Marna Paintsil Anning (she, her, hers) joined TURN in 2022 as a Staff Attorney focusing on energy affordability, consumer protection, and climate justice issues.
Prior to joining TURN, Marna worked
Xochitl joined TURN in February 2022 as the Northern California Organizer. She was born and raised in San Francisco. Early in life she learned about racial, gender, economic and other
Adria Tinnin joined TURN in March 2022 as Race Impact Policy Analyst. Adria examines TURN’s policies, practices and positions on utility-consumer advocacy work to eradicate structural and/or institutional racism that
Charlayne Wright joined TURN as executive assistant in September 2020. An experienced administrative and executive assistant, Charlayne supports the Executive Director and other staff members by coordinating internal TURN activities
Brenda D. Villanueva joined TURN in October 2020 as a Telecom and Regulatory Attorney. A seasoned regulatory attorney and government professional, Brenda draws on her regulatory, congressional, and legislative government
Camille Stough is new to TURN but not to energy law or climate justice advocacy. Camille has been working on energy issues since she first joined her law school’s environmental
Constance Slider Pierre joined TURN on May, 1 2019 as the organizing director. She has spent more than 15 years organizing, managing, and directing grassroots community, and labor-organizing campaigns. Constance
Jennifer Dowdell joined TURN as an energy analyst in March 2019. She comes to TURN with an extensive background in utility regulation, financial services, and financial modeling. She will be
David Cheng joined TURN in July of 2017, and works out of TURN’s San Diego office. He came to TURN with a robust background in energy, finance, and technology, and
Staff Attorney/kmorsony@turn.org
Katy Morsony joined TURN as staff attorney in September of 2018. An experienced litigator, Katy will be representing consumers in key energy cases at the CPUC, including wildfire
Rooftop solar is less expensive than ever to purchase and install, but solar subsidies continue to rise. Unless the CPUC modernizes this outdated program, utility bills will skyrocket for non-solar