Nicole Yearwood promotes civic engagement
Alumna is founder and CEO of Educated Voter
When Nicole Yearwood ā97, MPA ā98, first came to Āé¶¹Éē, she was interested in a computer science career. After New Yorkās governor threatened to cut funding for the Tuition Assistance Program, she became an activist and a new career path emerged.
As founder and CEO of Educated Voter, Yearwood is helping people understand how government functions. At last fallās Homecoming TIER Talks, she said people can have more of a voice if they cut two bad habits: only voting in presidential or midterm elections, and tossing their U.S. census forms.
āThere are about 16 elected officials who represent you,ā Yearwood says. āIf you only vote for president, thatās one out of 16. And, if you only voted for one and you didnāt vote for the people they have to work with to get laws passed, there are pieces of the puzzle that are missing. If youāre from New York City, and the last time you voted was in the 2020 presidential election, you couldāve possibly missed five elections.
āRedistricting is based on the Census. People ask me how they can get involved with the process because all the activity seems to happen without them. I tell them they can get in on that redistricting process by simply completing their census.ā
She also encouraged the audience to testify at public hearings and attend their elected officialsā town-hall meetings.
āAdvocacy is important. Too many of us are thinking: āI voted and Iām done. Iām going back to my corner. I donāt have anything else to do.ā You must advocate for the things you want. Elected officials donāt know it all, and they donāt get it right all the time. And thatās when they need to hear from us.ā