Our January grantees thank you for your support

Each month, CREDO members vote on how we distribute funding to three incredible nonprofits. Those small actions add up – with one click, you can help fund groups working for climate justice, economic justice and reproductive rights. In January, CREDO members voted to distribute our monthly donation to Action for the Climate Emergency, People’s Action and Planned Parenthood Action Fund.

These donations are made possible by CREDO customers and the revenue they generate by using our services. The distribution depends entirely on the votes of CREDO members like you. And for that, our January grant recipients thank you.

Action for the Climate Emergency
$52,471

Thank you, CREDO members! Your generosity makes it possible for ACE to educate, activate and support a new generation of climate and democracy organizers like me, and our community of 750,000 youth who are taking action on the climate emergency.” – Hakim Evans, ACE Fellow Alumnus

To learn more, visit acespace.org.

People’s Action
$42,294

Thank you! Organizing is the craft of bringing people together to build power where it did not exist, to then change how things work. Your contribution helps us build the power we need to win change people can feel in our everyday lives.” – George Goehl, Director, People’s Action Institute

To learn more, visit peoplesaction.org.

Planned Parenthood Action Fund
$55,235

Thank you for your support, which keeps the Planned Parenthood Action Fund strong as we fight for reproductive freedom and health care access. Together, we will work to build a more equitable future for all people.” – Alexis McGill Johnson, President and CEO, Planned Parenthood Action Fund

To learn more, visit https://www.plannedparenthoodaction.org/.

Now check out the three groups we are funding in February, and cast your vote to help distribute our donations.

CREDO members who use our products are the reason why we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.

Innocence Project Grantee Highlight: Innocent People Wrongfully Convicted Deserve Fair Compensation

Note from the CREDO team: This February, Innocence Project is among three amazing groups who will receive a share of our monthly grant. Funding from the CREDO community this month will power the Innocence Project’s work to restore lives by freeing the innocent and supporting their reconnection to community, transform the systems responsible through policy reform, and advance the collective power of this innocence movement.

Read this important blog post from Alexandra Weeks, Innocent Project’s Assistant Director of Institutional Giving below, then click here to visit CREDODonations.com to cast your vote to help determine how we distribute our monthly grant to Innocence Project and our other amazing grantees this February.

At the Innocence Project we envision a criminal legal system beyond wrongful conviction. We fight for fair, compassionate, and equitable systems of justice; free the innocent; and prevent wrongful convictions. Our work is guided by science and grounded in anti-racism — leveraging 30 years of expertise to not only exonerate, free, and support the staggering number of innocent people wrongly convicted; but also drive reform of the unjust, unreliable, and racially biased systems that lead to wrongful convictions. Compensation for the wrongfully convicted is a fundamental piece of this work.

More than 4,000 years have been lost to wrongful incarceration by the 236 innocent people the Innocence Project has freed or exonerated to date. At the minimum, states have the responsibility to provide compensation for this injustice — currently 13 states have no wrongful conviction compensation law at all.

Right now, Florida has an opportunity to reform their wrongful compensation law to ensure fair and accessible compensation for all exonerees who have spent years of their lives wrongfully incarcerated. Florida’s existing law is leaving out many of the people it should be benefitting. Fifteen exonerees, who spent a combined 236 years incarcerated for crimes they did not commit, are barred from receiving compensation for their wrongful imprisonment because of unique issues in the state’s law. This doesn’t have to be the case, and only two changes need to be made to allow them to obtain the compensation they rightfully deserve:

  1. Allow people with prior convictions to receive compensation. Florida’s law is the only one in the U.S. that bars compensation to exonerees if they have been previously convicted of other crimes. Research shows that people who have previously come into contact with the legal system are much more likely to be wrongfully convicted in the first place due to their record.
  2. Extend the tight 90-day application deadline from the day an exoneree’s conviction was overturned. Florida arbitrarily requires exonerees to file for compensation within 90 days from the date that their wrongful conviction is vacated by a judge. This deadline doesn’t consider common circumstances outside of exonerees’ control wherein they are forced to wait longer than 90 days for prosecutors to accept the judge’s ruling, rendering them ineligible for compensation.

Florida lawmakers have the opportunity to solve these issues now. Rep. Traci Koster (R-Hillsborough & Pinellas) and Senator Keith Perry (R-Alachua, Marion, Putnam) have introduced House Bill 241 and Senate Bill 526 to fix the law for all exonerees in Florida. In collaboration with our local Innocence Network partner the Innocence Project of Florida, and with your help, we are working to pass this critical legislation. 

Support exonerees today by pledging your support for compensating all wrongfully convicted people — text FLORIDA to 97016 stay updated on this campaign.

If passed, the impact of this reform would not only mean fair compensation for the current 15 Floridians who lost more than 230 combined years to wrongful incarceration, but would also ensure future injustices are rectified. Here are the stories of just a few of those exonerees who still await compensation for decades of wrongful conviction:

Clemente Aguirre-Jarquin was exonerated in 2018 after spending 14 years in prison, including a decade on death row, for a murder he didn’t commit. He is one of six exonerees barred from compensation due to the narrow and unrealistic filing deadline. When the court threw out his conviction, Clemente only had 90 days to seek compensation, but like most exonerees, he had to wait to see if the prosecutor would request a retrial before he could show he was fully exonerated and eligible for compensation. When the prosecutor finally announced Clemente wouldn’t be retried, it was too late. Read more about Clemente’s story and his ongoing fight for justice in his own words here.

Clemente Aguirre and his attorney Josh Dubin (right) the day he was exonerated in November 2018. (Image: Phelan Ebanhack)

Robert DuBoise was exonerated in 2020 after spending 37 years in prison, including three on death row, for a murder he didn’t commit. He is one of nine exonerees who are barred from receiving compensation because Florida is the only state in the country to prevent exonerees with prior convictions from being compensated. Robert’s claim to compensation should have been clear. But solely because he received probation when he was 17 for two minor non-violent offenses, the law says he isn’t owed any compensation for the decades unjustly taken from him. Hear more about Robert’s story in his own words in this video, featured as part of our partnership with the NFL and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers:

Orlando Boquete was exonerated in 2006 after spending 13 years in prison for burglary and attempted sexual battery he didn’t commit. Two years after his wrongful conviction, Orlando escaped Florida’s Glades Correctional Institution — a place he never should have been — and lived on the run as a fugitive from injustice for 11 years before he was caught and wrongfully reincarcerated. Because of Orlando’s non-violent criminal record from the years he was a prison escapee, Florida will not compensate Orlando for the time he lost. Hear more about Orlando’s incredible story in the new short film: A Run for Freedom, a collaboration with VeryTaste.

6 great Instagram accounts every progressive should follow

Social media is a great place to connect with friends, family and the causes we care about.

But our social feeds can get rather stale — even become an echo chamber — if we’re not on the lookout for new perspectives.

We’re here to help give your feeds a fresh and quick makeover! Here are 6 great Instagram accounts every progressive should add to their lists if you care about climate justice, civil rights, equality and great visual storytelling.

@devthepineapple

https://www.instagram.com/devthepineapple/

Devon Blow is a Los Angeles-based artist and graphic designer who uses social themes and pop-art style illustrations “to inspire and empower vulnerable, marginalized, neglected and disenfranchised communities; and to celebrate cultural expression in all forms.”

 

@yearsofliving

https://www.instagram.com/yearsofliving

The YEARS Project is dedicated to fighting climate change deniers and making climate justice the most important political, economic and social issue on the world’s agenda. The organization was a 2020 CREDO grantee and used the funding to help tell the story of climate change and the effects it is having on frontline communities, our economy, our health and our society.

 

@theslacktivists

https://www.instagram.com/theslacktivists

Featured in Forbes, USA Today and Axios, the slacktivists use social media to explain complex news and sociopolitical issues in easy-to-understand images and infographics. If you have pressing questions about the climate crisis, the filibuster, or the pandemic, they probably have an answer.

 

@heathercmcghee

https://www.instagram.com/heathercmcghee/

Heather C. McGhee is the author of the New York Times bestseller, “The Sum Of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together.” Her Instagram feed is filled with poignant quotes and observations covering racial and economic justice, democracy and current events.

@Whatmabeldid

https://www.instagram.com/whatmabeldid/ 

Mabel is a sustainably-focused Illustrator and designer whose Instagram feed is filled with beautiful body-positive, queer-friendly artwork that will brighten your day as you scroll through the app. If you find a piece you particularly like, she might have it for sale on her website.

 

@whereloveisillegal

https://www.instagram.com/whereloveisillegal/

Where Love Is Illegal is a project by Witness Change, a nonprofit that uses visual storytelling to support excluded people as they reclaim their narratives and improve their lives. With each photo, @whereloveisillegal documents and shares incredible LGBTQI+ stories of survival from around the world.

Vote for Innocence Project, Sunrise Movement and Women for Women International this February

Every month, CREDO members vote to distribute our monthly donation to three incredible progressive causes – and every vote makes a difference. This February, you can support civil rights, climate justice and women’s rights by voting to fund Innocence Project, Sunrise Movement and Women for Women International. 

 Innocence Project

The Innocence Project exonerates, frees, and supports the staggering number of innocent people wrongfully incarcerated. The organization envisions a criminal legal system beyond wrongful conviction and works to transform the unjust, unreliable, and racially biased systems responsible.

Funding from the CREDO community will power its work to restore lives by freeing the innocent and supporting their reconnection to community, transform the systems responsible through policy reform, and advance the collective power of this innocence movement.

Sunrise Movement

Sunrise Movement is building an army of young people from the plains to the mountains to the coasts to win the Green New Deal and center racial and economic justice in the fight against the climate crisis.

Funding from the generous support of CREDO members will power the group’s youth mobilization program as it works to bring the Green New Deal to communities across the country in 2022.

Women for Women International

WfWI’s global community invests in women and provides the skills, knowledge, and resources needed to create sustainable change for women, their families, and their communities.

The funding from CREDO directly supports marginalized women in conflict as they earn and save money, improve their health and well-being, influence decisions in their home and community, and connect to networks for support.

Your vote this month will determine how we divide our monthly donation among these three progressive groups. Be sure to cast your vote to support one, two or all three by February 28.

CREDO members who use our products and services everyday are the reason we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile and join our movement.

How to disinfect your phone the right way and keep it germ-free

Our phones are germ magnets. We touch contaminated surfaces like elevator buttons and door handles then transfer those nasty bugs to our smartphones, where viruses can live for days or weeks at a time.

In fact, our phones can carry 17,000 bacteria per square inch — 10 times more than a toilet seat! — and we touch our phones more than 2,500 times a day with every tap, type and swipe.

That’s why we recommend you disinfect your phone on a regular basis to stay healthy and keep your devices clean. In this week’s tip, we’ll show you the right way to clean your phone to keep it germ free.

Prevention: Wash your hands & avoid touching your face

The CDC considers phones “high touch surfaces” that require frequent cleaning, but how can we prevent our phones from getting too dirty in the first place? Washing our hands and avoiding touching our face.

The CDC reminds us that viruses, like the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, may remain viable for hours and up to days on some surfaces, so taking precautions to wash your hands with soap and water and avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth will help keep your phone clean. Here are some tips on how to properly wash your hands.

Disinfect your devices the right way

To rid your phones of germs and grime, you won’t need to use astringent chemicals (which may harm your phone) or fancy devices to keep your smartphone clean. Everything you’ll need you probably already have around your home. Here are some steps that we recommend you take to clean your phone and other devices:

  1. Unplug and power down your device.
  2. Remove your phone case, if you have one. If your case is waterproof, wash it thoroughly with soap and water, and let it dry completely.
  3. Use a good, lint-free microfiber or lens cleaning cloth to remove oil and fingerprints.
  4. Don’t spray any disinfecting liquids directly on your device, as they may damage your device or its coating.
  5. Gently use a Clorox Disinfecting Wipe or 70 percent isopropyl alcohol wipe to disinfect your phone. You can also spray a 70% alcohol solution on your cloth, but not directly on your device. Do not use bleach and don’t submerge your phone in liquids. (Read more from Apple.)
  6. Samsung recommends using a “hypochlorous acid-based solution (containing 50-80ppm) or an alcohol-based solution (containing more than 70% ethanol or isopropyl alcohol)” gently applied to your device using a microfiber cloth.
  7. Allow your device to air dry for five minutes.
  8. If you want, you can purchase a UV-C sterilization device which works by shining a type of ultraviolet light that can destroy the genetic material of viruses and bacteria.

How CREDO is working to protect the future of our planet

At CREDO, being green isn’t just a fad. It’s who we are and who we’ve always been. We’ve been fighting the green fight—with our dollars, our deeds and our voices—for over 35 years. 

Since we were founded, we’ve donated more than $20 million to climate justice and environmental organizations working to protect our planet. Groups like 350.org, Earthjustice, Friends of the Earth, Inside Climate News, Center for Biological Diversity, Rainforest Action Network and so many more.

To reduce waste, we started printing our bills on 100% post-consumer recycled paper all the way back in 1992 — a rarity then — and now we encourage everyone to go paperless! And to date, we have planted close to 4 million trees worldwide through donations to tree-planting organizations.

This work to fight for our planet is powered by our customers who use our products and services every day — and all our members who vote to help distribute our donations to our monthly grantees. 

This month, you can vote to help fund the incredible youth-powered climate justice organization Action for the Climate Emergency, who works to educate millions of teens about the climate emergency through original media, helps 750,000 youth members to participate fully in our democracy, and trains hundreds of youth climate organizers to end the era of fossil fuels.

You can cast your vote for Action for the Climate Emergency, along with People’s Action and Planned Parenthood Action Fund, this month by visiting CREDODonations.com.

How to use your smartphone as a tool for good

Your smartphone is great for staying connected with your friends and family, playing games, browsing social media and watching funny cat videos. But it can also be a tool to make positive social progress in our world.

Whether you’re looking to make change in your community, hold your lawmakers accountable, or help those less fortunate, your smartphone can be an important tool for good. Here are some quick tips to help you get the most out of your phone to make a positive difference.

Register to Vote

One of the best ways to make your voice heard and create change is by exercising your right to vote — and that starts by ensuring you are able to access the ballot box in your community by registering to vote. Our grantees at Vote.org have a number of simple tools you can access right from your smartphone or computer to check your voter registration status, locate polling places and dropboxes, access your ballot information for upcoming elections, and, of course, tools to help you register to vote.

The first 2022 primary elections are only a couple months away, so it’s never too early to check your voter registration status and register to vote. Visit Vote.org to learn more.

Donate surplus food to people experiencing hunger

Here’s a stunning statistic: Food waste accounts for roughly 30-40% of America’s food supply. And another stunner: more 38 million people, including 12 million children, are considered food insecure in our country.

What if we could ensure some of that perfectly good but potentially wasted food can be donated to people experiencing hunger instead? Thankfully, we can, and your smartphone can help.

If you’re a business owner with surplus food, or know someone who is, our allies at Feeding America have an app, MealConnect (iOS and Android), that will connect businesses with extra food with local food banks in their area. It’s easy to sign up, connect to a local food bank, take photos of your food, and wait for a volunteer to pick up the food.

Not a business owner? Use this tool from Feeding America to find a food bank near you who is currently accepting food donations, and find out which foods they will accept (self-stable and non-perishable) and not accept. 

Support people facing online harassment

Research shows that four in ten Americans have experienced online harassment, with women and BIPOC communities more likely to face severe online abuse. Our grantees at Hollaback! are working to end harassment in all its forms by transforming the culture that perpetuates hate and harassment. One of the main pillars of their work is bystander intervention by training people to respond to, intervene in, and heal from harassment.

HeartMob is Hollaback!’s digital platform designed to provide immediate support to people experiencing online threats, doxxing, impersonation, DDoS attacks, swatting, and, more recently, zoom-bombing. 

The HeartMob platform provides peer support, resources, and documentation for individuals experiencing online harassment. Bystanders are given tools to take concrete actions that reduce individual trauma and help build safer online spaces. User’s experiences are validated, their mental health supported, and their accounts remain secure, online, and generating content without disruption. To date, the platform has provided tools for internet users who have provided over 9,370 bystander interventions against harassment and abuse. HeartMob won Netroots Nation’s “best new product” award in 2016 and received an endorsement from the New York Times editorial board. With HeartMob, everyone has a role in providing support. For more information, or to take action against online harassment today, see iheartmob.org

Start a Petition

Maybe you want your city council to protect a local watershed, you’re fired up about combating climate change, or you want Congress to protect your community from gun violence — and you want to take action now. 

Luckily, you can start a petition to get your neighbors — or activists across the country — to join you and get the attention of important decision makers. Our friends at MoveOn.org have an easy-to-use, people-powered tool that allows anyone to build a petition on the issues you care about to let you start gathering signatures right away.

To learn more and get started creating your own petition, visit https://sign.moveon.org/.

Record an interaction with law enforcement

In 2020, a bystander’s cell phone video turned the tide after the murder of Ahmaud Arbery in bringing his killers to justice — and ignited a national reckoning for police reform and racial justice.

Today, everyone who owns a smartphone holds the power in their hand to ensure accountability and their own safety by recording interactions or misconduct with law enforcement. Our grantees at the Electronic Frontier Foundation believe you have a First Amendment right to record your interaction with the police, as long as you are not interfering with their official duties. 

Our allies at the American Civil Liberties Union offer a mobile app that helps you easily record, witness and report law enforcement interactions and misconduct right from your phone. The app also lets you add additional information, share your location and include contact information for follow up from your local ACLU affiliate. The free app is available for iOS and Android on the ACLU’s website.

Here are some additional resources if you are interested in learning more.

Brady United is reducing gun violence in our communities, thanks to CREDO members

For more than 40 years, our partners at Brady: United Against Gun Violence have been uniting gun owners and non-gun owners alike in the fight against gun violence. With programs that tackle the root causes of America’s gun violence epidemic, Brady works to ensure that every community is safer.

In May 2021, CREDO members voted to distribute $57,360 to help bolster Brady’s on-the-ground programs in areas most impacted by gun violence, help the organization take the gun industry to court, promote safe gun storage, and more — with a goal of reducing gun violence 25% by 2025. 

Here are some recent victories and highlights of Brady’s work, thanks to funding from CREDO members:

Combating Crime Guns Initiative (CCGI):

Brady’s Combating Crime Guns Initiative works to shift the burden of gun violence from the shooters to the suppliers of crime guns, including irresponsible gun industry actors who prioritize profit over public safety. One way the group accomplishes this goal is through enhancing gun dealer inspections.

Enhancing Local and State Gun Dealer Inspections

Not content with simply revealing gaps in enforcement, over the past year Brady has also looked for ways to directly improve gun industry oversight. Knowing that states and localities with appropriate authority can conduct their own gun dealer inspections, the group developed a predictive algorithm to help state and local police departments prioritize inspections. Developed by analyzing thousands of pages of inspection reports for gun dealer characteristics and violations, this tool can predict ‘high-risk’ gun dealers 4.5 times more accurately than random selection.

Over the past year, Brady’s Crime Guns team trained police in one state on how to implement this ‘inspection optimization algorithm’ into their existing gun dealer oversight practices. In just its first two weeks of use, this predictive tool identified one gun dealer that was repeatedly violating state law by not recording ammunition sales. Despite having been in operation for years and never having followed this specific state law, state police had no plans to inspect this dealer until the shop was identified by our algorithm. This was an extremely promising start to Brady’s long-term work improving gun dealer inspections across the state. Brady will soon be bringing this tool to a state where a law was recently passed requiring local law enforcement to conduct gun dealer inspections.

End Family Fire (EFF)

End Family Fire is a national public service advertising campaign from Brady and the Ad Council that debuted in August 2018. EFF recognizes that gun owners are an essential part of the gun violence prevention movement—and can prevent tragedies through safe gun storage. Grounded in extensive market research on the gun-owning population and their gun storage behaviors, EFF engages in a direct dialogue with gun owners, inviting them into the conversation about protecting their families and keeping our communities safe through responsible gun ownership.

Suicide Prevention Campaign

End Family Fire initially focused on preventing unintentional shootings. In late 2020, Brady expanded the End Family Fire campaign to focus on another type of gun violence that is often not talked about: gun suicide. In the U.S., we lose 63 people a day to gun suicide—more than those who are lost to firearm murders and unintentional shootings combined. In fact, over half of all gun deaths in America (61%) are suicides.

The new phase of the EFF campaign highlights these realities, using both behavior-changing tactics and empathy-provoking methods, to motivate gun owners to store their guns locked, unloaded, and separate from ammunition, thereby giving their loved ones a second chance at life. Our September launch was the product of years of research and message testing, and we could not be more proud of the resulting unique and life-saving campaign.

Brady Legal

Brady Legal has secured landmark precedents that hold gun companies and dealers accountable for the deaths and injuries they enable. To date, the program has won over $60 million in settlements and verdicts for gun violence victims and successfully pushed many gun dealers and manufacturers to adopt more responsible, safer business practices. They have argued and won cases before numerous state supreme courts, trial courts, and federal appeals courts, and litigated in over 40 states.

Recent Legal Win

Galliher v. Cabelas: Family of slain Ohio man settles lawsuit with Cabela’s for selling a gun to prohibited purchaser Brady, on behalf of the family of Bryan Galliher, a 21-year-old man murdered in 2016, has settled a lawsuit against outdoor retailer Cabela’s and its parent company, Bass Pro Group LLC, for selling the gun used to kill him. Brady alleged that the retailer violated Ohio law by selling a black powder gun—a replica of an antique Army revolver—to an Orrville man prohibited from possessing firearms due to a felony conviction of violence. As a result of the settlement, Cabela’s has instituted sweeping reforms to its marketing and sales practices to keep black powder guns out of the hands of individuals with a violent history and others prohibited by law from possessing a gun.

If you’d like to learn more or get involved with Brady’s incredible, life-saving work, please visit Brady’s website, or follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

People’s Action: The time has come for an organizing revival

The time has come for an organizing revival. Where we celebrate the evolution of the craft, and reground in organizing fundamentals that transcend form and context.

We have shifted an organizing field that was largely designed to win the best thing possible in the existing political and ideological landscape, to one dead-set on changing that landscape. Contesting to win the battle of ideas — advancing ours about race, class, gender, immigration, markets, and the role of government; a seismic shift toward contesting for governing power; using technology to be in relationship with more people; and a shift in who is leading our organizations and movements. You’d be hard pressed to find a decade where the organizing field has changed in such powerful ways.

If, in the pace of it all, something got lost, it was a culture that supported organizing fundamentals like starting where people are and the art of deep leadership development. Fundamentals that cut across organizing lineage for a reason — they work. Absent a revival, I believe they may be endangered.

To deliver on the promise of this moment, and to beat back the threats, what got us here will not get us there. Not alone. The social movements of the last decade have powered large-scale change, especially at a cultural level, that would have seemed dreamy ten years ago. Now we’ve gotta turn that awakening into sustained power to win tangible change in people’s lives.

That will require reaching into the cracks, organizing people untouched by our organizations and movements. People we will not reach with a better message or targeted facebook ad, but only through coming to them, asking about their greatest hopes, most pressing pain, and how they are making meaning of it all.

Forty million Americans live in poverty. We are in relationship with a small percentage. As many or more are defined as working class, many of whom are downwardly mobile. Most don’t even know we exist.

We need an organizing revival that helps us get to the next wave of people, and from there, the next. That is going to require lots of very good organizers.

WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 21: Asia Betancourt with VOCAL-NY speaks during a People’s Action rally against Big Pharma on September 21, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images for People’s Action)

There are many fundamentals we need to revive. Here are just a few that feel essential.

Start Where People Are At. It sounds so simple, but this is the first organizing super-power. We humans do not easily start where people are at. We tend to start where we are at — what we need, what we believe, what we want. Something profound opens up if we start where the other person is, truly work to be in their shoes, to understand their experience.

Our biggest campaign should not be one of mobilizing, but one of listening. This is how we build. We’ve been mobilizing non-stop for ten years. Now, let’s go and listen to millions of people.

How we do it matters — we should listen to learn, not to confirm. Be curious. Seek to understand. All people need to be seen and heard. Let’s go meet that human need, and from there great organizing can happen.

Agitate People to Greatness. We live in a constant haze that blinds us from truths about society and ourselves. Even when we do see through it, sensing that little can be done, we get comfortable being uncomfortable. This is no accident, but of design.

We are taught through experience that we are not powerful, that change is not possible, that we need to stay in our place. Breaking through this repressive worldview requires that people be stirred up.

Agitation, done right, is an act of love. We move people toward a more accurate and powerful sense of self and possibility. Done wrong, agitation is aggressive and sloppy. As an act of love, it can alter someone’s path in immeasurable ways, and unleash new power into the world. It is one of the most essential ways we develop leaders.

Winning Matters. We are clearer than ever on our north star demands. We need to be equally clear on the structural stepping stones that build toward those larger transformations. Organizing works because we create evidence that coming together and putting in the time is worth it.

We joke about when organizers used to work on stop-sign issues, and yet there is a reason we did. It provided evidence that coming together was worth the time. We don’t need to go back to stop-signs but we do need to develop a field that is clear on the structural stepping stones toward our north stars, and has a theory on how to deliver. A “political revolution or bust” stance may work for people of means and a diehard few, but it is not sustainable for most people. We have to be winning. To relieve people’s pain, to grow confidence in organizing.

There are other fundamentals: don’t do for others what they can do for themselves; it’s not where people start, but where they end up; all organizing is re-organizing; and many more. All worthy of remembering and reviving.

We can revive the fundamentals through training, culture, stories and our history.

Training. Organizing, really good organizing, is complicated. For a tiny handful this craft is intuitive on all fronts. For most, there are parts that come easy, and parts that come hard. Let’s train in how to organize the unorganized and truly develop leaders. To run great meetings, strategic actions, develop winning campaigns, to be curious about power. Training that helps us understand what is blocking our own growth, so we can help others realize theirs.

Culture. Training will only take us so far if that training is at odds with the culture of our organizations. Good organizing should be the air we breathe. If the culture of organizing is strong in our organizations, so will be the craft. If the culture rewards starting where people are at, truly developing other people, and building organizations that belong to members, people will do good organizing because they landed in the right context.

If the culture of our organizations celebrates the gamesmanship of the non-profit sector, we will grow people good at playing that game. If our culture rewards organizing the already converted, we’ll get more of that. The choice of what culture we set moving forward is ours.

Clear the Decks. There is too much on the plate of today’s organizer that is not organizing. When I was on the street, the job was organizing and a few other things would compete for that time. Today, I sense it can be the opposite, with people fighting to make time for organizing. Let’s take a clear-eyed look at our calendars and ask — how is this shit helping us organize and reach more people? Is this really building power for our members? If not, cut it loose.

Storytelling. The fundamentals come alive through stories. Stories of risky actions, leaders developing, winning campaigns. Let’s reignite a culture of storytelling — sharing the story from last night’s meeting, or of a campaign forty years ago. Organizers, the really good ones, are storytellers — inspiring us with stories from the past, and ones that spark our imagination about what comes next.

Honor our history. There’s no better source of stories than the folks who did this before us. Let’s bring our elders back into the fold. There is valuable, hard-earned wisdom on the sidelines. People who chartered these waters, suffered wounds so we would not have to, people who put language to the fundamentals. Let’s soak up that wisdom, and celebrate those who built the foundation we walk on.

There’s a sense among organizers that something is not right. That the craft is not right. It’s a strange thing to feel when we’ve made so much progress. Yet it becomes clearer by the day that what got us to this point, will not get us to the next one. That we have to organize another circle out, and after that another. This requires organizing that builds on recent evolutions in our craft, and swings back to pick up some things lost along the way. I feel confident we can do both.

With funding from CREDO members, Trust for Public Land is connecting everyone to the outdoors

Access to nature is a fundamental human right. Yet, 1 in 3 Americans don’t have a park close to home—including 28 million kids. Trust for Public Land is changing that by collaborating with communities to create parks, playgrounds, trails, and protect natural spaces.

In June 2021, CREDO members voted to distribute $49,095 to Trust for Public Land to help the organization continue leading a movement to put a park within a 10-minute walk of every American. With CREDO support, Trust for Public Land is partnering with historically marginalized communities to protect and develop new outdoor spaces so that all people have access to the health benefits and climate solutions that nature provides.Thanks in part to funding by CREDO members, over the past six months, the Trust for Public Land has opened many new community parks and protected vital public lands. Some examples include:

Cook Park in Atlanta, GA: The Trust for Public Landworked with the community to transform 16 acres of flood prone land into a vibrant new city park, engineered to alleviate the risk of future catastrophic flooding and provide multiple benefits to the neighborhood. Cook Park features a playground, splashpad, climbing boulders, outdoor fitness equipment, multi-use sports courts, public performance space, and a variety of places for visitors to relax and enjoy the outdoors.

South Oak Cliff Renaissance Park in Dallas, TX: Hand-in-hand with the neighbors of South Oak Cliff, Trust for Public Landcreated a 1.8 acre park with all-weather fitness equipment, a rock climbing boulder wall, an outdoor classroom, and barbecue and gathering spaces. This is the first park in the new Five Mile Creek Greenbelt, which will become a network of parks and dozens of miles of trails in Dallas.

5+ Community Schoolyards in NYC and beyond: Transforming barren lots at schools into vibrant green spaces open to the entire community, with playgrounds, athletic fields, outdoor classrooms, gardens, and relaxation areas.

Meadowood, Connecticut: Protecting a historically significant 285-acre property, a former tobacco farm where Martin Luther King, Jr. worked during two summers as a teenager.

Cross F Ranch, Arizona: In conserving a total of 3,154 acres, Trust for Public Landprotected the Cross F Ranch, a spectacular 22,000-acre ranch that connects the Galiuro Mountains and Aravaipa Canyon on its west side with the Santa Teresa Mountains and Forest Service Wilderness to the east. The project has created guaranteed permanent public access to 40,000 acres of existing public lands and protected a substantial portion of the watershed for nearby Aravaipa Creek.

If you’d like to learn more or get involved with Trust for Public Land, please visit their website, and follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.