Indiana

May 16, 2008

Friday digest-open thread 5/16/08


"One city ... thousands of voices heard ... democracy is here." That's the message of the winning video from the Indianapolis Neighborhood Resource Center, which took the $1,000 prize this week in Everyday Democracy's "Making Every Voice Matter" YouTube video contest. Using dozens of photos, music that moves from dramatic to energetic, and inspiring quotes about outcomes, the INRC entry shows how change is happening in neighborhoods throughout Indianapolis. As Everyday Democracy deputy communication director and operations manager Carrie Boron wrote on our website, "The video shows that all kinds of people are having a voice in improving Indianapolis neighborhoods. And it demonstrates that by employing simple production techniques, a community can use video to showcase its work in a medium accessible to lots of people." Read more here.

Everyday Democracy got another major media mention this week, this time in an essay, "Where Racial Healing Happens," from Rob Corcoran in the Christian Science Monitor. Quoting a friend who told him that "change happens from the bottom," Rob writes, "And he's right: Ordinary people are coming together to do extraordinary things. Healing conversation is already under way. In hundreds of local efforts across the US, diverse groups of citizens are bridging the traditional boundaries of race, class, and culture. Thousands have engaged in dialogue, symbolic acts of reconciliation, and collaborative problem solving. Organizations such as Everyday Democracy and Hope in the Cities (a project of Initiatives of Change) are facilitating this." Read it all here. Rob is national director for Initiatives of Change in the United States.

The past two weeks have been horrible ones for natural disasters including the cyclone in Burma and earthquake in China. A discussion at the Skoll Foundation's Social Edge website has been asking social entrepreneurs and community organizers to think about both how people can help affected areas now and what they'd do if a disaster hit their area. For example, author Jill Finlayson asks, "Are there grant applications or proposals for programs that you need funded that you can pull off the shelf and submit after a disaster?  Having these written in advance can enable you to promptly take advantage of funds that become available (before interest and support wanes), without having to start from scratch or take time away from the critical response efforts at the point of an emergency." Read more and join the conversation here.

Everyday Democracy executive director Martha McCoy spoke Thursday at the United Way's annual national conference in Baltimore. Her talk focused on "Engaging the Community, Building Community Knowledge." Also Thursday, United Way president Brian Gallagher outlined a new 10-year campaign focused on halving the number of high-school dropouts and working families that are struggling financially. "The country is at a crossroads right now," Gallagher said. "I've never felt a time in my career where there's this combination of enough pain, feeling of a lack of progress, feeling like we've stalled, combined with a next generation of leadership demanding change." Gallagher took questions about the goals in this live discussion at the Washington Post website.

Don't forget: There's now less than a week to catch the early-bird rate for Everyday Democracy's national meeting June 12-14 in Denver. Go here for more info, including the entire conference program now available in pdf form.

April 22, 2008

Seeking environmental equity

Yesterday, we took a look at communities on the East and West coasts (Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Port Townsend, Washington) where citizens are working to build sustainability and curb greenhouse gas emissions. Today, we focus on the Heartland, where an inner-city neighborhood is focused on environmental justice. From our website:

What began as a few people talking in a church-based dialogue has grown into a widening campaign for environmental justice in Indiana. The last two Saturdays of this month, the Martindale-Brightwood Environmental Justice Collaborative (EJC) will mark Earth Day with two mini-environmental conferences to help residents learn about ongoing toxic hazards in the community.

Martindale-Brightwood is a neighborhood in central Indianapolis with about 10,000 residents, most of them African American. As reported last year on our website, Scott United Methodist Church became a center of environmental justice activism when its minister, the Rev. Ray Wilkins, learned through an environmental analysis that a nearby business had improperly disposed of trichloroethylene, a toxic chemical that had possibly seeped into subsurface water flowing beneath the church property. The issue was discussed in a study circle, and participants went on to form the environmental group.

Now – as the “Voice to Action” conferences are held April 19 and April 26 – the EJC is working with a growing list of partners to raise awareness of the continuing toxic threats in their neighborhood. For example, the Indiana Black Expo and Marion County Health Department will be at the conference to test children for lead poisoning in a neighborhood where contaminated toys from China may be the least of parents’ worries.

Read more here. Also, have a look at the article "Environmental Justice for All" on the Utne.com website, which tells more about the emerging environmental justice campaign that leading activists are calling the civil rights movement of the 21st Century.

January 16, 2008

Leaders speak at key conferences

The Study Circles Resource Center is changing its name to Everyday Democracy. Four of our staff people are speaking this week at conferences where people are learning and sharing what it means to engage wholeheartedly in their communities - and in democracy - every day.

Patrick Scully, our deputy director, is at the Rural Community Conference in Billings, Montana, where the theme is "Creating Community by Design, Not by Default." Pat spoke this morning about how communities come together for action-oriented dialogue and change.

Martha McCoy, our executive director, will be the keynote speaker at the Tri-State Diversity Conference for Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky in Clarksville, Indiana. Martha's talk Thursday morning will be on "Bringing Diversity to Life: What Works (and Doesn't) in Real Communities." In the afternoon, senior program director Sally Campbell and senior associate Gwen Whiting will lead a session on "Every Voice Matters: Creating Diverse Public Dialogue for Change."

Did you attend either conference? Use the comments below to reflect on what you learned and what you plan to put into practice. Also, take time now to mark your calendar for our own national meeting on "Making Every Voice Matter," set June 12-14 in Denver, Colorado.

December 14, 2007

Friday digest-open thread 12/14/07

This will be the final Friday digest of the year here at DemocracySpace. For the final two Fridays of 2007, we'll have year-in-review roundups featuring some of the coolest news about small-d democratic organizing that we've seen this year. (Have a suggestion for those? Leave it in the comments below.) But let's not get ahead of ourselves ...

Images How is your holiday shopping coming along? If you need some ideas, check out the Case Foundation's Guide to Good Giving, which is packed with ways to fill stockings and build hope, all at the same time. Under Gifts That Give, you'll find ways to fight breast cancer, support animal shelters, aid still-struggling New Orleans musicians, and much more. Under Staff Picks, there are ways to give your money or your time to create positive change. (Scroll all the way to the bottom of this page to see a mention of the Study Circles Resource Center!) The Out of the Box section describes how "new and innovative ways to give are changing how we define philanthropy – and making doing good a daily occurrence."  The Skoll Foundation's Social Edge website has a gift guide, too, and don't forget our recent book roundups.

Monday (December 17) is the early registration deadline for a January 17-18 diversity conference in Clarksville, Indiana. Up to 300 people from Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky are expected at the event, which will feature a keynote speech by SCRC executive director Martha McCoy on "Bringing Diversity to Life: What works (and doesn’t) in real communities.” Read more here and download registration materials here.

Earlier this week, WBUR Boston's On Point radio show had a comprehensive look at the nation's subprime mortgage crisis, including how it is disproportionately affecting working-class neighborhoods and communities of color. You can access the show here. Guests included Douglas Palmer, mayor of Trenton, New Jersey, and president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, which recently released its report on the crisis.

In other $$$ news, Facing Up to the Nation's Finances has posted the round-up of entries into its blog carnival on the $9 trillion national debt. More than a dozen blogs took part, including this one.

Click here to read why one young South Dakota family committed to small-town life became involved in the Horizons program. Chad and Erin Odens live in Scotland, South Dakota - one of 32 communities in the state involved in the program. According to Randy Dockendorf's article in the Yankton Press & Dakotan, Scotland residents have identified six action items: a welcoming program for new residents, a youth center, a city beautification committee, a stronger business sector, a "Good Stuff Exchange" for unwanted household items, and a Scotland Community Foundation to fund local efforts and matching grants.

Wisconsin high school students who usually meet on the football field or the basketball court convened recently not to compete, but to cooperate in a brainstorming session on how to create positive changes in their schools. "Students from Burlington, Kenosha, Muskego, Oak Creek, Racine and South Milwaukee packed the Roma Lodge, where they spent the day in groups talking with their peers about issues like diversity, cliques, communication and respect," Paul Sloth wrote in the Journal Times. Click here to read more about this Leadership Cafe summit.

Speaking of Wisconsin, DemocracySpace will go on the road for the first time next week to post a report from Milwaukee, where an innovative partnership is looking to build sustainability in community economic development and the ways people work today.

November 30, 2007

Friday digest-open thread 11/30/07

Wow! Where did November go?

Most of our news this week has to do with using dialogue-to-action programs - often called study circles - for youth in schools and other settings. Please add other interesting links or your thoughts on these issues in the comments below.

As seen on our website, Education World is showcasing an in-depth look at how schools use study circles to boost parent involvement and generate greater community participation. Through interviews with Amy Malick, communications director for the Study Circles Resource Center; SCRC associate John Landesman, who has helped study circles become part of the culture at one of the nation's largest school districts; and Jim Noucas of the very successful Portsmouth Listens program, writer Ellen Delisio describes the positive impact study circles are having in school districts across the country. “It’s getting people together on a level playing field,” Noucas told Education World. “At a traditional public hearing, there is no interaction. The school board does not respond to speakers. When you get people together in small groups, they all can contribute and create a marketplace of ideas.” Read more about how communities are using study circles as an inexpensive, inclusive way to address issues ranging from racial equity to redistricting.

Yada_logo_large Earlier this fall, we wrote about the new Youth+Adults+Dialogue=Action program then just getting under way in Lewiston, Maine. More than 100 people spanning nine decades of age took part in four weeks of discussion, and next Thursday, they'll meet for their action forum. Lewiston Mayor Laurent F. Gilbert Sr. says that they all came up with creative ideas, "and the action forum will no doubt be an exciting kick-off towards making some of those ideas a reality." Read more in this City of Lewiston press release.

A Fort Wayne, Indiana, area school district plans to begin student study circles coordinated through the local United Way in the wake of a recent incident in which students said they'd found racist notes in their lockers. The incident has dominated local headlines over the past week, with a story yesterday reporting that the students had changed their stories - but one noting that he only did so after being threatened with expulsion by the school principal. Whatever the truth, this incident shows yet again how school districts must summon the courage to face racism head on.

P.S. Two weeks ago, we held a water cooler live blogging session to talk about organizing youth-focused study circles. If you missed it, you can click here to read the transcript. Don't forget: Our next water cooler will be at 1 p.m. Eastern on December 13 right here at DemocracySpace. Join us for a lively hour of discussion on how communities nationwide are using dialogue-to-action programs to address poverty.

October 12, 2007

Friday digest-open thread 10/12/07

The future of the "SCHIP" children's health insurance program has been a major news item this week. Although the bill passed with strong bipartisan support, President George W. Bush vetoed it. Proponents are now working to get more support for the legislation before an override vote that's scheduled for next Thursday. Health and Human Services Sec. Mike Leavitt has urged a compromise on the measure, but Families USA estimates that the current reauthorization legislation would cover only about half of the nearly 10 million children in America. HHS has used citizen engagement as a way to address pandemic flu. Perhaps the federal government could again look to the public for help finding creative ways to cover more of those children, as well as the estimated 47 million total people without health insurance in the United States.

Mychal Bell of the Jena Six is back in jail today after a judge revoked his probation and sentenced him Thursday on charges that predated the beating of a white classmate. The Rev. Al Sharpton told The Washington Post that the 18-month sentence "was a cruel and unusual punishment and is a revenge by this judge for the Jena Six movement," while organizers of Toward a More Perfect Union in Palm Beach, Florida, wrote in a recent letter to the editor that teen study circles in Jena and elsewhere could help remedy the root problems that led to the Jena Six saga.

Lee Derby, a principal in the Montgomery County (Maryland) Public Schools and a participant in that district's robust study circles program, has been honored with an award that recognizes "an exceptional ability to encourage academic excellence, positive human relations and strong community outreach." Meanwhile, today is the registration deadline for a round of education study circles set to start soon in Lowell, Indiana.

Yesterday was the annual National Coming Out Day. The current issue of Minnesota's Lavender magazine features the life-affirming stories of five people who have chosen to live openly as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered people. One of them, Rodney Weck, recalls, "My family has been such a huge support…they have reiterated that their biggest concern was my happiness. I think back to how scared I was to tell them and how I had all of the fears of rejection or abandonment, and realized that none of them came even close to coming true.”

Thanks to Study Circles Resource Center administrative assistant Myriah Pahl for passing along several of today's items. Do you have a tip for the weekly digest? Send it to jfanselow at studycircles dot org, or just post it in the comments below. This is your space; we appreciate links to whatever you are reading and thinking about or working on.