Showing posts with label Localization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Localization. Show all posts

Monday, November 7, 2011

Elinor Ostrom outlines the best strategies for managing the commons

Beyond Western notions of the market and the state, community-based forces can manage the commons effectively, and those methods can be studied and adapted to new situations and locations--hopeful news for any group seeking to manage local resources for the good of all rather than exploit them for the enrichment of a few.

To learn more about how AfD's Tapestry of the Commons project can jumpstart a commons conversation where you live, see the project webpage here.

by Jay Waljasper. Posted November 4 on Common Dreams

A breakthrough for the commons came in 2009 when Elinor Ostrom won the Nobel Prize for Economics. The first woman awarded this honor, the Indiana University political scientist not only made history but also helped debunk widespread notions that the commons inevitably leads to tragedy. In 50 years of research from Nepal to Kenya to Switzerland to Los Angeles, she has shown that commonly held resources will not be destroyed by overuse if there is a system in place to manage how they are shared.

How such systems work around the world was the topic of Ostrom’s keynote address at Minneapolis’ Festival of the Commons at Augsburg College Oct. 7, co-sponsored by On the Commons, Augsburg College’s Sabo Center for Citizenship and Learning and The Center for Democracy and Citizenship.

Ostrom explained there is no magic formula for commons management. “Government, private or community,” she said, “work in some settings and fail in others.”

The most effective approach to protect commons is what she calls “polycentric systems,” which operate “at multiple levels with autonomy at each level.” The chief virtue and practical value of this structure is it helps establish rules that “tend to encourage the growth of trust and reciprocity” among people who use and care for a particular commons. This was the focus of her Nobel Lecture in Stockholm, which she opened by stressing a need for “developing new theory to explain phenomena that do not fit in a dichotomous world of ‘the market’ and ‘the state.’”

Addressing a crowded auditorium at the Minneapolis Festival, Ostrom pointed to an authoritative study of 100 protected forests in 14 countries, which shows that the cooperation of local people is more important to preserving these commons than whether a national government, local officials or someone else actually oversees the forests. If the people who live there feel they benefit long-term from how the forests are managed, she notes, they make sure the rules are followed. “When local groups have the right to harvest non-timber resources, they are more likely to monitor and sanction those who break the rules.”

Overall, she recommends local control as the best path for protecting a commons because it allows rules to be “based on unique aspects of a local resource and culture”. But the polycentric approach—a diverse web that might include some community or private governance along with different layers of government—“can have the benefits of local control, but still cope with the problems that come on a larger scale.”

What We Can Learn from New England Fishing Fleets
Ostrom also champions “self-organized” systems, where the people closely involved with a commons help “develop rules for themselves which can be quite different from what is in the textbooks.” Her favorite example of this is the intricate system of rules and enforcement created by fishing fleets in Gloucester, Massachusetts, to ensure there are enough lobsters for everyone.

*The first time the rules are broken, a bow is tied around the offending lobster trap. “Imagine these big lobstermen tying a bow on a pot,” she said with a laugh.

*On the second offense, the lobstermen visit the home of the offender to discuss the problem.

*On the third offense, the lobstermen break up the trap.

*On the fourth offense, it’s possible the lobstermen may destroy the offenders’ boat—but Ostrom is not certain it has ever come to that.

This way of governing the commons has proven effective because penalties are imposed gradually and enforced by the community itself. Although she cautioned that “Community control is not a panacea” anymore than private or government control in a panel discussions with local commons advocates after her talk at the Commons Festival.

What Local Cops and Jane Jacobs Have in Common
Before the speech, Ostrom met with students from various colleges around the Twin Cities, discussing her commons research in subjects beyond natural resources. She cited Jane Jacobs—the passionate advocate of neighborhoods who believed that local people usually know more about what’s best for their communities than expert planners—as an influence on her work.

Ostrom outlined her years of research on local police departments in 80 metropolitan areas across the country, studying them at a time when they were under pressure to consolidate operations in the name of efficiency. Yet most of them, she discovered, were able to achieve increased efficiency in resources like crime labs without merging into a huge metropolitan-wide forces.

Unfortunately, she added, schools were not able to resist consolidation. While there were 125,000 separate school districts across American in the 1930s, now there are 13,500.

“The ideas was that bigger schools would be cheaper,” she said, but that has not turned out to be true. Ostrom believes that both education and our democracy have suffered in the process. She pointed out that each of those 125,000 districts had at least five elected school board members, meaning that a much higher proportion of people then were directly involved with public affairs in their communities. That left me wondering if the widespread contempt for politics we see today would be so prevalent if more of us personally knew someone who actually served in public office.

Following Ostrom’s keynote speech, the audience flowed out into Murphy Square—the oldest public park in Minneapolis—to celebrate the many ways the commons enriches our lives with art, cuisine, community organizations and social interaction. The Brass Messenger band set a rollicking mood for the evening while a mob of theater students enacted a scene from the play Marat/Sade. The festival continued the next day with a walking tour of commons landmarks in the inner city neighborhood around Augsburg College led by Sabo Center chair Garry Hesser, followed by a commons bike tour led by Augsburg urban sociologist Lars Christiansen and me, which wound up at the site of the Occupy Minnesota protest downtown.

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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Oregonians for Renewable Energy Policy: What's a feed-in tariff?



What's a feed-in tariff and why is it so important for development of alternative, renewable energy? Judy Barnes of Oregonians for Renewable Energy Policy (OREP) explains it as "a piggy bank on your roof"--a guaranteed predetermined fixed price for each kilowatt hour of alternative energy you produce for a fixed amount of time, usually 20 years. OREP concentrates on developing solar power in Oregon, confident that by growing the current state feed-in tariff program, they can develop widespread solar capacity in the state. In this video, Judy gives a quick overview of feed-in tariffs and how they've worked. For instance, in Germany, feed-in tariffs have produced not just clean energy but 370,000 jobs, while lowering overall costs for solar power. Ontario's feed-in tariff program is new, but has already created 43,000 jobs, produced 5,000 megawatts of renewable energy, and has put the province on track to close all its coal-fired plants by 2014. Watch to learn more about organizing in Oregon to achieve these same successes.

The video was filmed at the international Moving Planet event in Portland, Oregon, on September 24, and was produced by Jim Lockhart, www.PhilosopherSeed.org. OREP is sponsored by Alliance for Democracy, and works closely with AfD's Portland, OR, chapter.

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

“Transforming Communities Through Local Business" screens in Ashland, MA June 9

Former New England regional representative David Whitty sends the following announcement about the documentary series he's helped to organize:

The Documentary Film & Discussion Series will present the film, Transforming Communities Through Local Business (56 min.), June 9 at 7:00 pm in the Community Room, Ashland Public Library, 66 Front Street, Ashland, MA. The events, presented by the Friends of the Ashland Library, are free and open to the public. Viewers are invited to stay for discussion. All points of view are welcome. For event information, contact the Ashland Library, 508-881-0134.

The film, "Transforming Communities Through Local Business," contains two conversations from Peak Moment TV’s series on sustainable communities.

Conversation I – Sustainable Connections: Transforming a Community through Local Business
Michelle Long shows us how a highly successful local, independent business network has transformed Bellingham, WA, and inspired other communities. From an initial “Think Local First” program, they expanded to business peer mentoring, support for local food producers, sustainable buildings, and green energy. An astounding sixty percent of their community is not only aware of the “Think Local, Buy Local, Be Local” campaign but have changed their buying habits. (www.sustainableconnections.org)

Conversation II – Local Living Economies: Protecting What We Love
Judy Wicks’ love of place has made widening ripples on a global scale. She’s the founder of BALLE (Business Alliance for Local Living Economies), a national network of sustainable, small businesses. After moving onto a quaint street in Philadelphia, she learned it was slated to be torn down. Organizing her community, she saved the block as a walkable community. She opened White Dog Cafe coffee shop on the first floor of her home, which grew to a large restaurant proudly serving food from local farmers. (www.livingeconomies.org, www.whitedog.com) From water withdrawal to mining, GMOs, resort development and more, the corporate few wield the law against our communities, endangering our health, safety, and the environment. Confronted by corporate harms, more than 100 communities across the US have decided to do something different, enacting laws that place the rights of communities and nature over the claimed “rights” of corporations.

The Documentary Film & Discussion Series meets every 2nd Thursday and 4th Tuesday of the month for an in-depth look at important topics of our day. The discussions are often lively and thought-provoking. All points of view are welcomed. For more information, visit www.friendsoftheapl.com.

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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Trenton, ME, passes local food and self-governance ordinance

The fifth Maine town to vote on the Local Food and Community Self-Governance Ordinance, Trenton, passed it at their town meeting Saturday morning. The vote was close, at 29-25 (Trenton has only about 1000 year-round residents, and there was a fire alarm early in the meeting which cleared the hall and thinned the crowd a little).

AfD vice co-chair Bonnie Preston, who has been working to help spread the word about these ordinances, writes that pro-ordinance people plan to do some follow-up with the town and select board to try to make sure they better understand this issue. They learned a lot from this town meeting about how important the ground-work is, and how important it is to understand the circumstances in each town, something that can really only be done by that community.

They are still anticipating a re-vote in Brooksville this summer; this was the one town where the ordinance was defeated, although a town board may have improperly recommended that it not be passed. Right now Local Food and Community Self-Governance ordinances are 4-1; they will work to make it 5-0.

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Monday, April 4, 2011

Blue Hill, ME is the latest town to pass a local food and self-governance ordinance

Blue Hill, Maine, voted overwhelmingly to pass a Local Food and Community Self-Governance Ordinance at their Saturday town meeting on April 2. Discussion of the ordinance, which allows communities to establish their own rules governing sale and production of farm products, was lively, according to AfD co-chair and Blue Hill resident Bonnie Preston. You can read a model of the ordinance here.

Local food activists will be meeting soon to discuss how best to move forward to get this ordinance passed in other towns around the state. Two more towns are going to be voting in June, and several more are interested in adding it to their warrants for next year. Brooksville, which voted the ordinance down after a committee recommended a no-vote, may take the ordinance up again in May.

Bonnie also reports that people from around the country are interested in what the ordinance does to protect local farming and farm-to-consumer sales--the
day the Local Food, Local Rules web site went up, there were 522 hits on the link to the sample ordinance. Everybody eats!

The Bangor Daily News covered the vote here.

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Thursday, February 3, 2011

Farm-to-table economies protected in Maine

AfD'ers in Maine have been supporting town-level passage of the Local Food and Community Self-Governance Ordinance of 2011, and a public meeting on the ordinance is planned for Thursday, February 3 in Brooksville. The ordinance will be presented at town meetings there and in Sedgwick, Penobscot, and Blue Hill this spring. We'll be posting links to local coverage, and will have a copy of the ordinance online soon.

The ordinance is designed to safeguard the "farm to table" relationships between producers and buyers that have been a part of Maine food traditions for generations, but have come increasingly under attack by a regulatory system geared toward often dangerously haphazard oversight of industrial agriculture and processors.

The right to local self-governance in the ordinance builds on the local ordinances previously passed by six towns in New Hampshire and Maine to protect their groundwater and their local ecosystems.

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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Solidarity Economy Means Cultural, Environmental and Political Transformation




by Jim Tarbell

In 2007, at the Atlanta US Social Forum I witnessed the formation of the US Solidarity Economy Network. (USSEN). This past week, I used my time at the Detroit Social Forum to investigate how the Network was progressing. When I mentioned this to my colleagues, they nodded approvingly, but then stared at me quizzically asking, “What is the solidarity economy.”

That question is being answered as more people become involved with identifying and defining this organic, transformative phenomenon. Nancy Neamtan of the Quebec Chantier de L’Economie Sociale points out that “for years everyone was defining themselves as a community radio or a fair trade association or a workers co-op or a housing co-op and there was no common umbrella for defining ourselves as part of the economy. So the leap we made in 1996 was to come together as a broad network of co-ops, non-profits, and social movements in urban and rural areas that shared a vision of a solidarity economy that is democratic, inclusive and equitable.” She goes on to say that the solidarity economy is “citizen-based action within the economy through cooperative, collective or non-profit organizations that are producing goods and services based on a logic that sees the primacy of people over capital, that are democratically controlled, that respond to the needs of the community and that promote a philosophy of empowerment.”

Among the many workshops on the solidarity economy at the USSF, the Center for Community-Based Enterprise (C2BE) hosted one called Building Local Community and Creating Jobs through Cooperation. It featured several businesses across the country and included a Detroit neighborhood of community-based enterprises that hosted lunch the next day for a tour of Detroit community-based enterprises.

The US Solidarity Network (www.USSEN.org) helped organize a whole track of workshops at the Detroit Social Forum including one on how to map and organize solidarity economy members locally. Meanwhile, the Intercontinental Solidarity Economy Network (RIPESS) offered reports from solidarity networks across the planet. Representatives from Quebec, Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America reported back on laws, forums and networks that are being developed around the world to support and strengthen the solidarity economy.

At the Friday night plenary, Daniel Tygel, Executive Secretary of the Brazilian Forum on the Solidarity Economy captured the imagination of the entire Social Forum saying, “We must be able to deal with our differences, and we must be able to find what we have in common to get over the individual or organizational perspective, so that we can get to a massive perspective to propose transformation. . . We are always thinking about the transformation of the economy and the transformation of society. The main project of the solidarity economy is to combine economy, culture, the environment and politics. What we are fighting for is a kind of termite method of killing capitalism. The termites are eating the wood, but if you look at the house, it looks like it is there, but the termites are eating the wood and one day this house will fall down.”

The next issue of Justice Rising will highlight the solidarity economy and how we can all participate in the coming transformation. Let me know if you want to participate in this issue or have ideas about its content. We are all in this together and it will take a massive effort to come together and create a truly transformative solidarity economy.

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Monday, March 8, 2010

The money's being moved!

According to a Zogby Interactive survey, 32% of US adults have considered move some or all of their banking business from a large national bank to a community bank or credit union because of disapproval of big-bank policies, 14% have moved some of their banking from a big bank to a community institution, and 9% say they did it as a protest.

The survey reached 2,068 U.S. adults in mid-February. You can read more here.

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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

New Mexico moves to move their money--why not you?

The New Mexico House of Representatives has passed a bill enabling the possible switch of $2-5 billion in state deposits to accounts in community banks and credit unions. Thus far, large national banks, like Bank of America and Wells Fargo, have held the funds.

The New Mexico effort got a mention on the Huffington Post, and a credit union executive said that the media spotlight helped get the bill through the House.

You can read more about the New Mexico vote here, and learn more about the Move Your Money initiative here.

Move your money notes that states and local governments have a total of $230 billion in the nation's largest banks. But it's community banks that do the lion's share of lending to small and new businesses, a key source of credit for a rejuvenated economy.

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Sunday, January 10, 2010

Did you Move Your Money yet?



Just a reminder... the holidays are over and life is getting back to normal. If you made a resolution to get your finances a little more in line with your principles, why not get inspired to Move Your Money to a community bank or credit union. Check out MoveYourMoney.info for a zip code search of community banks on the home page, or this rundown of resources for locating a community bank or credit union, and where to go for ratings and other consumer information. Learn more about the campaign, watch video coverage and commentary, and read testimonials from individuals and all kinds of community groups who've made the decision to switch from a bank "too big to fail" to one small enough to be part of the local economy.

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Tuesday, August 11, 2009

GANE online--your analysis is welcome!

GANE--the General Agreement on a New Economy--is a document outlining a new model for economic development and analysis that emphasizes full employment, sustainable development, economic equity and community federalism. GANE, a project of the Alliance, has been organized by Ruth Caplan, coordinator of AfD's program on Corporate Globalization and Positive Alternatives.

Community federalism is a systemic approach to development that centers on the local community and builds outward to regional and national levels. Such an approach has become more and more necessary as we face a host of interrelated problems--climate change, off-shoring of jobs, fallout from speculative busts, degradation of the natural and social commons--from pure water to public education.

GANE was developed by the Economics Working Group, while a project of the Tides Foundation. It is the result of a robust discussion among forward thinking economists and policy advocates taking place over several years. And it is a work-in-progress, that depends on its readers to share their ideas.

If it bothers you that in this economic crisis Wall Street is getting bailed out while families and communities are left to fend for themselves, or if you question the veracity of current economic indices as a real reflection of our collective welfare, or if you feel that local communities are getting ignored in economic decision-making, check GANE out. You are asking some of the same questions we are and you may like some of our ideas.

The project website is here: www.greenecon.org. You can read a summary or a the full document, and share your ideas as well. Answers to our economic problems should come out of a broad public dialogue. Join in!

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Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Resources for studying sustainable economics

Re-Imagining Economics is a group of educators and activists seeking to expand popular understanding of how economies actually operate and how to foster more sustainable and socialized economic models. The project includes members of the Alliance's Columbus, OH, group.

Why "re-imagining?" The group's position is that the current definition of economics has collapsed in the face of growing global economic instability and crisis, and environmental degradation. Consequently, they write, "the prevailing model of economics needs to be replaced, not merely fine tuned."

To make that replacement a grassroots project, they've developed a series of single sheet flyers on a range of topics related to the history of money and banking, cooperatives, corporatism, and related topics, which can be read online or downloaded from this section of their website. They're also interested in working with organizations which have similar or related interests. Contact them at economics@arawakcity.org.

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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Will Mendocino County be an Epicenter of Corporations vs. Local Citizens in 2009?

By Steve Scalmanini, Ukiah, California
One of the battles between corporations and local citizens is heating up in rural Mendocino County, CA, and will almost certainly come to a head on November 3rd of this year. That is when voters will decide whether to approve an initiative on the County-wide ballot to change the zoning of a former industrial plant site to mixed-use so a developer can build the County’s first large retail mall. The battle has been brewing since 2005 when real estate investment trust ("REIT") Developers Diversified Realty, Inc. ("DDR") of Beachwood, Ohio, purchased an industrial plant site that the Masonite Corporation had used for 50 years to make molded siding and doors from sawdust and resins, and which it closed in 2001. The plant is located just a quarter mile outside the City of Ukiah.

DDR's efforts in the ensuing years to have the zoning changed met with resistance from several local interests who want the site to remain zoned industrial for future industry, and who want to direct large chain-store retail development to the south end of the City of Ukiah, adjacent to the few other similar stores like Wal-Mart, Staples, Food 4 Less, and a few regional chain stores.

In last year’s election for the County Board of Supervisors, all three winning candidates were against the proposed zoning change. Likewise for the two candidates reelected to the Ukiah City Council. (Unopposed, actually.) So the developer was headed for defeat in their effort to get their desired zoning changed through normal government processes.

So DDR funded a petition circulation in April to garner enough signatures to qualify an initiative to change the zoning to their desired mixed-use. The campaign was the talk of the County as petition circulators from outside the County badgered the public outside groceries and other businesses more aggressively than anyone had ever seen before to sign the petition. Moreover, the pitches of the circulators were misleading to say the least – downright deceptive to many. The most commonly reported lie to gain signatures was that the petition was "to clean up the Masonite site", which of course appealed to many voters in this environmentally conscious County. But this is not true. The site is required by California State law to be cleaned up before it can be reused for any purpose. Some of the public questioned the circulators about this claim, and pried further into the true intent of the petition, which let to plenty of exchanged words. One of these even led to a fist-fight after which the circulator involved was served with a restraining order.

Within a few weeks their aggressive, deceptive signature gathering had garnered enough signatures to qualify the initiative for an election. On June 9th the County Elections Officer informed the Board of Supervisors that enough signatures were confirmed as valid to qualify the initiative for an election. For what it’s worth, the invalid signature rate was 19%.

Weeks after this invasion of the corporate-funded circulators I found a rational explanation for what they had been up to. The deceptive activities of corporate funded initiatives are explained at www.stopballotfraud.com. You’ll find there a list of the infamous companies that do the bidding of corporations to get initiatives on ballots for the benefit of those corporations. These include Arno consulting, the outfit hired by DDR to do the deed here in Mendocino County.

DDR has already funded their campaign with over $180,000, which is over $2 per voter, and the election is still five months away. If you want to see the latest version of what corporate America is throwing at the public to charm them into supporting sprawl, have a look at www.mendocinocountytomorrow.com and www.mendocinocrossings.com. If you wonder why the former of those two Websites doesn’t even mention the initiative, its "Links" page has no links, its "FAQ" page has no FAQ’s, and members are accepted only as "Recommended By", so do I. Yet their organization sponsored the petition drive. The latter Web site will show you the latest in green-washing a pig-in-a-poke.

The Web site for the "Home Team" defending our local community and economy, known as "Save Our Local Economy" ("SOLE"), is at www.nomegamall.com. Donations are welcome, of course; SOLE is up against big money. Look for an update on the campaigns in next month’s AfD E-Newsletter.

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Monday, May 18, 2009

Justice Rising on the web (and, members, in your mailbox!)


The Spring issue of Justice Rising: Grassroots Solutions to Corporate Domination is available online here. This quarter, we focus on Deglobalization/Localization, with articles by co-editors Ruth Caplan and Jim Tarbell, Mark Anielski, Maia Campoamo, C.R. Lawn, Dave Lewit, and Ellen Brown.

Remember, you are always free to use Justice Rising for your own organizing--just download and print. Paper copies are available from the national office as well. And if you'd like to make sure you never miss an issue, join the Alliance for Democracy!

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Monday, March 30, 2009

April 11 in Massachusetts! Maintaining Democracy: Undermining the Corporate Agenda from the Bottom Up

More information on this event!

A conference for Northeast region AfD members, supporters, and allied activists! Join us!

SATURDAY APRIL 11, 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM
Walker Center, 144 Hancock Street at Grove Street
Newton, Massachusetts
(Exit 22 off Rt I-95, or a 0.5 mile walk from Riverside Green Line station)

Registration ($15, early-bird rate of $5 by April 4)
Lunch and dinner available, with vegetarian option. Lunch $12, dinner $14.

CALL 781-894-1179 (AfD National Office, Waltham) to REGISTER NOW, or email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org

We look forward to seeing you there!

Speakers/presenters include:

  • NANCY LEE WOOD (Bristol Community College): Overview and Resource Depletion
  • JILL STEIN (MCHC: Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities): Taking on the Climate Crisis -- Local, State, and National
  • GARRET WHITNEY (Concord Climate Action Network) The 350ppm Campaign
  • Sustainable Community Initiatives: Reports from Aperion and Green Drinks of Rhode Island
  • MARY ROSSBOROUGH (Salem State College Lifelong Learning Institute): The Economy -- Pitfalls and New Directions
  • DAVID LEWIT (Dispatch): Participatory Budgeting & Trade Issues
  • PAT McSWEENEY (Citizens for an Informed Community): Militarism as a Tool for the Corporate Agenda
  • Radio hosts STAN ROBINSON & JOHN GREBE: The Local and Larger Independent-Media Presence
  • KATIE ROBBINS (Healthcare-NOW!): State Legislative Initiatives
  • BARBARA CLANCY (AfD Health Care Campaign): Action Tools
  • TONI SERAFINI (AfD) & SHERYL CRAWFORD (Mass Vote): Electoral Issues

Additional Media Initiatives:
  • COMMUNITY SHOWINGS/ACTIONS: David Whitty (Town of Ashland), Joan Ecklein (Women's International League for Peace & Freedom: WILPF), Sue Gracey (Boston Bio-Weapons Lab, WILPF), The Raging Grannies
  • COMMUNITY CABLE PROJECT: "OTHER VOICES": Ruth Weizenbaum (Overview with distribution team), Jane Lynn (Marlboro), Michael Bleiweiss (Methuen), Charlie Phillips (Concord), Bob Datz (Brimfield), Cornelia Sullivan (Boston), Joanna Herlihy (Cambridge & Somerville): editing & filming work, Leo Immonen (Wrentham)
  • LETTER-WRITING
  • WEB OPTIONS
  • NEWSLETTERS

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Mass. Globalization Impact Bill to Rules Committee

The Massachusetts Globalization Impact Bill has a new committee assignment and number. It’s now H 4705, and will be considered by the legislature's Committee on Rules. The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Byron Rushing, sits on the committee, along with at least one co-sponsor. Massachusetts’ two active chapters, North Bridge Alliance for Democracy and Boston/Cambridge Alliance, will be working on organizing tools to get the bill out of committee and passed, including model letters to editors and op-eds. Keep an eye on the chapters’ website for info on the bill’s progress and for educational material on SPP.

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