Transcript Document
Community Organizing:
Building Power and Making
Change
Wednesday, April 4, 2007 -- 9 PM EST
Facilitated by
Willie Dodson, from the Southern Energy Network
http://www.climateaction.net
Mattie Reitman, from the Energy Justice Network and the
Student Environmental Action Coalition
http://www.energyjustice.net http://www.seac.org
Introductions
Hello!
-Go Around
10 minutes
Advocacy Vs. Organizing
Grassroots Organizing – organizing the people
Grasstops Organizing – organizing power
holders, other organizers
Advocacy – advocating for something – flyering,
lobbying, etc.
-all are important and useful, but we're just talking about
grassroots organizing here
3 minutes
The Importance of Self-Interest
-Selfishness vs. Selflessness vs. Self-Interest
-The central motivating force that gets people involved is selfinterest – this isn't good or bad, it's just something we have to
remember when organizing
Picking Your Issue is a Privilege
-communities don't choose to get polluted!
-need to find and recognize our own self-interest:
why do I care?
2 minutes
What do Grassroots Groups Work On?
Two types – offense and defense
-offense: community gardens, service programs (i.e. Black
Panther free breakfast program), Cool Cities, etc.
-defense: landfills, incinerators, power plants (coal, nukes, natural
gas…), refineries (oil, ethanol…), sewage sludge dumping (as fertilizer
on farm fields or in strip mines), fluoridation of drinking water, toxic
waste site cleanup, waste transfer stations, ash dumps, medical waste
facilities, nuclear facilities (waste storage/disposal, nuclear fuel
processing facilities…), roads/highways, power lines, pipelines, liquefied
natural gas (LNG) terminals, mining/quarries (coal, limestone,
aggregate, etc.), development/sprawl (housing developments, box
stores, etc.), paper mills, cement kilns, logging, water extraction (bottled
water or for energy or other industries), factory farms, chemical plants...
3 minutes
Research
Talk to people! to find out:
1) Social, political, economic, and cultural past and
present.
2) Past and present status of organizing and activism
around community issues.
3) Groups and individuals already working on similar
issues.
5 minutes
Initial Contact
methods: tabling at community events, organizing
your own events, creation and distribution of literature,
telephone calls, media, actions, door to door (listening
projects)
-be brief
-engage in a familiar and comfortable
setting
-gauge people's interest, get contact info
2 minutes
One On One Follow-Ups
They're important!
Some tips:
- keep an open mind – listen to what people have to say
- talking should be 70% community member 30% organizer
- drive at self-interest & action: what's the problem? who's
responsible? how can it be resolved? what do you want to do?
- say things others have done in similar situations
- develop your strategy and next steps (based on community
members ideas, self-interest, etc.) and know this when talking
to people. they will probably have ideas that work well with
yours.
- gain trust before offering ideas and asking things of people.
5 minutes
Community Meetings
-Connecting people with similar interests, get
them talking to each other
-Remember – it's about generating ACTION!
-After people are comfortable, get them talking
about next steps
-Try and keep it comfortable/familiar
2 minutes
Recipes For Winning and Losing
Losing
Step 1: Group forms. People get involved.
Step 2: Group does advocacy, with tables and flyers about their issue, etc.
Step 3: People in the group sit back, assume that they're doing good, and
it's up to their target to start caring and do something about the issue.
Step 4: Instead of gaining public support, the group alienates its target
audience and decision-makers – people start to feel hopeless and tired.
Step 5: Time passes, nobody is recruited, and the effort dwindles away.
Winning!
Offense – target makes the right decision
Defense – the company gives up or some level of government says No
-work backwards from your goal, and make a plan!
-useful tactics - getting local ordinances, going after project funding
5 minutes
Action
Building power leads to action, otherwise it's all for
nothing.
- can be internal action, but must be campaign-related
- action sustains involvement
- once trust is established, you can ask specific things
(call the regulator responsible, come to the hearing,
come to the nearby university to tell the students about
your situation etc.)
3 minutes
Roadblocks?
What are some problems and difficulties you can
foresee in doing this kind of work?
5 minutes
Examples of Campus-Community
Collaboration
5 minutes
Closing, Next Steps, Assessment
-How did it go? Can you use this?
-A note on solidarity
-Upcoming things to plug into – Step It Up!,
Energy Justice Summer, etc.
sorry there weren't more pictures!
10 minutes