Is this email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
Weekly highlights from LEGISTORM
Deck the halls with boughs of savings
Here's your Holiday Bonus. Buy a new 12-month subscription and get the 13th month free! Sign up for a free demo today.
Posted by Keturah Hetrick on Dec. 10, 2018
Congress hired more paid interns in 2018 than in any year since 2011 — but still far fewer than every year in the preceding decade.
Overall, congressional offices are allocating more total money toward paying their interns but the pay per intern has been stagnant for a decade. And they are the lucky ones to be paid at all.
These trends are occurring as congressional intern and staff pay has become a national issue, with incoming Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) making headlines last week after calling for members of Congress to pay all staffers and interns a living wage and promising to pay her own interns "at least" $15 per hour.
Those interns who did get paid received an average stipend of $2,400 in the Senate and $1,400 in the House so far this year. But most interns on the Hill actually receive no pay at all. Internship programs are often the first step in congressional hiring programs, and it can be difficult to get a permanent Hill job without having first completed a congressional internship.  
From January to September of this year, Senate offices hired 1,329 paid interns, while the House hired 889, for a total of 2,218. Those numbers have risen steadily in recent years, from a low of 1,593 in 2013.
Despite the increase, it's still a departure from the 2000s, when Congress paid hundreds more interns per year. The number of paid interns peaked in 2004, with 2,809 receiving stipends in the year's first three quarters. 
These numbers may include multiple paid Hill internships per person and do not include any outside funding. 
Some people and organizations who "caught our eye" last week:
Trending Staffers› learn more
Hill Hires
Hill Departures
  • Josh Falzone , formerly Press Secretary to Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN)
    (now Director of Communications for Agriculture and Environment at Biotechnology Innovation Organization)
  • Ben Howard, formerly Floor Director to House Republican Whip
    (now White House Deputy Assistant for Legislative Affairs)
  • Josh Trent, formerly Chief Counsel to House Energy and Commerce Committee, Health Subcommittee
    (now Principal at Leavitt Partners)
  • Peter Chandler, formerly Chief of Staff to Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-MI)
    (now Director of Federal Policy and Government Relations at TechNet)
Hill Moves and Promotions
  • Ryan Saylor, now Communications Director for Incoming Rep. Ben Cline (R-VA)
    (formerly Communications Director to Rep. Bruce Westerman (R-AR))
  • Allison Nielsen, now Communications Director for Rep. Lloyd Smucker (R-PA)
    (formerly Communications Director to Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK))
  • Ben Napier, now Floor Director for House Republican Whip
    (formerly Floor Assistant)
Top hashtags of the week
  • #remembering41(171 mentions)
  • #pearlharbor(127 mentions)
  • #getcovered(115 mentions)
  • #nc09(51 mentions)
  • #greennewdeal(51 mentions)
  • #climatechange(48 mentions)
Transition Updates
- And More
Don't miss out on our transition updates. LegiStorm tracks and provides full bios for Members-Elect and their aides as soon as they are announced. Create contact lists, set up Lightning Alerts to track recent new hires and stay on-top of the incoming teams.
b391de31-e955-4351-ad22-772734af871c.jpg

Connect with us on:

Facebook  Twitter

Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy
LegiStorm 2101 L St. NW, Suite 300 Washington, DC 20037 USA | info@legistorm.com