Run a new Summer of Solutions or Local Initiative in 2013

An off-grid solar panel in Detroit. A bike shop in South Minneapolis. A chicken coop at the Coal River Mountain Watch homestead. Two hundred filled-out surveys on visions for the community in Portland. Five summer camps in Oakland, Raleigh, Lexington, Chicago, and Hartford. A dozen farm plots across the country.

Members of Middleton Summer of Solutions in their Children’s Garden.

Over 300 participants trained in community organizing, sustainable venture development, and distributed leadership. Young people who learned how to plant a seed for the first time. How to help a child believe in herself. How to develop a community owned solar business. How to listen. How to build something that works.

This is a small slice of the legacy of the sixteen 2012 Summer of Solutions programs. We are inviting other young people to join in and become a part of the Grand Aspirations network of empowerment through getting things done.

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After the Summer of Solutions: Employment

After closing up sixteen successful Summer of Solutions programs around the country, Grand Aspirations is ready to help a handful of young people move on to the next step: employment. Five solutionaries who just finished the Summer of Solutions programs in Detroit, MI; Twin Cities, MN; and Chicago, IL are ready to get going with new jobs. Thanks to a grant from REAMP, Grand Aspirations is providing matching funding to these young people to go out and create their own jobs with partner organizations based in these local communities. Read more about the change each solutionary is ready to go out and make.

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Grand Aspirations August Gathering Announced!

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Members of Grand Aspirations at the 2011 August Gathering in Raleigh, NC.

Grand Aspirations will be hosting an end-of-summer event, the August Gathering, in Hartford, CT, from Monday August 20 to Friday August 24. We are extremely excited to invite our associates and allies to join members of all 16 of our Summer of Solutions programs for this week. If spending a week with amazing green economy building youth is exciting enough for you, go ahead and register here. If you want more information, read on. Continue reading

Minneapolis Energy Options: Energy, Markets, and Democracy

Last November, I sat down with a couple of long-time Environmental Justice organizers in Minnesota and had a conversation about Minneapolis’s energy future. I had been notified by a environmental lawyer that the franchise agreements (20 year agreements that allow the major local utilities to use the public right of way to distribute electricity and natural gas to Minneapolis energy users in exchange for paying Minneapolis about $24 million annually) were expiring in 2014. In our conversation, we figured we should do something about it to ensure the next 20 years of energy development was founded on energy efficiency, clean energy, and community ownership of our energy system.

Fast forward six months and we have a coalition of a dozen groups leading the Minneapolis Energy Options campaign, support from many of our local elected officials, and insight into the many ways that state regulation partners with utilities to limit the options cities have taking steps towards more affordable, efficient, clean, and community-based energy development. We’ve learned of the work of dozens of other cities that have moved to take control of their energy purchasing, generation, and/or distribution, whether through innovative franchise agreements with cooperative utilities, community choice aggregation (which allows a local governments to choose what power they buy, distributed by the local utility), and forming new municipal energy utilities. We believe Minneapolis should keep its options open rather than locking in 20 more years of business as usual – we want to enable the city to explore the option of municipalizing while evaluating negotiations of the franchise with an eye towards enabling Minneapolis residents and businesses to take charge.

And recently, we opened that discussion in an Op Ed in the Star Tribune: http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentaries/153296235.html

Read more about what we could achieve and what this means for energy action, democracy, and how movements relate to markets:

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Social Media!

Social Media
Grand Aspirations has a variety of social media accounts that comprise our online presence and help us relate to other non-profits and similarly driven individuals. We highly recommend you visit and subscribe to these pages!

LinkedIn
http://www.linkedin.com/company/2384483?trk=tyah

Google+
https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/100670483184187069676/

Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Grand-Aspirations/346189577410

We also have a Twitter page that is forthcoming. Join our movement by liking our page!

The View from Four Years Out

When I helped close the 2011 Twin Cities Summer of Solutions three weeks ago, I knew something amazing was happening, but in the flurry of it all I wasn’t really able to identify it. I started to get a sense of it when I first sat down at the Grand Aspirations August Gathering two weeks ago, when forty people from all over the country streamed in with wondrous stories of their work creating the green economy. By the end of the Gathering, last week, the full depth of the change was starting to dawn on me and was brought to the front of my attention when Ethan Buckner, a friend and Oakland Summer of Solutions Program Leader, said smiling at the end of a big group hug, ‘you know, we’ve created something really remarkable in the past few years’. Now, after a week of catching up and taking the next steps forward back in Minnesota, I’m finally seeing the view from four years out.

Four years ago was about 6 months after the events that got Cooperative Energy Futures and the Alliance to Reindustrialize for a Sustainable Economy off the ground – the seeds of my green economy work in the Twin Cities. It was about 6 months before the vision for the Summer of Solutions and Grand Aspirations emerged. Four years ago, there had been no national gatherings of thousands of youth activists, candidate Barack Obama was barely a competitor, and the economy had not yet tanked. The dream of a green economy was barely starting to be voiced, and the idea that we could sustain ourselves, our communities, and the future of our world by creating new ways to feed, house, power, and transport our society was an exciting but utopian ideal.

So what has changed?
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Summer Wrap-Up in Raleigh

by Tom Frakes of the Iowa City Summer of Solutions.

As the summer draws to a close, it’s easy to feel nostalgic for those sultry mornings spent with local food producers, conservationists and community gardeners when the July sun shone through hazy skies. Even those long hours spent in the office are becoming a happy memory. Our participants in Iowa City Summer of Solutions have a lot of work to reflect on and be proud of, and we’re especially thankful for all the support that our partners and the Iowa City community at-large gave us. Part of our mission has been and will continue to be building a lasting relationship with this city and its residents, and everyone in our organization looks forward to carrying the torch into 2012 and beyond.

Iowa City was one of fifteen communities nationwide to host a Summer of Solutions program, with several more being added for the 2012 operating year. Our parent organization, Grand Aspirations, is actively fostering new programs in rural areas, college towns and major metropolitan communities across the country. While the focus of each program is local and dencentralized, the need for national cohesion and community sets the stage each year for the August Gathering in a Summer of Solutions host community. This year’s gathering was in Raleigh, North Carolina…a city who has earned international notoriety for its emphasis on green economics and green collar job growth in addition to its established scenes in academia, research and the arts. Our partners in Raleigh were phenomenal hosts and graciously introduced us to their community. Iowa City was able to send four team members to the week-long conference where all SoS programs could showcase their ongoing projects, share successful models and methods of community organizing, and contribute to Grand Aspirations’ national vision and strategy. This was a truly rewarding experience for our members who traveled to Raleigh, and will provide lots of innovation and resources for the Iowa City program.


Thanks to generous donations and fundraising opportunities from community partners such as the University of Iowa’s Office of Sustainability, the City of Iowa City Recycling Division, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, Dairy Queen and Cold Stone Creamery…our team raised enough money to drive to North Carolina for the week to participate in this vital conference. We were also able to cut the drive in half with a one-night camping adventure in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This park is famous for its accessibility (trails aplenty and admission is free), its range of microclimates, and its biodiversity and endemic species. This was not only a great place to break up the seventeen hour drive, but also was the first chance any of the Iowa City delegation had to visit this park with its inspiring vistas and wildlife. We learned about the stress the park is facing from invasive species and acid rainfall despite its unspoiled appearance to the untrained eye. We also had several opportunities to learn about Appalachian history and the cultural heritage of the region. We walked the Appalachian Trail near Clingman’s Dome at 6,500 ft. above sea level and listened to native bluegrass music on the Blue Ridge Parkway on its way into Asheville. Even before reaching the conference, the August Gathering had given us opportunities of a lifetime.

After descending from the Smokies and crossing the park and plantation landscapes of the Piedmont, we arrived in Raleigh in high spirits. Immediately we got to work meeting colleagues, setting norms and goals and settling in for a week of focused workshops. Almost fifty participants from across the United States joined together at the Umstead Park United Church of Christ, who donated its fantastic and LEED-gold space to Grand Aspirations for this year’s gathering. Within hours we had set the tone for the week, met dozens of visionary peers ranging in age from 15 to 31 and in backgrounds from Oakland and Detroit to Arkansas and West Virginia. If ever there were proof that youth leadership and the sustainability movement are alive and well, this was it.

The week progressed and so did our conversations and our work, despite the levity added by earthquakes and hurricanes in the region. We awoke at dawn on Thursday to strange pressures and skies, as the atmosphere was palpably charged from the impending hurricane. The woods were very still and quiet that morning in anticipation of the storm. Despite these events, the whole group enjoyed visiting parks and coffeeshops in downtown Raleigh, held a beautiful fundraising event at the Mahler Fine Art Gallery within sight of the capitol building, cooked delicious food for each other at mealtimes and spent eight or even nine hours each day hard at work in sessions, workshops, breakouts and program spotlights. We also participated in a talent show and, when time permitted, spent evenings relaxing and building relationships with our colleagues. Overall, the 2011 August Gathering was a tremendous success despite natural disasters, travel logistics and a pervasive lack of sleep.

We left the Carolinas on Friday evening with the outer bands of the hurricane moving inland and gusty winds picking up from off the Atlantic. Irene was visible in our rear-view mirrors all the way across the Blue Ridge and the Alleghenies where she rained on our rental car with gusto. It wasn’t until we reached the coal fields of West Virginia that the skies cleared and temperatures dropped. Before we knew it, we were crossing the vast landscapes of Indiana and Illinois. The sun rose crisp and bright on the banks of the Wabash and by 9am we were home, alive and well, simultaneously stimulated and exhausted.

We here in Iowa City believe that each SoS program and Grand Aspirations as a whole will benefit from the work accomplished and relationships forged in Raleigh. Motivation is running high; maintaining it will be paramount to our success as obligations to work and school are established this fall. There will be challenges, but with the vision and support networks established in North Carolina, Iowa City SoS is eager to face them. We want to reiterate our heartfelt thanks to our partners in Iowa City, in Raleigh, in the Twin Cities and across this great country in setting the stage for an incredible and proactive 2012. Check our website,Twitter and Facebook pages often for volunteer opportunities and upcoming events. Good luck to all our peers and supporters this fall, and thanks again to Iowa City for being a great community to work with!

Getting To Work

This past weekend, the largest day of climate action in history, united tens of thousands of people all across the planet in “getting to work”.

People came together in communities across the world to make neighborhoods more efficient, grow food, install renewable energy, plant trees, create bike transit teams, and so much more. In the face of political inaction, a global economy that seems hesitant to go green or to recover, and a climate clock whose ticking is ever more audible in Pakistan’s floods and Russian fires, these people from all across the planet are getting to work and telling the world to do the same.

It’s a start.

Building a green economy is the work of a lifetime. We will not reinvent the electrical grid, rebuild our cities and their transit infrastructure, or renew our food system overnight. Rather than removing urgency, this long time horizon should heighten it while making our movement more thoughtful and strategic. The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. Now is the absolute latest that we can get started, but it will be a long haul.

How will our generation survive this marathon race to a society that can sustain itself? The job market is slowly slipping, and our generation is the most unemployed, particularly for young people from low-income and minority backgrounds. The economic foundations on which young people have long relied to pay the bills, or drifted back to after the bright-eyed aspirations of youth fade from us are themselves fading. As a generation, we are increasingly finding ourselves with our backs to a wall in an uncertain world.

Its time to get to work.

We need to start growing the green economy so that it can sustain us and others around us. We need to demonstrate through our work that this whole big dream of sustainable communities and green jobs is more than a bunch of talk. We need to rally our communities around a vision that they can see and feel and touch – that is visibly a win-win-win for the planet and the economy and the person down the street or across the world. It’s time to start competing with the dirty energy companies and the highway networks and the food giants to provide better alternatives to meet the basic needs of people from all backgrounds while rebuilding community, revitalizing local economies, and creating a future for ourselves. It’s time to forge new alliances that dream a better future AND create it, transforming the balance of power politically, economically, culturally, and technologically. With that, I have an invitation to one great way to get to work doing those world-changing in conjunction with other cool people doing the same:

Over the past few years, I’ve had the honor of being a part of building an emerging community of leaders who are getting to work by growing the green economy. Since 2008, Grand Aspirations has grown rapidly, supporting youth leaders and partner organizations in running Summer of Solutions programs across the country and sustaining and replicating the innovative strategies they develop throughout the year. These young people are helping communities employ people to farm in urban food deserts, launched community-energy projects, started green industry centers, helped whole neighborhoods work together to find positive ways to cut carbon emissions, and opened access to green jobs and sustainable transit. Several of us met in August to share lessons learned figure out next steps. We know that there is a lot more great work going on out there – we keep hearing about new solutionary ventures across the country and around the world. We’d love to get to work together, because it will take all of us.

So now, we’re inviting youth leaders (14-30) from all walks of life, backgrounds, and organizational affiliations to create and lead a Summer of Solutions program in 2011. These programs focus on making transformative change in close partnership with local communities while creating the sustainable community development models that create jobs and a future for youth leaders and their communities.

Telling us that you want to be a part of it is simple. Find at least one partner-in-solutions and fill out the application! Priority deadline is October 24th at midnight.

APPLY HERE

To get a better understanding of what the Summer of Solutions means and what great work we are trying to achieve together, you can check out the guidelines for a program here. While we’ll provide plenty of support, outside these guidelines the shape and format is pretty much up to you! We’re bottom-up, and while we have some cool insights and resources to help you create the green economy solutions most relevant for your context, we need the genius, passion, and dedication from all the solutionaries out there to create the green economy.

However you decide to do it: get to work.

Reflecting on a Grand Aspirations Leadership Gathering

x-posted to It’s Getting Hot In Here

Over the past ten days, 19 youth activists involved in the Summer of Solutions converged in chilly St. Paul, MN to build a strategy for reshaping our economy from the ground up. We learned how to run an effective summer program dedicated to finding tangible, local solutions to the problems of climate change, the economic downturn, and environmental injustice.

The program began in the summer of 2008 with one program of 20 participants, and over the course of last year grew into 9 programs across the United States. Collectively, there were 150 youth activists involved around the nation.

That was this last summer. Now, we’re looking forward to next summer and the growth it has in store for us.

I have had the amazing experience of working with folks from around the nation over the past 10 days at the Grand Aspirations Winter Leadership Gathering. Grand Aspirations is the organization that facilitates Summer of Solutions programs around the nation. The purpose of the gathering was to bring local Summer of Solutions program planners together to strategize at the national level on how to make our programs effective, how to connect with the communities we live in and train participants.

Participants in Grand Aspirations’ Summer of Solutions program have created businesses around cooperative energy, held community forums called “barn raisings” to raise awareness about energy issues, and have enhanced the power of their own organizations, such as the Northwest Institute for Community Energy. Last summer also saw a huge growth in community gardening and local food projects, listening projects to bring communities together around development issues, and general education and awareness raising.

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