Sierra Club, the nation's largest environmental organization, owes its reputation in part to its networks of volunteer members. Those networks are divided into regional or state chapters, which are in further divided into subregional groups. The New York State Chapter, whose leaders prefer the anachronistic name of the Atlantic Chapter, contains 11 regional groups, one of which is the NYC Group.
Some chapters and groups, especially in large urban areas, are amazingly dynamic. Here's a statement from a leader of the Los Angeles area network.
"The Angeles Chapter, which covers both Los Angeles and Orange Counties, is the oldest and largest chapter in the country. We are currently planning our Centennial 1911-2011. The Chapter is comprised of 62 separate entities which is a combination of regional groups, activity sections, task forces and committees. The Angeles Chapter has a membership of approximately 46,000 people, of which 8-10,000 actively participate in our outings (of which we have over 6,000 per year), our political advocacy and our conservation efforts which include our Water Committee, Transportation Committee and Global Warming and Energy Committee just to name a few…." - Ron Silverman, ron.silverman@sierraclub.org
Chicago is an urban center comparable to NYC, right? The chair of Sierra Club's Chicago Group sent an article, originally for printing in the NYC Group newsletter, to tell New Yorkers what they are up to. Briefly, they maintain a volume of activity on a vast scope of issues and programs that is completely unlike what we have in New York City. What's the difference? Purely and simply, it's about the quality and competence of volunteer leadership. Read what they're doing in Chicago...
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By Christine Williamson
Chair, Chicago Group of the Sierra Club
The Chicago Group of the Sierra Club is having one of its busiest years ever as we fight to shutter coal-fired power plants in the city, battle the spread of Asian Carp into Lake Michigan and spread the word about the impacts of global warming on wildlife, plants and people.
Our group has about 8,500 members spread across a wide geographic area. Our territory encompasses the city of Chicago and suburbs south of the city to the Indiana border, north to the next county and extends about 20 miles west of the city. Our territory includes intensely populated inner city business and residential areas, a narrow green band 20 miles long of parks along Lake Michigan, many large and small neighborhood parks and open spaces, industrial areas and typical suburban landscapes.
Our issues are varied and so are the activities of the group. We have a fairly small Executive Committee and like many Sierra Club groups, that cadre of core activists does much of the priority setting, planning and executing for the much wider group.
But we’ve made a concerted effort to reach out to our members through monthly electronic newsletters and a well-maintained web site. We only publish a print newsletter once per year. We also advertise many of our events on Facebook, Meet-up, in print and electronic versions of local newspapers, many core activists blog regularly about their work and some of our younger members have very strong “viral” networks of friends and acquaintances that they prevail upon to come to events and work days.
We also are very fortunate because the Illinois Chapter office is located in Chicago and it is well-staffed with both state and national conservation organizers. Chicago Group works closely with all of the staff in the office on various political, lobbying, fundraising and conservation issues. Our chapter staffers, for example, are coordinating with other Great Lakes states on the Asian Carp issue and our members respond eagerly to action alerts that ask them to contact the federal legislators to take action to control the spread of this voracious non-native fish.
One of our most important campaigns this year is in support of an ordinance that’s been introduced into the Chicago City Council called the Chicago Clean Power ordinance. You may have read about this issue recently in a story in the New York Times, which suggested that the plan to clean up or close the city’s dirty coal-fired power plants may prove to be a good model for other cities.
The ordinance is stuck in committee right now and Mayor Richard M. Daley has not expressed support for the ordinance. But with the help of national clean energy staffers, Chicago Group’s Air and Energy Committee members are reaching out to their city council representatives, known as aldermen here, to try to gain more support for the ordinance. Using the person-by-person organizing approach of the Obama presidential campaign, our members and those of our coalition partners are gathering friends, family and neighbors together to learn about the ordinance and then setting out to lobby their aldermen.
The goal of closing or cleaning up Chicago’s coal-fired power plants has been a priority for about six years now. It might take more time to make it a reality, but the issue has proven to be a powerful rallying point for our members.
Chicago Group also works on park and public land use issues and one of the ways we find more volunteers for this work is through the adoption of Chicago’s largest beach, Montrose Beach. We hold beach clean-ups monthly from April through September and also help the land stewards of the bird sanctuaries at Montrose with habitat restoration work. We typically have about 100 people attend our April Earth Day beach sweep and about 400, including many local school groups, attend our September event, which is part of International Coastal Clean-up day. The international event is sponsored by the Ocean Alliance and 2010 is the event’s 25th anniversary. We expect an even bigger crowd this year and have struck partnerships with Whole Foods to provide snacks for the workers, with REI, local coffee shops, hardware stores for supplies, and a host of other supporters.
Chicago Group is very active politically and we endorse environmental champions on the local, county, state and federal level in every election. For the February primary elections this year, we endorsed more than 20 candidates. We also work hard to get our champions elected and have made a big difference in hotly contested races by getting our members out on the streets to hand out campaign literature and on phone banks to talk to other Sierrans about the importance of voting for environmentally responsible candidates.
Most importantly, we have fun in doing all of these activities. We love to feed people and Sierrans love to eat and one way we combined the food focus with good environmentalism is to hold “service parties” in the Illinois Chapter office. There is always something to be done, from addressing thank you letters to donors, to data entry and carpentry. One year, we cleaned out and completely reorganized the chapter’s cluttered storage area. Our staff was amazed on Monday when they saw the efficient new storage scheme and could actually find everything they were looking for.
The party ends with a dessert pot luck and wine and lots of social interaction! But innovation often happens spontaneously. Last December, one Sierran stopped at a tiny family-owned Mexican restaurant on her way over and picked up tamales. They disappeared in minutes and members insisted that we make it an “appetizer and dessert” potluck this year. There’s no way to say no to that demand!
Chicago Group also has had an active outings program for many years which takes members on outdoor adventures all over the city, the state and the Midwest. Our Inner City Outings program that takes underprivileged kids out into nature also is thriving. In fact, our ICO kids are among the best workers we have at our Montrose Beach sweeps and some repeat attendees will become trainers for new kids this September.
Our philosophy with outings for kids and adults is that if you can help people experience nature in a positive way in a wonderful place, they will become advocates not only for “real” wilderness, but also for the wild corners of the city (we have an unbelievable wildlife population in this city!).
And last, but not least, the demand for social connections remains very strong within Chicago Group of the Sierra Club. Our Social Committee hosts monthly dinners, bar nights, neighborhood walks, movie nights and book discussion groups. Environmentalists want to hang out with each other. We don’t fight it: we embrace it and provide the opportunities.
Sometimes it seems that as environmentalists, Sierrans have such deadly serious work to do. If we don’t get those coal-fired power plants cleaned up or closed, more people with asthma could die or suffer with ill health. Asian Carp could decimate Lake Michigan’s eco-system if they reach the lake through various rivers and canals. If the BP plant just south of the Indiana border emits any more pollutants into Lake Michigan, our water supply may be compromised and the underwater eco-system once again will suffer.
But unless our members, potential members and supporters have fun with each other and feel like they’ve accomplished something important, we won’t see them at another event or they won’t act on an action alert we email to them. So our goal always is to provide a high quality experience that’s very well-organized and that’s as much as it can be.
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