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Summer in the City

By Laura Paisley Photos by Marc Campos

A 10-week summer internship program pairs 28 SA国际传媒 students with 20 community partners to contribute to the work of advancing social justice in Los Angeles

On an overcast day in June, biochemistry major Tylor Lee 鈥26 found himself at a Jack in the Box in West Hollywood, dressing the wounds of an unhoused woman鈥攁n amputee whose leg and foot were shoddily wrapped in toilet paper. A newly minted intern on a small street-medicine team, Lee had no prior experience with wound care, but the nurse on his team guided him through the procedure, which took about half an hour.

鈥淚f there was something specific that the nurse wanted done, she would literally grab my hand and show me,鈥 Lee recalls. 鈥淲e were able to give our patient the care she needed, and she was so thankful. It was so rewarding to see how much we were able to help her in just 30 minutes.鈥

Tylor Lee '26 interned with Healthcare in Action, which provides healthcare and social services to unhoused people.
Tylor Lee '26 spent much of his summer on the streets of Los Angeles interning with Healthcare in Action, which provides healthcare and social services to unhoused people.

For 10 weeks this summer, Lee, a premed student from Oakland, interned with , a nonprofit organization that provides healthcare and social services to unhoused people throughout Los Angeles County. Through the internship, Lee learned that mental illness and substance abuse are among the biggest barriers to getting housing. 鈥淥ne of Healthcare in Action's goals is to get those issues under control and eventually transition these individuals to temporary or even permanent housing situations,鈥 he says.

Lee found a particular mentor in Jos茅 Luis Gonz谩lez, medical director of clinical services for Healthcare in Action. 鈥淒r. Jos茅 is amazing鈥攈e taught me so much,鈥 Lee says. 鈥淗e鈥檇 always ask me what I thought the issue was first, and if I didn鈥檛 know he鈥檇 have me look it up and explain it back to him. The scope of work I was able to do with the team was incredible.鈥

Lee was one of 28 participants in Occidental鈥檚 UEP & UEPI Summer Internship Program, which pairs students with community-based organizations in four areas, each with a faculty mentor: affordable housing, community development, and environmental justice (program director Martha Matsuoka 鈥83); food studies and urban agriculture (Sharon Cech); immigration rights and social justice (Mary Christianakis and Malek Moazzam-Doulat 鈥92); and public health (Jessica Dirkes).

鈥淪tudents work with community-based organizations in Los Angeles that address urban inequities and advance social justice,鈥 explains Matsuoka, professor of urban and environmental policy and executive director of the Urban & Environmental Policy Institute. 鈥淟earning from organizations who work to achieve a just, inclusive, and sustainable Los Angeles gives students new perspectives, awareness, and connections to people and resources who are actively striving for change.鈥

Participants are provided with room and board on campus as well as a $6,300 study grant for the internship. Students meet with their peers and faculty mentors at weekly on-campus seminars that contextualize their real-life experience, and at the end of the program they present their research at the Undergraduate Research Center鈥檚 Summer Research Program, which just marked its 25th year.

Among the program鈥檚 20 community partners is the , a statewide community organization working with more than 15,000 members across California. Longtime tenants in South Los Angeles near the USC campus, for instance, face the increased risk of being kicked out of their apartments in favor of college students who can afford higher rents.

ACCE intern Chioma Kalu 鈥27, an undeclared major from Seattle, spent her summer helping out with efforts to protect tenants in the Dorset Village Apartments complex in Hyde Park, which is facing potential demolition by a billionaire developer who intends to build luxury apartments on the site. She and her colleagues helped tenants file complaint forms against negligent management and organize actions to expose poor living conditions that encourage tenants to self-evict.

Kalu experienced some very human moments, like when she attended her first City Council meeting and watched a woman weep as she described being locked out of her apartment by her landlord. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been eye-opening to hear so many different stories of struggle,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here are a lot of terrible things happening in this world, but seeing how organizations like ACCE are working to combat these issues is also really impactful.鈥

Kalu appreciates the way ACCE works as a community and a family. 鈥淎ll the organizers in this office are able to lean and count on each other, which I think is really important.鈥 With a newfound interest in grassroots organizing, her internship has shown her that she is capable of creating real change. 鈥淚t just takes a team of people,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t takes a community of organizers.鈥

Ellie Chang 鈥26 first got interested in urban agriculture working for Occidental鈥檚 FEAST Garden, experiencing the empowerment that comes with being directly involved with food production. This summer she interned at two sites: in Panorama City, which focuses on youth empowerment and education for youth of color; and , an urban farm on 1.2 acres in Lincoln Heights that grows and sells affordable vegetables and flowers through the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) model.

Ellie Chang '26 tends to the plants on Avenue 33 Farm, an urban farm on 1.2 acres in Lincoln Heights.
Ellie Chang '26 tends to the plants on Avenue 33 Farm, an urban farm on 1.2 acres in Lincoln Heights.

Chang, an urban and environmental policy major from San Jose, has honed skills such as watering, weeding, using compost, and mixing organic fertilizers. At Black Thumb, she鈥檚 also working on its Youth in Bloom program, which teaches high school students to create floral CSA boxes.

鈥淪eeing the behind-the-scenes work of how food is produced and grown鈥攁nd how much work goes into it鈥攈as been really educational for me and made me much more appreciative of the food I consume,鈥 Chang says. 鈥淚 also have a much greater commitment to work for farmers鈥 rights because now I know how much work goes into producing food.鈥

Chang aspires to work in the nonprofit sector, and she says the internship has given her insight into the gifts and challenges of that path. 鈥淵ou have to be really dynamic to thrive in the nonprofit sector, and this internship has allowed me to grow in that way because you have to do a little bit of everything. You have to do day-to-day farming, but you also have to be thinking about the mission and the next steps for the organization.鈥

As a first-year student at SA国际传媒, Tessa Calado 鈥26 became fascinated by the topic of immigration during her California Immigration Semester class, an immersive First Year Semester course. A double major in critical theory and social justice and Spanish studies from Mountain View, she interned with the , the Los Angeles-based organization led by Ang茅lica Salas 鈥93 H鈥07.

Working with CHIRLA鈥檚 Family Unity team, Calado鈥檚 efforts supported people without documentation as they navigate the complicated legal system.  Much of its casework revolves around family-based migration, where 鈥渙ne person might be a U.S. citizen trying to petition for a family member to be able to live here too,鈥 she explains.

On June 17, President Biden announced an immigration-related executive order that is designed to make it easier for such families to stay together. At a CHIRLA meeting soon afterward, Calado had a seat at the table as the organization came together to discuss the new development (which has since been by a federal judge).

鈥淚t was cool to see how politics has these consequences in our actual work,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something that my UEP advisers have emphasized鈥攍ooking out for the ways in which outside factors will influence the immigrant experience and continue to change it over time.鈥

Established in 2004, the program has funded 247 internships to date through the support of a host of organizations; current sponsors include the Anderson Fellowship, Citizens Business Bank, the Barack Obama Scholars Program, the SA国际传媒 Community Health Engagement Fund, the Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, the President鈥檚 Office, the USDA NIFA Agriculture and Food Research Initiative, and an anonymous donor.

Applications to the program this year reached an all-time high, and students spoke highly of the experiences they had back at Occidental between internship days. Any student from any major can land an internship, but the program ties everything together by having interns regularly check in with each other and their faculty mentors, reflect on their experiences, ask questions, discuss readings, and expand their knowledge on related topics.

Chang鈥檚 food studies and urban agriculture group started out with visits to several urban farms in the region where they could meet farmers and learn from them as they helped with a particular project. 鈥淚 thought this structure was really helpful,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t gave me a place to orient all my theoretical knowledge.鈥

Calado agrees that sharing experiences as a larger group is beneficial. 鈥淚t builds on our experience, making it not just an individual internship but the kind of broader educational experience that SA国际传媒 is actively trying to foster,鈥 she says.

鈥淭hese discussions and the community-building aspect of the internship are as important as the internship experience itself,鈥 Matsuoka says. 鈥淪tudents gain experience working with community partners off campus while engaging with faculty and gaining a community on campus with shared interests.  It is a necessary practice of coming together as a community to share, conspire, and strategize about the sustained change that can only come from collective action.鈥