Your Voice in Action
Testifying at hearings, writing letters of support and opposition, the elevator pitch, and how to turn your personal story into a policy argument.
Your Voice in Action
You have the foundation. Now it's time to use it. This session is about showing up: in hearing rooms, in writing, and in the conversations that shape policy. Your story is not just something that happened to you. It is a strategic advocacy tool.
Lawmakers respond to people, not just policy memos. This session covers how to testify, how to write effective letters of support and opposition, how to mobilize collective advocacy, and how to build the four-version elevator pitch you will use in every setting from a Senate hallway to a community meeting.
Survivor voices carry moral weight that no policy brief can replicate. When you walk into a hearing room, you are not asking for a favor. You are a constituent exercising your right to be heard. Understanding how to channel that into effective testimony, letters, and direct advocacy is what transforms personal experience into legislative change.
By the end of this session you will have drafted your personal testimony, prepared responses to tough questions, written a letter of support or opposition, and built out your elevator pitch in multiple versions ready for any room you walk into.
Your Voice Matters
As you read, ask yourself: What makes testimony powerful? What makes it persuasive? How does sharing your story serve people beyond yourself?
"Your lived experience is not just valuable; it's indispensable in civil policy advocacy. Policymakers need to hear from the people most impacted by the issues they are addressing. Facts and statistics are crucial, but they rarely move hearts. Stories do."
· Chelsea Filer, ICAPA Network
Read the full piece → Your Voice MattersWhy your story is a strategic asset
You become the human face behind the policy , reminding lawmakers that their decisions affect real people with real struggles, dreams, and hopes.
You stand for more than yourself. When you speak out, you amplify the voices of those who share your struggle but lack the courage, platform, or opportunity to speak.
You build bridges between lawmakers and the communities they serve , giving legislators the compelling reason they need to champion a bill.
You ground the debate in reality. When survivors testify, the debate stops being about politics and starts being about people.
Making contact with your representatives
Reach out. Send an email or call to introduce yourself, explain your connection to the issue, and request a meeting.
Share your story. Focus on how the issue has affected you personally. Be concise but heartfelt.
Make the ask. Always include a clear, specific request : co-sponsoring a bill, voting a certain way, or attending a hearing.
Remember: Legislators work for you. Your opinion matters to them, especially when presented thoughtfully and passionately. You are not asking for a favor. You are exercising your right as a constituent.
When a survivor stands before a legislative committee, recounting their experience with vulnerability and courage, it becomes harder for lawmakers to ignore the need for reform. These moments forge connections, inspire empathy, and drive action.
Chelsea Filer · Your Voice Matters · ICAPA Network
Testifying at a hearing
When a bill is up for a hearing, lawmakers open the floor for public comment. This is your most direct line to the people writing the law. Even a 30-second statement can change a vote.
Opening remarks
The bill's sponsor introduces the bill and explains its purpose to the committee.
Legislative discussion
Committee members may ask questions or discuss the bill before public testimony begins.
Public comment opens
The chair asks if anyone is present to speak in support or opposition. This is your cue. Line up at the podium.
In-person testimony
Speakers are called to the podium one at a time. State your name, organization (if applicable), and position.
Virtual testimony
After in-person speakers, the committee calls on Zoom attendees. Stay muted until called. Expect 1 minute or less.
Full Testimony
A brief but complete : your name, issue, personal connection, and ask. This is the gold standard. Prepare and practice until it's tight.
"Me Too" Statement
A concise statement of support or opposition. Often used when time is limited. Powerful in . A room full of "me too" statements sends a clear signal.
Only
Name & Position Only
When time is extremely limited, you may only state your name, organization, and stance. Your presence : it is counted and recorded.
Be concise. Legislators hear many testimonies in a short time. Get to the point quickly.
Practice beforehand. Rehearse out loud until it fits within the time limit comfortably.
Stay professional and respectful. Even if you strongly oppose a bill, a composed tone strengthens your credibility.
Follow up. After testifying, email committee members to reinforce your position. A hearing is just one step.
Watch: Survivor testimony that changed legislation
Paris Hilton's testimony was powerful because it was personal, direct, and emotional. As you watch, ask yourself: What makes this testimony effective? How does she frame her personal experience as a policy argument? What can you apply to your own testimony?
Paris Hilton Testifies in Utah
State legislature · Provo Canyon SchoolParis Hilton Testifies Before Congress
Federal hearing · NBC coverageParis Hilton Testifies Before Congress
Federal hearing · FOX coverageChelsea Filer's Testimony
Watch ICAPA Network's founder and Executive Director testify before legislators on institutional child abuse. Notice how she connects personal experience to specific . This is the structure you will build in your own testimony.
View Chelsea Filer Testimony Document →Preparing for difficult questions
Testifying isn't just about telling your story. It is also about answering tough questions. Lawmakers and opposition groups may try to discredit your position. Anticipating these challenges ahead of time is one of the most important things you can do.
"This bill is unnecessary government overreach."
When an industry receives public funding and operates with children in its care, oversight is not overreach. It is accountability. Parents cannot make informed decisions without transparency, and children cannot advocate for themselves. These are baseline protections, not excessive regulation.
"Why should we prioritize this issue over other pressing concerns?"
Protecting children is always a priority. Failing to act now allows abuse to continue unchecked, causing lifelong trauma that leads to higher costs in healthcare, social services, and the justice system. Prevention now saves far more than intervention later.
"Aren't there already laws protecting children in these programs?"
Existing laws are inadequate and lack enforcement mechanisms. Children placed in out-of-state facilities often fall through jurisdictional gaps between licensing and child welfare agencies. This bill introduces clear definitions, mandatory reporting, and oversight mechanisms that ensure accountability.
"Isn't this just a few bad actors, rather than a systemic issue?"
Congressional investigations, GAO reports, and thousands of survivor testimonies document a pattern of abuse that is widespread across this industry. When the GAO studied residential programs in 2007, they found abuse in facilities across multiple states. This is structural, not incidental.
Key strategy: Stay on message. When a question feels designed to derail you, acknowledge it briefly and redirect to your core talking points. "That's a fair question. What I can tell you is that children are being harmed right now, and this bill creates the accountability needed to stop it."
Writing letters of support & opposition
Sometimes you can't testify in person, but that doesn't mean you can't influence the legislative process. Letters of support and opposition allow lawmakers to hear directly from constituents about why a bill should or shouldn't pass. They become part of the official record.
Constituent Emails
Direct messages to your lawmakers. Personal, brief, and specific. Focus on how the issue affects you and your community. Always include a clear ask.
Formal Letters of Support/Opposition
Submitted to committee chairs and members. Structured with introduction, position statement, reasoning, personal experience, and a call to action. Entered into the official record.
ICAPA Examples
Review real letters supporting and opposing bills to understand what makes them effective. See how ICAPA frames the issue, structures the argument, and makes the ask.
What to include in your letter
Introduction: Identify yourself and your connection to the issue.
Statement of Position: Clearly state support or opposition in the first paragraph.
Reasoning: Explain how the bill helps or harms individuals or communities.
Personal Experience: Share research, statistics, or your personal story.
Call to Action: Urge lawmakers to vote in favor of or against the bill. Be specific.
How to submit your letter
Send to the committee's official email address, found on the legislative website. Use the bill number in the subject line.
Some legislatures require submission through an official portal. Check the committee page for specific submission instructions.
Deliver or mail before the hearing date if physically accepted. Printed letters with a letterhead carry additional weight.
Submitting & following up on letters
Submitting your letter is just the first step. Following up with lawmakers keeps the pressure on and ensures your position is actually heard and considered.
Identify the bill & hearing date
Find the bill number, title, and sponsor on the legislative website. Check the hearing date and submission deadlines for letters or testimony.
Draft & submit your letter
Use professional letterhead if possible. Address the committee chair and members. Submit via email, portal, or in person before the deadline.
Attend the hearing
Reinforce your written submission with oral testimony. In person or via Zoom. Your presence signals commitment and puts a face to your letter.
Follow up with lawmakers
Email the bill's sponsor to thank them or raise concerns. Contact committee members to reinforce key points. If opposing, suggest specific language amendments respectfully.
Track the bill & contact the next chamber
If the bill advances, identify the committee and sponsor in the other chamber. Send your letter to new members and follow up with calls or meetings.
Advocate until the final vote
Monitor progress on the legislative website. Engage allies and encourage them to submit letters or testify. Contact all legislators with your stance before the final vote.
Open letters, sign-on letters & petitions
Sometimes you need to show broad support from a larger : not just one voice, but many. These tools are essential for mobilizing people who may not be able to testify but still want to take action.
Open Letters
Published publicly to raise awareness and encourage others to take action. Open letters speak to both lawmakers and the public , and they build political pressure from multiple directions at once.
Best for: Public awareness, media pickup, building a narrative
Sign-On Letters
Organizations or individuals co-sign a collective statement. The breadth of signatories signals to lawmakers that support for an issue is widespread, not fringe. A letter with 50 co-signers carries very different weight than one from a single advocate.
Best for: Coalition building, demonstrating breadth of support
Petitions
Gather mass signatures to show legislators that people care about this issue. Petitions are especially powerful when delivered in person to a lawmaker's office, and thousands of names handed directly to a staff member is a hard thing to ignore.
Best for: Mass mobilization, constituent pressure campaigns
The "Me Too" principle: Advocacy isn't always about being the primary voice in the room. Sometimes it's about showing up and saying "me too." Your presence alone, at a hearing, in a sign-on letter, in a petition, sends a message of unity and demonstrates the widespread impact of an issue.
The elevator pitch
Your elevator pitch is your most versatile advocacy tool. Whether you're presenting in a one-on-one meeting, on a phone call, at a press event, or in a legislative hallway, it captures attention, sparks interest, and moves people to action. You'll build four : each for a different context and audience.
30-Second Pitch
The hook. Core problem, your personal connection, brief summary of the bill. Designed for chance : an elevator, a hallway, a reception. Gets attention and earns a longer conversation.
1-Minute Pitch
Adds key facts about the issue, your personal connection, and the bill's purpose and immediate benefits. Used for hearing testimony, brief legislative meetings, and media interviews.
5-Minute Pitch
Expands on the issue, provides context, explains urgency, and details the proposed solution. This is your primary pitch for scheduled legislative meetings. This is what you'll present next session.
10-Minute Pitch
Comprehensive. Covers relevant data, personal stories, and potential broader impact. Includes room to address anticipated questions. Used for donor meetings, coalition presentations, and extended media opportunities.
Pitch structure: what to cover
One compelling sentence that identifies the issue and immediately establishes why it matters.
Describe the issue, its urgency, who is affected, and what the consequences are of inaction.
Your lived experience, professional background, or personal story. This is your credibility.
Brief explanation of the bill, its key goals, and the outcomes it will achieve. Why this bill is the right solution.
A specific request. Support the bill, co-sponsor, attend a hearing, connect you with colleagues. Always end with a clear ask.
Practice & Prepare: Write your personal testimony
This is the most valuable exercise in the course. Write three versions of your testimony and a tough questions sheet. These are tools you'll actually use in hearings, meetings, and the field. Work through them at your own pace.
Legislative Testimony & Elevator Pitch
Work through three versions of your testimony/elevator pitch at your own pace. Each version is tailored to a different advocacy setting. Your goal: clearly articulate the urgency of your issue, share your personal connection, and advocate for a legislative solution in a compelling and professional manner.
30-Second "Me Too" Statement
A brief, impactful statement that grabs attention. Name, issue, connection, position.
1-Minute Timed Testimony
Core issue, your connection, and a brief summary of the legislative solution. Fits within hearing time limits.
5–10 Minute Elevator Pitch
Full version for legislative meetings or extended testimony. Present this at Session 3.
Also include: Tough Questions Sheet
Prepare at least five anticipated questions from lawmakers or opposition, and your responses. Use research, statistics, and logical reasoning. Stay on message.
Structuring your testimony: the five parts
One sentence. Grabs attention. States the issue clearly.
Urgency, who is affected, consequences of inaction.
Lived experience. This is your credibility and your power.
The bill, what it does, and why it's the right solution.
Specific, direct request. Vote yes. Co-sponsor. Act now.
Course Reading & References
All required reading, exercises, and reference documents for Session 2. Open each document directly in your browser.
1. Your Voice Matters
Reference Guide2. Testifying at a Hearing Guide
Reference Guide3. RISE: Testify at a Hearing
Practice Guide4. Submitting & Following Up on Letters
Reference Guide5. Elevator Pitch Example
Reference Guide6. Practice: Testimony Exercise
Practice ExerciseSession 2 recap & discussion
Take a moment to reflect on what you've covered. Here's a summary of this session, followed by discussion questions to think through, or share your perspective in the comments below.
What we covered in this session
Why your lived experience is indispensable in civil policy , and how sharing your story serves people beyond yourself
How a legislative hearing works, the three types of testimony, and what to do before, during, and after you testify
How to prepare for tough questions from lawmakers and , and how to stay on message when they try to derail you
Writing effective letters of support and opposition, the 6-step follow-up process, and how to keep pressure on through every stage of a bill
Open letters, sign-on letters, and : how to mobilize a community when one voice isn't enough
The four versions of your , and the five-part structure that makes every version work
Discussion questions
Reflect on these on your own or share your answers in the comments below. There are no wrong . This is a space for learning together.
What do you think would be the toughest question you'd be asked at a hearing about your , and what's your rebuttal?
If you were drafting a sign-on letter for your issue, what organizations or groups would you reach out to first for , and why??
What's your best : the 30-second "Me Too" statement that captures your position and gets people to lean in and listen?
After watching Paris Hilton's , and what stood out to you about how she used her personal story as a policy argument? What would you do the same, or differently?
Join the Conversation
Share your answers to the discussion questions, ask the ICAPA team anything about testimony or letters, or just introduce yourself. Your voice matters here and in the halls of your legislature.
Welcome to Session 2: Initiative!
This is where things get real. You’ve got the foundation from Session 1 — now it’s time to actually use your voice.
The “Me Too” statement is one of my favorite tools to teach because it proves that you don’t need a law degree or a perfect speech to make an impact. Thirty seconds, delivered with conviction, from someone who has lived this issue — that lands. Every time.
So let’s practice right here in the comments.
What’s your go-to one-liner? Write your 30-second “Me Too” statement below.
It doesn’t have to be perfect. It doesn’t have to be polished. Just write it like you’d say it if you were standing at that podium right now. Getting it out of your head and into words is the first step — and seeing what others write might be exactly the inspiration you need to sharpen your own.
I’ll be reading every response and giving you a standing ovation!
— Chelsea Filer
Executive Director & Founder, ICAPA Network