Renna Communications offers a wide variety of communications related services to our clients.
What we do, we do very well.
However, if you have certain needs that are outside of our areas of expertise, we also have excellent relationships with other talented professionals in all areas of media and communications. When you are our client, we will be happy to access those contacts on your behalf.
We look forward to working with you.
Kate Boulden | CNN | March 6, 2010
Catholic Charities cuts benefits for new workers’ spouses to avoid D.C.‘s new same-sex marriage law.
To view the whole story, click here

Representative Pete Stark | PFLAG | March 10, 2010
Rep. Pete Stark (D-CA) is hosting a panel discussion on the “Every
Child Deserves a Family Act.” Panelists will include foster children who
will discuss their experiences in the foster care system, parents who have
been prevented from adopting their foster children because of state laws
prohibiting gays, lesbians and bisexuals from adopting, and experts on
foster care and LGBT family issues.
WILL STREAM LIVE ON MARCH 11 AT 1:30 PM: click here

Washington Post | Monica Hesse | March 9, 2010
They met in grad school. Angelisa Young and Sinjoyla Townsend were assigned to debate opposing sides of the same issue in a constitutional law class at the University of the District of Columbia, and both were so nerdily over-prepared — typical Washingtonians — that the other member of their group decided the debate was a draw.
Young felt the attraction first. Throughout the semester, she found excuses to pass Townsend fliers for the political activist group that she belonged to on campus; she was devastated when she later found those fliers left behind after class. She would go to watch Townsend shoot hoops, even though she hates sports.

Washington Post | Ann E. Marimow and Keith L. Alexander | March 10, 2010
There were yellow roses, champagne toasts and tiered cakes.
There were tuxedos, lace dresses and Pachelbel’s Canon in D.
This D.C. watershed moment was bursting with pride and happiness. Yet it was also tinged with memories of political struggles and legal battles.
On Tuesday, the District for the first time issued marriage licenses to same-sex couples, some of whom married in ceremonies across the city — from a D.C. Superior Court chamber to a Unitarian church in Northwest.

Washington Post | Andrew Alexander | March 9, 2010
Powerful photographs can have lasting impact, and a Post photo of two men kissing is an image that many readers can neither forget nor accept.
The photo, which ran on the newspaper’s front page and online last week, captured Jeremy Ames and Taka Ariga kissing outside D.C. Superior Court on the day that the District began accepting license applications for same-sex marriages.
