that nurture better health for the next generation.

You can congratulate Sunny on Instagram!

Sunny Williams; NLC Chapter and year: Chicago 2015; Capstone Name: Tiny Docs

Capstone Clash participants included food pantries, chess cooperatives, Narcan vending machines, caregiver support, and education. Our participants (read about them below) connected with hundreds of new friends, peers, and supporters across the country, bringing new exposure to the ideas and issues that matter most to them.

Our first-ever Capstone Clash united alumni to celebrate the direct impact that the #NLCFamily makes in their communities. That’s the power of NLC: one conversation, one Capstone project, at a time, we change the world together. 

In NLC chapters across the nation, Institute Fellows identify a project or big idea that captures their passion and then find a way to fill a need in the community by leveraging the skills and networks to make a change. This connection and collaboration is what drives our community leadership movement.

Have a story of impact since your Institute experience? We’d like to amplify it with the NLC network. Share your story with us!

About the 2023 Capstone Clash Participants

Runner Up: Marcella Juarez (NLC South TX Frontera ’20)

Forever Farm is growing by converting two shipping containers for the year-round production of local, healthy, and sustainable food for my community.

Missy Spears – COVunity Fridge
She/Her
Kentucky 2021

The COVunity Fridge is a free fridge, freezer, pantry open 24/7 for community donations and shopping. We partner with a number of small businesses and individuals to keep it stocked and clean. It also has a microwave and hot/cold water dispenser to allow folks to eat meals on site.


Holly Noon – Doctorate with Focus in Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
She/Her
Broward 2022

My capstone was to outline the process for pursuing my doctorate degree with a speciality or focus in the diversity, equity & inclusion space. Once I obtain the doctorate I would leverage my expertise in my own consulting business or pursue a leadership role at an organization with a DEI focus.


Em Gray – The N.I.C.E. Project, Narcan In Case Of Emergency – Texas’s First Free 24/7 Narcan Vending Machines
She/Her
Austin 2019

Launched in August 2022, the NICE Project works to reduce overdose deaths in central Texas by making imperceptible the barriers to overdose reversal medication via the vending machine delivery system. They currently have three locations in Austin and have dispensed over 5,000 doses of Narcan.


Ashley Hart – The Janice Hart Foundation
She/Her
Tampa Bay 2022

The Janice Hart Foundation focuses on providing a community to support caregivers and encouraging them to fill their vases. We will provide peer and therapeutic support groups, reprieve volunteers to assist caregivers, emergency bill assistance, and a community directory of business in our community


Ernest Levert Jr. – ChessMakers Cooperative
He/Him
Columbus 2021

The ChessMakers Cooperative was created to help raise awareness about solidarity economics and cooperatives through the creation and distribution of custom-made chess sets, tables, and equipment. We are excited to move into the next phase of the project by hosting our first ChessMakers workshops!

Just as our alumni came together to vote to advance projects through Capstone Clash, we will also unite to learn and grow with each other at our yearly Convention. 

This year, hosted in Little Rock, Arkansas, we’ll focus on the many ways that NLC Fellows and alumni create change where change is needed. We’ll celebrate folks like Sunny and our other amazing Capstone Clash participants, as well as those other impactful changemakers across our nation.

You can learn more about Convention and purchase ticket here.

Austin, Boston, Chicago, National, New Hampshire, Orlando, Silicon Valley, Washington DC

2023 Fellows Use Their Stories to Drive Change

Meet Eight Fellows from NLC’s Nationwide Chapters


December 13, 2022 //Karen Pandy-Cherry

New Leaders Council trains the people who change the world. Our next class of Institute Fellows – our 2023 cohort – are the entrepreneurs, non-profit executives, and elected officials of the future. They are a new kind of leader on the front lines of the issues impacting their communities and, with NLC’s network and training, they’ll be equipped to solve their communities’ problems by centering equity, collaboration, and cross-sector connections.

NLC creates new ways of leading at the local level. We believe that to solve local problems, we need local problem-solvers. Below are just a few of the amazing 2023 Fellows we are welcoming to the NLC Family. While all our Fellows have shown exemplary leadership qualities and a passion for progress, the below folks have used their stories to uplift their communities. Read more about these Fellows and our 400 other Fellows on your local chapter’s webpage!

Joanne Celestin – Orlando

Joanne Celestin, Orlando

Joanne is a primary Care Nurse Practitioner and volunteers with multiple community organizations. In 2019, her life was forever changed when her baby brother was brutally killed by local police during a mental health emergency. This experience shattered her world as an emergency-trained medical provider and led her on a path to organize community efforts for awareness and demand for change in the local justice system.

Kyle DeLeon – Austin

Kyle DeLeon, Austin

Kyle is the Senior Manager of Grassroots Organizing in Texas for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.  After 3 rounds of chemotherapy, Kyle survived stage II testicular cancer – the same cancer that took the life of his grandfather. He proudly draws upon his experience as a survivor to advocate for other cancer patients and their families.

Samrawit Silva – New Hampshire

Samrawit Silva, New Hampshire

Samrawit is a black Tigrayan immigrant. She helps organize peaceful protests throughout the US and trips to visit Tigrayan refugees in Sudan, continuously raising awareness of the Tigray genocide that impacts her family. She is also the Organizing Director for Black Lives Matter Seacoast. 

Jess Weltha-Bales – Washington D.C.

Jess Weltha-Bales, Washington D.C.

Jess served seven years as an active-duty army officer and has extensive experience advocating for survivors of military sexual trauma and teaching bystander intervention techniques to fellow soldiers. In her current role as a Congressional Fellow with the Women’s Congressional Policy Institute, Jess is working to develop and pass legislation that supports women and the veteran community.  Jess continues to serve as an army reserve public affairs officer and volunteers with her local domestic violence shelter and Veterans of Foreign Wars organization.

Imran Hossain, New York City
Imran Hossain – New York City

Imran Hossain, New York City

Imran is a public interest attorney who is passionate about assisting small business owners in New York City. His interest in small businesses started in law school, where he was part of an award-winning clinic that counseled small business owners who could not afford legal services. Currently, Imran is a Staff Attorney with the Volunteers of Legal Services (VOLS) where he advises small business owners who traditionally lack access to legal representation. At VOLS, Imran also works with grass-roots organizations on informational clinics for local small business owners and has testified at City Hall regarding progressive policy reform and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on small business owners.

Noëlle Rábago Boesenberg – Silicon Valley

Noëlle Rábago Boesenberg, Silicon Valley

Noëlleis a Filipino American immigrant and single mom. In 2020, when the pandemic halted her career in business, Noëlle did what she always did in times of crisis: baked cinnamon rolls. As Noëlle baked, she realized it wasn’t just therapeutic for her but was a way to reconnect with her community during difficult times. In July 2020, Noëlle founded TherapyBaking LLC, and raised funds for local non-profit and mutual aid organizations. 

Consuela Hendricks – Chicago

Consuela Hendricks, Chicago

Consuela is an urban ecologist, artist, community organizer, and founding co-president of People Matter (PM), a community-based organization whose mission is to uplift, unearth and untether people in different Chicago communities. A 4th generation Chicago native, she has worked for over a decade to improve race relations between Black/ Latine /Asian communities. Consuela founded PM’s Community Language Program, one of the world’s only dual-immersion Cantonese and English classes taught through a social justice lens.

Jean Dolin 2023 Fellow
Jean Dolin – Boston

Jean Dolin, Boston

Jean is a trilingual humanitarian from Haiti and is the creative director and curator of Portraits of Pride, a large-scale portraiture exhibition of LGBTQ people in the city of Boston that he launched in 2022. In 2021, he founded Rainbow Tales, a multimedia production initiative to tell LGBTQ stories through various creative mediums. 

Our chapters across the U.S. adapt NLC’s national curriculum to fit their local lenses, sharing the mindsets and skillsets needed to succeed in business, public service, and/or non-profit leadership, including communications, community organizing, fundraising and finance, goal setting, and public policy.

NLC Institute is the foundational experience for all NLC Fellows, creating a shared experience that deepens their relationships within the cohort.  It is these relationships that are the cornerstone of leadership development both in our chapter cohorts and for the new kind of leadership model we are building on a national scale

When we invest in one Fellow, one cohort, one chapter, progress multiplies not just in local communities, but collectively across the country. As our 2023 Fellows join the NLC Family in January, we encourage you to learn more about our new Fellows, connect with our chapters on social media, and make a gift that sustains progress and equity one leader at a time.

National, Philadelphia

NLC Philadelphia Helps Shape Their City’s Future

Witness what makes Philly so special at 2022 Convention, July 21 – 24.


June 21, 2022 //Karen Pandy-Cherry

In July, hundreds of leaders from across the country will gather in Philadelphia at NLC’s 2022 Convention.

It’s fitting that the NLC is coming together for the first time in three years in Philadelphia, a city that embodies the spirit of NLC’s community of changemakers. 

“Philly’s grit and attitude flow through all of our alumni,” said Kellan White, Chair of NLC’s National Programs Committee and former NLC Philadelphia Chapter Director. “We see and hear the issues affecting our city, making us the most well-equipped to lean in and solve its problems.”

Founded in 2011, NLC Philadelphia has trained over 200 place-based leaders through the NLC Institute. They are running government, nonprofits, and businesses across the city and its surrounding counties – and are shaping the future of the communities they serve.

“So many of us made good on the investment NLC made in us,” said White. 

Often that means returning to the chapter to help design the curriculum and Institute experience for its next cohort of Fellows. Michael O’Bryan, a 2017 NLC Philadelphia alumni and founder of Humanature, a design strategy firm that helps organizations put human well-being at the center of their work, was motivated to come back to NLC because of the impact COVID-19 had on the community. 

Like many cities across the country, Philadelphia is confronting a wide-range of issues, including poverty, a housing crisis, and endemic gun violence. Alongside chapter leadership, O’Bryan helped design a space where Fellows are challenged to think and talk about these issues using a systems lens that confronts inequities in Philadelphia’s history. 

Fellows are then encouraged to create solutions that center the dignity of the people they serve – and to lead through the relationships they have with other Fellows and members of the community.

“Governance is hard. We have to create space for something different,” said O’Bryan. “I’ll do whatever I can to encourage people to step into leadership. You can do it almost anywhere by building your relationships and skills in service of the things you want to solve and the issues you want to further.” 

Kellan White echoed relationship-building as a cornerstone of NLC Philadelphia’s work. “It’s easier to solve problems with friends rather than strangers,” he said.

Kellan White

Chair, National Programs Committee
Former NLC Philadelphia Co-Director
Kellan White
Chair, National Programs Committee
Former NLC Philadelphia Co-Director
Michael O'Bryan
Founder of HumanNature
Former NLC Philadelphia Institute Co-Chair
Michael O’Bryan
Founder of HumanNature
Former NLC Philadelphia Institute Co-Chair
Dr. Monica Taylor
Professor, program director, 
University of Sciences in Philadelphia Department of Kinesiology
Dr. Monica Taylor
Professor, program director,
University of Sciences in Philadelphia Department of Kinesiology
Monet Reilly

Co-Director
NLC Philadelphia
Monet Reilly
Co-Director
NLC Philadelphia

Dr. Monica Taylor, a 2018 NLC Philadelphia alumni and professor and program director in the Kinesiology department at the University of Sciences in Philadelphia, brings that relationship-focused mindset to her community outreach work, both as a professor and elected official. 

As part of her NLC Capstone project, Dr. Taylor mapped resources in other school districts across the region that were not available in the school district she served as a school board member. She leaned on the knowledge and network of her NLC community to make connections that would improve her district, resulting in a series of community outreach projects, including ones that promote STEAM programs in elementary schools and inclusive job fairs that introduce high school students to career pathways in healthcare fields. 

“NLC helped me figure out how I can make an impact in the areas I wanted to, and the network to make it happen,” said Dr. Taylor, who is now the Chair of the Delaware County Council. “Any time I call on someone in NLC for connections at a local school, they’ll say ‘oh yeah I know someone at that elementary school, they’d love to have you come over and help.’”

NLC Philadelphia has created a network of community-first leaders – and now, with hundreds of NLC alumni preparing to descend on their city this summer – they’re ready to show the rest of the NLC network what makes Philly so special. 

“Philly pride can’t be matched,” said Monet Reilly, a 2021 NLC Philadelphia alumni and 2022 Chapter Co-Director. “We are the city that loves you back. There is no where else like Philly.”

New Leaders Council Philadelphia  Board of Directors and alumni.
New Leaders Council Philadelphia Board of Directors and alumni.
Columbus, National, New Hampshire, New York City, Oakland, Oklahoma, San Francisco, Tallahassee, Tampa Bay

Class of 2021 Shares Their Stories

Fellows Make a Collective Impact


January 31, 2022

In all that 2021 has taught us, we know firmly that national progress starts at a local level. We know that communities are changed by those closest to its problems, by its proximate leaders. That’s what NLC is all about: building an ecosystem of leaders across identities, issues, and industries, to push for progress at home and across the country. 

As we look forward to 2022 and beyond, we are taking time to reflect on our alumni’s individual and collective success. In this year’s annual report, A New Phase for New Leaders, we highlighted nine Class of 2021 alumni and the important work they are doing in their communities, cities, states, and the nation. Read more about these impactful folks below and check out this year’s report! If you’re an NLC Alumni who wants to share your story of collective impact, please share more here.


adner MArcelin

NLC Tallahassee ’21

Administrator, Ben Crump Law

I decided to apply for a New Leaders Council fellowship for the very same reason I decided to run for office: I have a heart for my community. Following the murder of George Floyd in 2020, I was connected to Floyd’s family in my professional capacity with Ben Crump Law. Throughout my NLC fellowship in 2021, I was also traveling to Minneapolis to support the family during the Derek Chauvin trial. The Floyd family was depending on us and our team during the lowest, most broken times of their lives and I felt a connection to them. Experiencing the trial and NLC Institute at the same time was invaluable and I wouldn’t have wanted it any other way. The trial highlighted in real-time the lessons I was learning in NLC about the power of local leaders. NLC gave me clarity that I was doing the right things at the right time. As I completed Institute in June, Minneapolis City Commission President Andrea Jenkins – the first Black, openly trans woman to serve in that post – was a catalyst for settling the record-breaking civil case against the officers that murdered Floyd. I learned from her that integrity is key to good governance, a value that NLC validated as something needed in Tallahassee too. Floyd’s brothers and sisters encouraged me to run for office, expressing a need for leaders who can create a more just, equitable system now and in the future. Their words of encouragement and my NLC Institute experience painted a picture of my individual leadership potential. As I make my bid to be a local leader, I use my NLC training every day, including fundraising, public speaking, and relationship-building. Beyond the curriculum, NLC connected me with people in and outside of my cohort and taught me how to go out there and talk about the change I wanted to see in Tallahassee. NLC has also helped me get out of my comfort zone and has given me the direction and determination to achieve the change my community needs. 

Rep. Ajay Pittman

NLC Okalahoma ’21

Oklahoma State House of Representatives, District 99

My foundation of leadership was influenced by the women in my life. I was taught to embrace my culture and heritage as an African American and Native American with dual citizenship in the Seminole Nation. My Native grandmother believed that if we expect our youth to become leaders, then we must empower their voices now. I was able to bring that inclusivity and openness to the table to help elevate my NLC experience.

It was easy to connect with my LEAD group, my cohort as a whole, and the National Alumni and Fellows. On the micro-level, in my four-person LEAD group, we shared our ambitions, focus areas and became family. We practiced our support for one another with open hearts, advice and listening ears. For example, one of my peers shared a desire to run for office and I shared my experience as a millennial. Our conversation made space for each other to show up as our whole selves. I wanted to be as authentic as possible because Oklahoma needs a pipeline for new leaders and I’ve been fortunate to set an example for those who will come behind me.

In addition to my cohort, I enjoyed a national NLC connection also. We embraced opportunities to meet other Fellows, and speakers from across the United States. We participated in our monthly institute with National Programming as an important lens for the local topics we discussed monthly. Together, with other Fellows across the nation, we broke out into different groups to discuss current issues and share best practices. In these breakout sessions, I connected with doctors, accountants, authors, and even other elected officials. NLC training was helpful in the areas of connectivity, community building, and some fundraising strategies.

The leadership training provided a model to identify and build stronger leaders. We all prioritized different issues as individuals but agreed that you cannot do this work alone. Whether it is healthcare, criminal justice reform, or economic justice, this important work requires collaboration. I believe we all have to show up with an authentic purpose, use our strengths and unique stories to effect change.

emily ladau

NLC NEw york city ’21

Digital Content and Community Manager, Disability & Philanthropy Forum
Author, Demystifying Disability

I identify as a physically disabled woman. While 1.3 billion people in the world live with disabilities, we too often remain on the margins. Being in community with others excites me, including opportunities to better understand different experiences and to self-reflect. That desire for connection and collaboration led me to New Leaders Council.

I found NLC through other disabled people I know who went through different chapters across the U.S. I wanted to be a Fellow to not only expand representation of disabled people in the cohort, but also expand my experiences beyond my own bubble. A lot of the work done in social justice movements tends to be insular; often, based on our identities and issues, activists stick to their own communities. That’s not a way to create change. But with NLC, I was able to connect with others beyond the communities I’m already a part of and be more effective together. Every issue is a disability issue. All the great work that other NLC folks do encompasses disability whether or not they recognize it. And I recognized that my work can improve by focusing on how different forms of oppression intersect.

My cohort experience was a powerful opportunity to connect with people who care about the direction our country and planet are moving. It was motivational to connect to those who want to affect change, especially in the midst of a pandemic. While the weight of the world is heavy, my LEAD group helped me combat self-defeat. Our small group talked about our goals and our next steps. We not only learned from speakers and from sharing our perspectives, but there was also power in learning with people who are so passionate about their work.

NLC was a reminder that a pandemic does not mean we need to be stagnant. It was so nice to be in community with people who are also doing the work. The world is bigger than we think it is, and NLC helped me find my people. Beyond Institute, I still check in with my LEAD group, and NLC has led to connections with other amazing people in the disability community who I continually work with today.

ernest levert Jr.

nlc columbus ’21

Founding Director, The Royal Oak Initiative (ROI)

I’ve been playing chess since I was in elementary school. Chess offers practitioners the opportunity to learn more about themselves and the world through the parallels between life and the game. If you can use your principles to navigate the opening, use tactics and mindfulness to navigate the middle game, then you might be able to win in the end.

NLC challenged me to take my game to the next level. One of my most significant experiences in NLC was developing my capstone project, inspired partially by our session on labor, solidarity economics, and unions. I had heard about cooperatives and economic democracy before, but I wanted to use my passion for chess to dive deeper into exploring how these look in practice. For my capstone, I decided to focus on launching a chess-based producer cooperative through which local makers could design and create their own chess sets, pieces, tables, and other locally made chess products. With intentions of increasing workforce development skills and economic empowerment, I wanted to help others tap into their creativity to express and explore themselves through the art of chess. With encouragement and support from my cohort, mentors, family, and friends, I entered my idea for the Chess Cooperative into a local business pitch competition and ended up receiving the most votes and a community-funded grant!  

NLC also challenged me to evolve the way that I view mentorship. NLC pushed me to step out of my comfort zone and to initiate a mentoring relationship with community leaders that I admired in the areas of business, impact, and authenticity. I was also able to connect with and build relationships with new friendtors (friend + mentor) among my NLC cohort and NLC Columbus alumni. 

Just like the pieces in the game of chess, each of us has unique abilities, experiences, and perspectives that can unite to form an indomitable coalition of dreamers and doers. My time in NLC showed me what the next level of community impact and leadership could look like as we strive to operate in our unique strengths to fight for a more equitable, inclusive future.

EZRA KONG

nlc oAKLAND ’21

Managing Partner & Co-Founder, Reflex Design Collective

I’ve wanted to connect creativity with social justice for awhile now. In college, I was moving between engineering and architecture with a focus on how design can be used for social impact. At the same time, I was noticing a growing gap between my values or politics and the approach that “design for good” work does, in that it didn’t incorporate a real understanding of systemic racism and other forms of oppression in the design process. The traditional approach to design (design thinking, human-centered design) managed to leave out much of this. I wanted to build something different: a way to design that embraces co-creation within communities so that a practitioner designs with, rather than for, those most impacted. This shifts the cyclical pattern of inequity in which those who have been systemically oppressed aren’t even able to access the agency needed to change these systems. I found these same themes of dismantling traditional power structures for collective good with New Leaders Council in Oakland as well.

As a part of equity design, my work also focuses on interpersonal dynamics: the teams we work on. This work is about who has access to decision-making power, and for people to equitably design, we have to look inward and look at the relational dynamics we have together. The way we work together in our teams will impact how we are able to show up with integrity when working with community groups. This belief was affirmed and sharpened by my NLC experience and my peers who embodied these values with me.

I found NLC through a friend, who I met through equity design work and was the chapter co-director of NLC Oakland. Knowing my passions, they highly recommended the Institute. Just like in my design work, a lot of people in my cohort also worked within the traditional institutions such as governments and academia – but they also felt accountable to grassroots communities and were trying to change really difficult power dynamics. Working between institutions and communities is emotionally challenging and can take a lot out of people, but NLC brought me a sense of community. Together, we shared and expanded organizing strategies, analyzed and interpreted systems thinking, and most importantly created a space for us to provide support and inspiration.

Gabriela
Santiago-Romero

NLC detroit ’21

Councilwoman, City of Detroit
Policy and Research Director, We the People Michigan

I am a lifelong resident of Detroit and immigrant from Mexico. I grew up in poverty in a single-parent household and have witnessed our communities marginalize people with harmful policies and a lack of resources. Detroit raised me to be a social justice warrior, and NLC connected me with other leaders who care about progress.

During my NLC Institute, I was debating to run for office or not. When we started in January 2021, I was not sure what I wanted to do, as I had just lost my first bid for county commissioner. But with my cohort’s support, helpful curriculum, and even an encouraging call from U.S. Rep. Rashida Talib, I decided that running for City Council would be my capstone project. That push from folks in my community to run and serve, and that belief in me, is what I needed. And just like the movement of collective leadership we build in our cohorts, coming to a decision point was a team effort. With the primary in August, my NLC fellowship gave me time to dive in, set my intentions behind running, work through timelines of what had to be done, and launch the campaign in real-time. In November 2021, I won my race and accomplished my capstone project. It felt good to complete this task, especially with my cohort’s constant support.

There’s a lot I want to do for my community, including improving environmental justice and protection, increasing affordable housing and availability, and making sure all residents have basic city services. For too long, my neighbors in my district have lacked the resources they deserve, and the more that I’m learning, with my NLC community and beyond, I know progress is possible. Today, I still talk to my cohort, including sharing jobs I have available through the City. From experience, I know it’s really hard to run for office, especially for young women of color. But my cohort saw leadership in me and thought that I should be a part of the ecosystem of diverse leaders we need to make change real. It was so impactful to seek folks that seek the good in you, accept and share support, and surround myself with those who were dreaming big.

jules good

nlc new hampshire ’21

Somersworth NH Selectperson
Founder, Neighborhood Access

Growing up, I never felt like I fit in, especially as a young, queer person. I attribute most of my leadership skill development to always being the odd one out and wanting to protect and uplift others who were shunned by the conservative majority in my community. I learned to use my quirks as a tool to relate with all kinds of people, but especially other queer and disabled people.

I was nominated by an NLC alumnus who was a faculty member at the university I attended. It seemed like a great opportunity to meet other young progressives and learn some organizing skills. The most important lesson that NLC taught me is that it’s crucial to regularly take time to reflect on your past, goals, skills, and skill gaps. It is really easy to get caught up in the flow of day-to-day work, especially when you work full time and run a business like I do. LEAD weekend at Institute was a catalyst for helping me focus on my goals and formulate actionable steps to achieve them! Additionally, this time of reflection solidified my desire to continue building my network of disabled progressives. I was able to connect with other disabled 2021 Fellows throughout Institute, which introduced me to people I still collaborate with to this day. Many of the goals I set during LEAD weekend had to do with expanding my consulting business, Neighborhood Access, and becoming more involved in my local community. Over the past year, I’ve expanded my staff and clientele and have become part of several disability coalitions. It’s been thrilling to see people get excited about our work and get involved!

During Institute, I met and strengthened relationships with disabled folks and together we worked to host a virtual Disabled Fellows Mixer. It was a wonderful chance to meet other disabled folks in the program and learn about their experiences, as well as their advocacy efforts in their respective communities. I still interact with some of the Fellows I met through that event from time to time, and it’s so much fun to see them progressing on their journeys!

matthew chernesky

nlc tampa Bay ’21

Manager of Financial Stability, United Way Suncoast
Co-Founder of nenos

NLC presented an opportunity to be part of something larger, develop and hone-in on special skills, and cultivate my lifelong passion of being a change agent. NLC not only connected me with a diverse group of people who care about Tampa, but also speakers and curriculum that guide my business.

My favorite Institute experience was when we had a chat with small businesses in Florida. These leaders shared what it takes to get that ball rolling, and as my nenos co-founder and I had recently filed our LLC paperwork and actually formed the legal entity side of the business, this session was an awesome learning moment to dig deeper with an actual professional in the field. NLC played a big role in the app and our business. The ideals of what NLC represents – community, inclusivity, peer support, and so much more – were so critical to what we wanted our business model to be and what we wanted the company to represent. NLC lit a fire in my soul. I wanted to make sure everything we did, both internally and externally, was DEI-positive, actively supportive of creators on the platform, and was a progressive and forward-thinking social network. This ultimately led to us taking revolutionary critical steps such as prohibiting sponsored advertising, allowing creators to monetize their own content, and taking strong stances against misinformation and hateful content.

Now, after graduating from my NLC Institute, I serve as NLC Tampa Bay’s Communications Chair. I stay connected to my NLC chapter because it is so incredible to see new cohorts blossom into the next leaders of our community. NLC is a transformative experience. It places us in conversations that challenge our preexisting ideas, fosters and develops our skills, and allows us to network with other change agents across the country. The work that I do with NLC Tampa Bay is my way of helping future cohorts have as incredible an experience as I did and build a sustainable chapter for the long-term.

Renée Menart

nlc san francisco ’21

Communications and Policy Analyst, Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
Author, Demetri Makes a Memory Quilt

I work in youth justice advocacy at the state level in California. My focus is on alternatives to incarceration and keeping families together. Following my Institute Fellowship in 2021, I published Demetri Makes a Memory Quilt, a story of a young boy whose mom is in prison. With the help of his family, Demetri embarks on a creative healing process and explores ways to connect with his mom. When I was an NLC San Francisco Fellow in 2021, I was in the early stages of developing my children’s book. For my capstone project, I aimed to successfully launch the book with proceeds benefiting families impacted by incarceration. There was a lot to be learned! But through NLC I was connected to a community of folks who support criminal and juvenile justice reform, as well as communications and event planning professionals. My cohort even helped read and finalize my book’s manuscript. As a first-time author, this support was critical. Through Institute curriculum, I learned how to develop an audience, share my book on social media, and plan a successful hybrid launch party in November 2021. I wanted to make as big an impact as I could with this book. To date, the project has helped raise nearly $1,800 for the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice’s Cameo House in San Francisco. Moving forward, I want to seek foundation support for donating copies of my book to children and families directly impacted by incarceration.

NLC taught me how to find my authentic voice, identify my own version of success, and set long-term goals. But most of all, I was grateful to have an opportunity for connection at a time when I was craving to meet new people who do similar community work. Through the pandemic, I found a lot of energy in collaboration and connection. My cohort provided space to be fully human, react to what was happening in the world, and envision my life’s path in new ways.

National

NLC Welcomes Nearly 700 New Fellows

“The NLC experience allows emerging leaders to reimagine what’s possible.”


November 23, 2021

At NLC, we know that change happens when folks work together to make a collective impact. 

Today, we are thrilled to announce the next generation of system changers. This year’s cohort of NLC Fellows includes nearly 700 local leaders from across the country. They are organizers, educators, healthcare professionals, and entrepreneurs. They are committed to equity, accountability, and community-centered solutions. 

And they are ready to write the next page of history for themselves and the communities they serve. 

“Fellows come to NLC on the cusp of transformational leadership,” said Clare Bresnahan English, our President & CEO. “During their fellowship, they gain the skills, resources, and network to take their leadership journey to the next level.” 

Starting in January, Fellows will begin the NLC Institute, which is delivered in chapters throughout the country. The Institute creates space for intensive leadership development and meaningful connection with other changemakers –  a key element in making lasting progress.  

“In response to the issues we are facing in this country, this much is clear: leaders need meaningful, collaborative relationships to move us forward,” said Karen Pandy Cherry, Vice President of Programs. “NLC Institute brings people together who likely would have never met, and creates a space for them to build relationships with one another.”

While every chapter’s Institute is six months long, the national curriculum is tailored to connect Fellows’ training to local issues. The curriculum includes skill-building in areas such as collective impact, communications, fundraising, and community organizing, with equity and inclusion infused in each session. It is delivered by trainers from local networks, immersing Fellows in community-led change.

The Institute culminates in a capstone, where Fellows identify a project that fills a need in the community and is aligned with their passions and goals. Fellows leverage the skills and network NLC provides during the Institute for their capstone project – bringing the NLC experience to life in their communities. 

“New leaders are constantly thinking in new ways with a new lens,” said Pandy Cherry. “NLC Fellows are closest to their communities. They know the names of the people who they are fighting for and who they are accountable to, which makes them most equipped to bring forward the solutions they create in their capstone projects.”

Once Fellows graduate from Institute, they join a network of 10,000 NLC alumni who are making a collective impact in government, non-profit organizations, and the private sector. Whether they go on to become Members of Congress like Rep. Lauren Underwood (NLC DC ‘14) and Rep. Nikema Williams (NLC Atlanta ‘13), founded nonprofits like the Housing Rights Initiative, or started their own businesses, the NLC Fellowship serves as an inflection point in their leadership journey. 

NLC alumni have done great things in their communities, including expanding voting access, changing their state’s healthcare policy in under three weeks, and making history in the public sector. Our past cohorts have proven that systems can change when folks come together across industries, issues, and identities to make progress a reality. 

“The NLC experience allows emerging leaders to reimagine what’s possible,” said Bresnahan English. 

“It’s a place where you learn that your personal story is your leadership story, and that our collective stories can change systems. It’s a place where you learn how to multiply your impact by getting out of silos and by getting into good trouble with a cohort of changemakers. And it’s where you learn how to join forces for long-term systems change – all while being challenged to dream big and take risks to start making an impact now.” 

Learn more about the 2022 NLC Fellows here.