Maine Women's Lobby

The Maine Women's Lobby (MWL) was founded in 1978 and is dedicated to legislative action on behalf of Maine's women and girls. The Maine Women's Lobby believes women and girls should have economic security, access to health care, and freedom from violence and discrimination. [1]

Maine Women's Lobby
AbbreviationMWL
MottoThe Voice of Maine Women
Formation1978
HeadquartersAugusta, Maine
Executive Director
Destie Hohman Sprague
Board Chair
Elizabeth Riotte
Websitemainewomen.org

History

The Maine Women's Lobby was founded in 1978 by nine women, including Patricia E. Ryan, Linda Smith Dyer, Lois Galgay Reckitt, and Janet T. Mills.[2][3] During the 1978 Maine Legislative Session, the group worked to fund battered women’s shelters, but when the session concluded, there was no money appropriated for the shelters. The group was told that they had not been represented during the vote. After the defeat of the Battered Women’s Projects in 1978, they decided they would never be unrepresented during a legislative vote again.[4]

Then-Maine Attorney General Janet T. Mills was elected to the Board of Directors of the Maine Women's Lobby in 1998.[5] She resigned after being elected Governor of Maine in 2018. In 2010, the organization launched the "She Decides" campaign, which compiles political candidates' responses to questionnaires geared towards women's issues.[6]

In the 2018 story, "We‘ve Come A Long Way, Baby...Haven‘t We?", published by Portland Magazine, Executive Director Eliza Townsend notes the expansion of Maine’s Family Medical Leave law to include domestic partners in 2007 as a recent highlight of the MWL's work. In 2015, L.D. 921 was passed to provide more extensive protections for victims and survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking in the workplace. Penalties increased for employers who fire employees needing to take time off to attend court dates, doctor appointments, and other related burdens.[7]

Maine Women's Policy Center

The Maine Women's Policy Center is the sister organization to the Maine Women's Lobby and is dedicated to creating equality for Maine's women and girls. It holds four main areas to be the focus of its goals: economic security, civil rights, freedom from violence, and secure health care and reproductive rights.

The Maine Women's Policy Center was founded in 1990 to improve the economic, social, and political status of women and girls in Maine through public policy and leadership development. The Policy Center sponsors Girl's Day at the Maine State House, which hosts seventh and eighth grade girls from all over Maine.[8][9]

References

  1. Harlow, Doug (November 16, 2011). "New head of Maine Women's Lobby, Women's Policy Center starts work". Kennebec Journal.
  2. nid=2457&dat=20010319&id=gKlJAAAAIBAJ&sjid=SQ4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=4717,1111887&hl=en "Women's Hall of Fame inducts Pingree, Dyer" Check |url= value (help). Bangor Daily News. 19 March 2001. p. B3.
  3. "Maine Women's Hall of Fame Honorees – Patricia E. Ryan". University of Maine at Augusta. 2016. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  4. Portland Magazine, February/March 2018
  5. "Mills elected to Maine Women's Lobby board". Sun Journal. December 22, 1998.
  6. Riley, Dylan (August 26, 2010). "Maine Women's Lobby launches 'She Decides' campaign". Bangor Daily News.
  7. Portland Magazine, February/March 2018
  8. Applegarth, Cassady (April 16, 2007). "Girl's Day at the State House". Sun Journal.
  9. Washuk, Bonnie (March 28, 2005). "Girls, girls, girls all over the State House". Sun Journal.
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