When ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ native Kate Henjum (IAFS ’17) visited Washington, D.C. on a middle school trip, she made a promise to herself: one day she’d work in one of the historical buildings on Capitol Hill. Having seen D.C.’s fast-paced, competitive edge at an early age, she realized that once she got her foot in the door, she had to keep it there.
In spring 2016, Henjum earned a spot in the with an internship in . The ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ in D.C. program allowed her to gain professional experience in Washington, D.C. while taking ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder classes. “In the office, I worked as a legislative and press intern, learning the layout of a senator’s office and the various policies they handled,†said Henjum. By the end of the semester, she was offered a full-time position in the D.C. office as a staffer for the summer.
Back in Boulder for her senior year, Henjum drew upon the lessons learned during her internship and her ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ in D.C. classes to write an honors thesis that connected monsoon flooding and Taliban recruitment in Afghanistan. Determined to stay connected to Washington, D.C., she volunteered for Senator Bennet’s ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ campaign and kept in contact with her former internship supervisors back on the east coast.
Staying connected paid off, and a few days after graduating from ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder, Henjum traveled back to Washington, D.C. to accept a job as a staff assistant in the Senator Bennet’s office. Her new role includes a variety of responsibilities, but one stands apart from the rest: she is the internship coordinator. “Serving as the internship coordinator is special,†explains Henjum. “It reminds me of how I got to where I am today and where I am going in the future.†She plans to continue working on Capitol Hill and to build a career in policy and legislation, fulfilling her aspirations from so many years ago.