United Today, Stronger Tomorrow
Rural Listening Project
1099-Eligible, Short-Term
Field Organizer Position
February 2026 through April 2026
UTST is seeking to hire a short term Rural Listening Project (RLP) Field Organizer to support RLP 2.0.
UTST
UTST is a community power building hub and distributive organizing initiative that improves the lives of people living in rural and remote areas across the Upper Mid- and Mountain West and Alaska. We restore trust in democracy and mediating institutions by helping people understand their own agency in the decision making that impacts their lives and engaging them in strategic local, state, regional, and federal campaigns and programs that deliver concrete benefits. Simultaneously, we are building the next generation of rural and remote leaders, many of whom hail from conservative communities, to meet the current political moment and lay the foundation for long term power building over the next decade.
RLP Field Organizer
This multi-state research initiative will investigate the attitudes and values of rural and remote Americans across eight states: Alaska, Iowa, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, and Montana. At a moment of national political transformation and technological disruption, this project seeks to identify the perspectives of rural residents in the states on a range of issues, including: energy and climate; artificial intelligence and emerging technology; corporations and the economy; trust in governing systems, like democracy, mediating institutions, civil society; and immigration. By centering the perspectives of rural residents—especially moderates, Republicans, and independents—on economic, political, and technological shifts, the project will produce actionable findings that will help UTST and the broader field develop effective messaging and strategic organizing in rural communities.
On a short-term, 1099-Eligible Contract, RLP Field Organizers will listen, learn, and hope to understand how rural, small town, and remote community members (mostly conservative and independent) see the current moment. They will help find and probe people in rural communities and participate in one or more aspects of our research, including surveys, focus groups, or one-on-one interviews. They will also be responsible for helping follow up with research participants, and identify individuals for further leadership development or participation in UTST or our partner groups’ campaign work. This will be a hybrid organizing project composed mostly of Zoom and virtual work, but will include opportunities for offline work and in-person engagement.
Field Organizers will be working with individual community members, grasstops leaders, and other stakeholders.
Responsibilities
Working with the Project Lead, and directly supervised by the Field Coordinator, this position will help identify and recruit rural community members in our targeted states to participate in our research — including surveys, focus groups, and one-on-one conversations. Field organizers will also be responsible for following up with research participants in one-on-one conversations, via Zoom, phone, or in person, to identify individuals for further participating in UTST’s work at the local, state, or federal level. The field coordinator will also work with the research team to help identify key stakeholders, elected officials, public safety officers, business and industry leaders, faith leaders, and civic and educational institutions who would be good candidates for inclusion in this research project.
Qualities and Qualifications
The ideal candidate is someone who is curious about people; interested in understanding, learning, and activating personal networks; likes research; and is a good listener. They are able to hold a conversation that seeks to understand people where they are at, as opposed to trying to convince someone of something else. More specific qualities and skills include:
This position is remote but with a preference for applicants located in or familiar with Alaska, Iowa, Utah, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, or Montana. The ideal candidate can work flexible hours, including evenings and weekends if necessary; and has access to a reliable computer with strong internet. Spanish fluency is a bonus but not necessary.
Women, people of color, Native/indigenous people, and LGBTQ+ people are strongly encouraged to apply.
The Field Organizer position will work 40 hours per week and earn $35 to $40/hour based on experience. If interested, please send your resume to: jobs@unitedtoday.org with “Field Organizer” and your state in the subject line.
Please send your resume to: jobs@unitedtoday.org with “Field Organizer” and your state in the subject line.