Green Team hosted a letter-writing event where students and faculty wrote letters to their local elected representatives, urging them to take action towards clean energy sources for the fourth day of Earth Week on April 23 in front of Manzanita.
The letters inspired members of the community to engage in causes such as civic responsibility, clean energy legislation and the protection of polar bear habitats from global warming.
Green Team Vice President Elaine Zou (11) hoped the activity would spur further environmental activism from students.
“We hope that this is only the first step,” Elaine said. “Having Harker students come here and write letters to elected representatives, we hope that it’ll encourage them to engage civically with climate action even more, especially since it’s Earth Week.”
Green Team organizes this initiative every year as part of Earth Week, contacting several organizations like Climate Citizens Lobby (CCL), an international group that encourages development on climate policy, in order to send the letters to district representatives, such as Sam Liccardo for District 16 or Ro Khanna for District 17.
“The event today was just organized by Green Team,” Elaine said. “But there are several organizations like the CCL we’re contacting that have a lot of great resources on how you can as a student engage more with climate action, and I encourage anyone who’s interested to explore these resources.”
English teacher Elizabeth Wahl wrote her own letter about expanding solar panel coverage and reducing plastic usage. She emphasized that young people can make a difference in climate issues despite pessimism about the environment.
“Do something small and local, because if you just disengage, you actually feel more depressed,” Dr. Wahl said. “Even taking small steps can be empowering. Californians have a huge opportunity because we have a state that’s already showing leadership, and we have a lot that we can do.”
Frosh Maria Sokolova emphasized that even simple forms of advocacy like letter-writing can make a big difference.
“It’s our planet, and we can make the change,” Masha said. “Every small act matters, and if everyone does it, then it makes a massive impact.”





![“I wasn't discouraged by some of the obstacles we faced. I learned a lot from the leadership. I found that different people need different ways of receiving feedback — you can't [just] tell them to do something and expect the best. [Some] people needed more incentive. A large part of my role was to figure out what worked for everyone and to figure out how to lead all these separate individuals as a team,” Suhana Bhandare (’26) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/SuhanaBhandare_JasmineHansra-1-1200x798.jpg)


![“This is actually from Randy Pausch Randy P. Brick: ‘Walls are there for a reason. You have to show how much you want to overcome them.’ You have to show how much you want something. That's what I've always been able to do with tennis, Link Crew and getting that internship [with Kushy Baby]. It’s important pushing through that — getting around that brick wall, climbing over it or clawing through it,” Yash Sachdeva (’26) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/YashSachdeva_RamBatchu-copy-1200x1002.jpg)


















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![“When I came into high school, I was ready to be a follower. But DECA was a game changer for me. It helped me overcome my fear of public speaking, and it's played such a major role in who I've become today. To be able to successfully lead a chapter of 150 students, an officer team and be one of the upperclassmen I once really admired is something I'm [really] proud of,” Anvitha Tummala ('21) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Screen-Shot-2021-07-25-at-9.50.05-AM-900x594.png)







![“I think getting up in the morning and having a sense of purpose [is exciting]. I think without a certain amount of drive, life is kind of obsolete and mundane, and I think having that every single day is what makes each day unique and kind of makes life exciting,” Neymika Jain (12) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-03-at-4.54.16-PM.png)








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![“I'm not nearly there yet, but [my confidence has] definitely been getting better since I was pretty shy and timid coming into Harker my freshman year. I know that there's a lot of people that are really confident in what they do, and I really admire them. Everyone's so driven and that has really pushed me to kind of try to find my own place in high school and be more confident,” Alyssa Huang (’20) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/AlyssaHuang_EmilyChen_HoHPhoto-900x749.jpeg)


