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Public Interest Network

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Hypocrites who know exactly what they're doing - Anonymous employee Public Interest Network Employee Review

1.0
13 June 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

coworkers are wonderful and kind cool opportunities to meet other activists and elected officials, but apply to jobs with those coalition partners, DO NOT work for TPIN, PIRG, or Environment America

Cons

The organization claims to be for the "public's interest" and "protect consumers" but they don't care about any of their employees. They have no interest in investing into entry level employees, and see them as disposable. If someone wants to be paid more, or work less grueling hours, then they are not "bought in" to the organization. They exploit smart and capable people by overworking them and never giving positive feedback. In the one year I worked at TPIN my pay structure changed FIVE TIMES! The organization does everything in their power to pay their employees the bare minimum so they don't qualify or overtime, and can work 65-75 hour weeks. Canvassing is not for the faint of heart and there is pretty much no way to get out of it. Running a canvassing office takes endless hours, and promoting exploitative practices. Your recruit, hire, and fire dozens of people, and often your employees make significantly more money than you. The organization claims they "spend their money wisely" but the only expenses I noticed were work trips that were usually unnecessary.

Explore other reviews about Public Interest Network

5.0
20 June 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The team really cared about helping me learn, lots of flexibility in schedule, learned a lot of skills in writing fundraising and advocacy materials, kind coworkers, gave me the chance to pursue my own interests and make content about them

Cons

Only main cons are that it was unpaid and remote.

1.0
16 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Cool opportunities like lobbying and hosting events. Valuable skills learned at trainings.

Cons

Whether you’re PIRG, EnvAm, Frontier Group, Community Action Works, etc, they’ll make you move across the country to open a canvass office and will not provide financial assistance. You’ll have to find a place to stay on your own. To afford it, they’ll assume you can sublet your apartment back home, or would be okay staying in a coworker’s house (basement was actually offered to me). They’ll pay you minimum wage and expect 60-75 hour work weeks during the canvass. While you’re canvassing, you’ll be sent to neighborhoods you’re unfamiliar with & will have to knock doors and ask people for money, alone in the dark (because they canvass from 4:00-9:00PM). If you’re worried about your safety, they’re not very reassuring; you might get followed in the dark by strangers, and your boss will want you to continue canvassing. If you’re not up for any of this, you’ll probably be fired. The turnover is HIGH. I think all of the other associates in my office that started when I did (12? 13?) have quit by now, just months later. And this rate of turnover occurred in every office across the country. People will be quitting around you all of the time, and it will be largely unaddressed by management. Just another day on the job. The job is okay while you’re not canvassing, but they’ll constantly say things to you that will make you question if this is a legitimate organization or a fever dream. For example, one of their main values is “eat dirt.” They say they’ll happily work with organizations like Turning Point USA; it’s part of their organizing strategy, since they’re “transpartisan.” You’ll work longer hours during the non-canvass part of your job as well, and will likely stay after 5:00PM everyday. There is no HR, so any uncomfortable situations you encounter are instead reported to your boss, which feels like it crosses a boundary. They’ll send you to trainings in Denver, but you’ll have to share a hotel room with a coworker and pay for your own food while you’re there. And when you go out to eat with more senior staff after work events/for work socials, it will be an awkward staring contest to figure out who will put their card down (the professionals who have been working for 20+ years and have houses and kids, or the new college graduate with a $1,000 credit limit?) Eventually, you’ll be asked to make a “commitment” to their organization, pledging to work their for X amount of years, but they won’t offer you a formal contract. It’s a Google form. You might also go on a retreat/training trip with your team, meaning you’ll share an airbnb with your boss and coworkers for a few days (yes, that might mean sharing a bathroom with your boss). For an organization that strives for social change, it was very unprogressive in the way it treated its entry level employees.

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