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Livable Streets Advocacy Training. Robert Johnson. Our Mission. The unified voice for active living, promoting a healthy, safe and accessible outdoor experience for all in a vibrant, engaged community. . What is an Advocate?.
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Livable Streets Advocacy Training Robert Johnson
Our Mission The unified voice for active living, promoting a healthy, safe and accessible outdoor experience for all in a vibrant, engaged community.
What is an Advocate? • Someone who pleads the cause of another; who defends or maintains a cause or proposal; or who supports or promotes the interests of another.
What is an Campaign? • A connected series of operations designed to bring about a particular result
We do Not Need to Be Negative We do Not Need to Be Negative People are ready for this change
We do Not Need to Be Negative We do Not Need to Be Negative People are ready for this change People are ready for this change They just need to know about it
Millions of Missourians Cannot Drive • 1.2 million are under the age of 16 • 756,000 are over the age of 65 • 378,000 between 16-65 have at least one physical disability • 40% of all Missourians
Millions of Missourians Cannot Drive • 1.2 million are under the age of 16 • 756,000 are over the age of 65 • 378,000 between 16-65 have at least one physical disability • 40% of all Missourians Does the Status Quo work for them?
Finances The citizens of the United States sent 32.6 billion dollars of their wealth overseas on foreign oil
Finances The citizens of the United States sent 32.6 billion dollars of their wealth overseas on foreign oil In January 2011
Health Today’s children may be the first to not outlive their parents
Health & Finances No connections around school No sidewalks
Be an Informed Citizen • How transportation policies affect lives • Communicate policies to elected officials • Most of what you need to know can be found in the Advocacy Manual given to you today
Join an Advocacy Organization • Local: BikeWalkKC • State: KanBikeWalk and MoBikeFed • National: League of American Bicyclists • Funds • Email alerts
Educate Others • Ask what Livable Streets means to them • Slightly tweak • Handle objections
Facilitate Effective Meetings • Pick a time and place that is appropriate for the group • Build a strong agenda • Ensure good facilitation
Understand and Change Perspectives • You are here: You are likely not “normal!”
Perspectives; Ask Questions • If you did decide to walk or bicycle…… • What about Federal, State and local policy…..
Set Reasonable Goals and Compromise • Users and infrastructure at the same time • Baby steps
Be Completely Credible • Appearance • Positive & visionary • Follow up
Complete Streets Is Not A Partisan Issue So Do Not Make It One
Non-partisan • Identify the qualities of Livable Streets that appeal to the two main parties.
Is Your Campaign the Right Fit? • Has reasonable prospects for victory • Results in definite community improvement • Engages important groups of people • Fits your organization or neighborhood’s mission, culture and resources • Leverages positive media
Step 1: Define Your Issue • Identify the problem • Formulate a solution • Illustrate how to implement the solution • List people who care about what’s at stake for them These are your stakeholders. • Formulate your Quick Pitch
Step 2: Set Your Campaign Goals • Goals should represent the social changes you wish to see • The long term goal should be be the overall goal of the campaign • Short and medium-term goals are steps toward the overall goal • Short and medium goals can be small • It is very important that your neighborhood or organization goals support the campaign
Step 3: Assess Your Resources: SWOT • List your strengths • E.g. Strong fundraising ability • List your weaknesses • E.g. No membership structure • Opportunities • E.g. Safe Routes to School Funding • Threats • E.g. Community detractors, NIMBYs
Step 4: Strategize:Who has the power to make the change you seek? • Primary Targets • Specific people • Not simply “city council or MoDOT” • Who can apply for that grant; who must support your effort? • Secondary Targets • People who have influence over the primary targets • Public Targets • Geographic: Neighborhoods, street corridors, schools, business districts • Constituencies: Soccer moms, citizens of low wealth
Obtain Stakeholders Commitments • Ask the important questions • Wait for an answer
Reach out to Stakeholders • Prioritize based upon the effectiveness of communication. • Face to face • Telephone conversation • Email
Strategy:Who has the power to make the change you seek? • Create a Power Map Primary Targets Secondary Targets Connections to all targets Crosswalk on B St.
Step 5: Communicate • Brainstorm ways to use social media • Compose a personal story • Write a letter to the editor • Write your stair speech • Hook • Problem • Solution • Specific actions • Slogan
Communicate: Media Tactics • Press Release • Op-ed • Pitch your story to news outlets • Local radio or TV shows • Public Service Announcements • Editorials or Columnists
Step 6: Tactics and Timelines • Draft a tactic (to-do list) • Give it a deadline • Identify the lead person Tactic Date Lead Person May 15, 2011 E.g. Identify allies in neighborhood: Your Stakeholders Neighborhood Association President
Step 7: Manage Your Resources • Large campaigns can cost money • Your campaign may not require much money • It is important to consider what your expenses may be • Personnel • Professional Expenses • Printing, materials, mailing • Seek in-kind support from stakeholders • Outline possible income the campaign can generate
Research Protocol • Length of speaking time? • Are you allowed to use media? • Distribute documents?
Coordinate Stakeholders • Plan talking points • Plan for potential arguments • Respect the stakeholders efforts