For
Immediate Release
September 24,
2020
Contact: David Huppert
610.256.9124
Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania Launches Largest State
Electoral Campaign by Environmental Group in Commonwealth History
CVPA to invest $971,000 in 22 legislative races, with 2.3 million
planned voter contacts
Harrisburg, PA- Leading environmental advocacy
group Conservation Voters of PA (CVPA) has launched a massive statewide
campaign designed to flip the Pennsylvania General Assembly to a
pro-environment majority in the upcoming election. In the largest state-level
electoral campaign by an environmental group in Pennsylvania’s history, CVPA
will invest more than $971,000 to support candidates who are committed to ensuring
our state’s families can breathe clean air and drink safe water.
CVPA’s Victory Fund plans to invest more than $831,000 through an
independent expenditure to elect pro-environment candidates to the state
legislature in swing districts across the commonwealth. The organization plans
to make 2.3 million contacts with voters in 19 state House of
Representatives races and three state Senate races. The organization’s
state PAC will spend an additional $140,000 on contributions directly to
candidates’ campaigns.
CVPA’s plan seizes on the increasing focus on environmental issues
among Pennsylvania’s voters. Depending on where they live, Pennsylvanians
already face some of the worst air in America and a strong chance that their
water is contaminated with PFAS, lead, fracking fluid, fertilizer, or mine
runoff. Next week, the House seeks to make that problem worse as it
considers a bill to let potential polluters choose whether or not to report
spills to the Department of Environmental Protection. Earlier this summer, the
Legislature voted to hamstring the Department of Environmental Protection and
to give $670 million in tax breaks to prop up the giant gas companies that fund
many of their campaigns.
"Voters have watched our elected officials
side with corporate polluters over their own constituents time after
time," said CVPA Executive Director Josh McNeil. "This election is
our chance to finally elect leaders who will put our health and safety first."
CVPA’s 2020 election plan builds off investments in recent
elections that helped elect a new generation of environmental leaders. In 2018,
joint CVPA investment of $292,000 in state legislative races sent a wave of 11
new pro-environment candidates to Harrisburg.
In 2019, CVPA spent $250,000 to help propel Marian Moskowitz and
Josh Maxwell to the Chester County Board of Commissioners. This represents the
first time in history that Democrats have controlled the county, and CVPA’s
investment was the largest amount spent by an issue-advocacy organization in
that election. That same year, the organization was an early investor in
Jamie Gauthier, who became the first professional conservationist ever elected
to Philadelphia’s City Council.
“The candidates we support are already talking about the
environmental issues that impact their communities,” McNeil said. “Our
investment will help them make their case to voters and ensure that the
environment climbs to the top of the agenda in Harrisburg in time to help
address the global climate crisis and to save lives here in PA.”
CVPA’s 2020 investments target races in 13 counties across the
commonwealth and include plans for phone banking, text messaging, multiple
mailings and robust digital advertising.
CVPA will support the following candidates through its
Conservation Voters of PA Victory Fund in November:
· HD-13 (Chester/Lancaster) – Richard Ruggieri
· HD-18 (Bucks) — Harold Hayes
· HD-26 (Chester/Montgomery) — Paul Friel
· HD-28 (Allegheny) — Emily Skopov
· HD-29 (Bucks) — Marlene Katz
· HD-30 (Allegheny) — Lissa
Shulman
· HD-44 (Allegheny) — Michele Knoll
· HD-87 (Cumberland) — Nicole Miller
· HD-88 (Cumberland) — Tara Shakespeare
· HD-105 (Dauphin) — Brittney Rodas
· HD-106 (Dauphin) — Lindsay Drew
· HD-131 (Lehigh/Montgomery/Northampton)
— Kevin Branco
· HD-144 (Bucks) — Gary Spillane
· HD-147 (Montgomery) — Jill Dennin
· HD-151 (Montgomery) — Jonathan Kassa
· HD-156 (Chester) — Diane Herrin
· HD-160 (Chester/Delaware) — Anton Andrew
· HD-176 (Monroe) — Claudette Williams
· HD-178 (Bucks) — Ann Mitchell
· SD-13 (Lancaster) — Janet Diaz
· SD-15 (Dauphin/Perry) — George Scott
· SD-49 (Erie) — Julie Slomski