Thoughts following Midwest Powershift

I spent the weekend at Midwest Powershift in Cleveland. Among the rallies, trainings, and speeches, I was able to catch some downtime with fellow Summer of Solutions program leaders and participants from around the Midwest. Especially valuable was a conversation I had with members of other Midwestern programs on Saturday night.

500 young people applaud Joshua Kahn Russell's keynote poem at Midwest Powershift in Cleveland. Photo credit Ben Hejkal.

This conversation helped me articulate two things: one, the “good environmentalists vs. the evil polluters” framing I saw a lot of other places during the conference makes me deeply uncomfortable, and two, if the green economy is going to work it needs to be the whole economy, not a side industry.

Continue reading

Creation is Our Essence

Our economy is crumbling. One in seven Americans live in poverty. The only thing our partisan politic-deadlock government can agree on is a free trade agreement with South Korea that isn’t likely to produce anything different from every other free trade agreement we’ve created.

More for the rich, less for the poor.

So why the squirrel?

It brings me back. Back to the single greatest period of growth and leadership development I’ve experienced in my life: Summer of Solutions – Twin Cities. It was the summer of 2010, and it was when my potential to lead, to challenge, to create, was unlocked.

I learned how to organize, how to facilitate, how to create a proposal for successful implementation of energy efficiency measures in homes and then how to present it to the administration of an electric utility, the imam of a local mosque, the head of a children’s summer program. I learned about oppression and privilege. I learned how to use Google Docs.

Together, we door-knocked, created an urban farm in a day, fixed and rode bikes, hosted community listening sessions, developed plans to convert an old car factory into a green manufacturing and living zone, planted and harvested food across Minneapolis, wrote business plans, toured renewable energy facilities, organized fundraising events, and ate a lot of delicious vegan food.

That summer changed me, because it empowered me. It gave me the tools I needed to help create the vision I and others have for our world. A world where communities overcome divisions and rise up together to take head on the economic, social and environmental challenges we face.

There’s a reason the dandelion is the focal point of the Summer of Solutions logo. A versatile, highly nutritious plant that can take root almost anywhere, grow, and disperse for miles around the parent plant, the dandelion defines the methodology of the program to gather in low-income communities, build up local infrastructure while training the next generation of green social entrepreneurs, and spread.

I was fortunate enough to go through this great experience, and now it’s time for me to return the favor. So I’m creating.

In 2012, application pending, there will be a Summer of Solutions program in Los Angeles. Building largely off the great work of a local organization, La Causa, we will be working with various different organizations and leaders, and our focuses are likely to include food access, green business, urban agriculture, complete streets and bike advocacy, green manufacturing, renewable energy projects, and community organizing.

I can’t wait to see what creations emerge.

The application to build your own Summer of Solutions program is open until next Saturday, October 29th. I encourage others who are ready to take this step: to join an incredibly talented and growing network of young leaders who aren’t waiting for help from above–they are working now to create the change they wish to see in the world.

Apply to Start a Summer of Solutions Program in Your Community!

The Summer of Solutions is a program for young people who want to build just, sustainable economies in their communities.

We want to invite YOU to be one of those young people building those solutions. Apply here by October 22 to start a program in your community or to join an existing program leader team.

Running a program gives you the opportunity to create and support green economy projects that build power for people who currently don’t have as much access AND to empower young people from your community and beyond with the skills and strategies they need to do the same thing wherever they go next.

Past Summer of Solutions programs have:

  • Built community gardens and farms on vacant lots
  • Taught neighbors how to use bikes as an effective form of transit
  • Run summer camps for children to help them learn about healthy eating and growing their own food
  • Founded and partnered with energy businesses to create a community-based clean energy system
  • Created community spaces, from mini-golf courses in the coal fields of West Virginia to a playground in Detroit, MI
  • Designed and organized for green manufacturing at a closing car factory in Saint Paul, MN Continue reading

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?
Continue reading

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!

Hands in the Soil

Aside

Daria and Paige with the Concrete Beet sign made from a salvaged piano.

This morning I tumbled out of bed and made my way to the Concrete Beet farm, where I have been learning hands-on urban farming. On Thursdays and Sundays, the Concrete Beet harvests vegetables for ten CSA shares. When I got there today, Emily and Emily were strategizing the order in which the produce would be picked, cut, dug, etc.

*Linda in front of some potato towers

Tall Emily got out her steel snips and started the process of un-furling the wire-fencing around a potato tower* while I picked the kale from the top of said tower. I was not expecting much from this particular potato patch, because of previous weeks’ harvesting of underwhelming spuds. This week was different. As soon as the tower was unbundled, we started pulling out huge round red taters.

When Anna, another S.O.S. participant, showed up, we were left to dig through the mound of soil and plants. I noticed how dark and rich the soil was as I ran my fingers through it, disturbing the tiny creatures that lived in it. They scattered as Anna and I chatted and pulled clumps of earth apart.

My hands and fingers are the same as my father’s mother’s. She died in 2008, and I wear her rings, which fit my fingers perfectly. As I was reaching my fingers into the earth, I thought about her, and about the hands of all of my ancestors who put their hands in the earth and brought food from their efforts. Some were German, some English, some Irish, but most were farmers.

I said something to Anna about my Irish ancestors, since we were digging potatoes. I associate potatoes with my being in this country; since my primary education about immigrant history is that the majority of Irish influx to the United States was due to “potato famine.”

Lost in my reverie, I thought about the recurring themes that have lead people to leave their homelands and seek out a new beginning thousands of miles away.

The Irish Potato Famine was exacerbated by (English) absentee landlords who charged a premium to poor tenants for small pieces of land on which only potatoes could be grown in enough abundance to be a staple food throughout the year. When the potatoes failed, everything toppled for the Irish. Millions starved as landlord’s evicted people from their land—their only source of living—and destroyed their homes.

For many people, this neighborhood, the Phillips neighborhood, is a haven. People have fled conditions ranging from simple suburban wage-slavery, to limited opportunities, to war, to certain death for themselves and their families. This haven, however, is not without its faults. Absentee landlords take advantage of those with little social clout, loan companies and banks have had their way with people who want a stable home (which has resulted in rampant foreclosures), and much of the land is an EPA superfund site (don’t let your kids eat the dirt without testing it first).

In the face of these challenges, Phillips is often defiant. Phillips plants gardens full of flowers and food. It holds Pow-wows, follows Ramadan, goes to Mass on Saturday night, has halal options, dollar tacos, Native foods.

It bikes, walks, buses, skateboards, and shares a car. It reads the neighborhood rag.

It speaks Spanish, English, Somali, Anishinaabeg, Dakota, Arabic, Hebrew, and many other languages.

It breaks down and sobs in despair with the loss of each and every one of its youth to violence and darkness.

It celebrates the coming of spring and light together, every year. It rises and grows.

When I think of myself as part of this community, I envision lines on a globe that concentrate here, but span out like a root system to the places people and their ancestors have come from. These roots draw nutrients from many sources, and like a plant, grow stronger because of the diversity and breadth of heritage that they are tapping into. We create the Tree of Life in our own image.

At the Concrete Beet, with my hands in the soil, I felt connected to this idea, this image of a connected community of corporal and spiritual entities of shifting and changing relations.

Anna, Small Emily, and I washed and weighed the CSA shares and put them into storage for pickup later that day. I started weeding the walkways and felt the sun beating hot on my arms and back. By the time I was done, my hands were green and my nail beds were black with dirt. My body ached with the slight contortions of kneeling and weeding. Physical work produces a satisfying effect on my body. To be happy and connected, I work the soil.

Late greetings from Portland: The Foster Community Action Day

On Saturday, we had our Foster Community Action Day. It was the culmination of weeks of hard work and organizing. At times, the pace became frantic as we made last minute adjustment and preparations. Nonetheless, everything got done, and spectacularly so.

The day started separately for all of us. We split up into two groups. Naomi, Anastasia, and I (Leo) went to New Seasons Marketplace to buy refreshments and snacks for the volunteers. New Seasons was nice enough to donate a $50 giftcard to help fund our food purchases. Earlier that day, Naomi also picked up several cakes from Baker and Spice Bakery, again donated.

 

The others, including Shabina, Nathan, Huntley, Barbara, Kari, and Allison were busy at our secret headquarters (aka the Shrub House) assembling clipboards and other materials for the volunteers. They soon received word that more volunteers than they anticipated would be arriving: several people from the Corvallis Summer of Solutions program would be joining us!

The food group reconvened at the Shrub House to quickly prepare some food for the volunteers. We purchased chips, dips, and a variety of fruits and vegetables for the volunteers to eat in between canvass areas and rest stops.

Once the volunteers from Corvallis arrived and introductions were had all around, we packed all our materials and food and moved to the park next to Kelly Elementary, where our training would be held. Shortly thereafter, about 25 volunteers from Second Stories, as well as their older interns arrived at the park.

Nathan and Allison did a thorough canvassing training for them. Many had never canvassed before and were quite nervous about the experience. We explained to them the basics of what we were doing, as well some logistics, such as our coding system and how to read the turf maps. Finally, we split into groups to practice the canvassing script and giving surveys and challenges.

Heading out with volunteers in tow, we each were assigned a block or two of houses in the Kelly Elementary area. Some volunteers were nervous, others were eager, and the whole experience went very quickly.

We ended up covering nearly all the turf that we had set out to cover, basically finishing all the turf in the Kelly School area. Many of the groups had multiple challenges and surveys. The numbers aren’t quite in yet, but we’ll keep readers updated as they roll in!

https://picasaweb.google.com/s/c/bin/slideshow.swf

So, what are you doing this summer?

A question I am often asked while running into friends, family, or meeting new people.

I used to have a really difficult time answering this question, due to the vast possibilities and powerful emotions I have associated with Summer of Solutions. I’m working with the Twin Cities team, and up until a couple weeks ago I tended to throw out phrases such as “youth leadership,” “sustainability,” “green economy,” and “it’s super cool, I promise,” with hopes of creating a semi-coherent explanation of what I am up to this summer. Depending on the audience, some people just nodded their heads in approval, having heard key words indicating it is a meaningful program. Many friends could sense my vibes of excitement and continued to ask for more information about what, specifically, I am working on.

During one of our weekly community reflection sessions a while back, I realized what I came into this program intending to work on has completely changed. I wanted to do urban agriculture work, and spend some time outside getting my hands dirty. But when the projects were announced, the one I felt I could make the most impact in completely overtook my attention, and I have been dedicating hours to this project since. I’m working on outreach in the Highland Park area, with hopes to re-invigorate the closing Ford manufacturing plant. It’s a great project that really speaks to me, having spent a significant portion of my high school years messing around in the Highland village.

Now that I’ve secured my interests for this summer, the big question for me is, “what will I be doing this fall?” I still have some of time to figure this one out, but it will definitely involve implementing many of the tactics I have learned this summer. I hope I will be able to educate my peers at school and pass on the passion I feel towards this work. I’m really grateful for going with my gut instincts in this program & following where my passion leads me. I have spent much of my SoS work with a smile on my face, which is a great thing to look back on as I reflect on my summer.

My Work

When I journal or write things that are only meant for me to write, I often use this term called ‘my work.’  I don’t mean my job, like the thing that makes me money. I don’t mean checking things off of my to-do list. I mean the ‘work’ that when I say it, sends tingles down my spine and makes my heart smile. It’s the work of joining with millions of other people, some of whom I know, some of whom I will never meet, to collectively heal our world.

The distinctive thing about ‘my work,’ and the thing that makes me feel so good when I say it, is that it really is work. It’s slow, and incremental, and not always glamorous or even visible. It’s copy and pasting data into a spreadsheet for hours late into the night, and knocking on doors in the blazing heat, and making dozens of phone calls inviting people to community meetings.  It’s spending  a week to prepare a two-hour anti-oppression workshop, and spending six weeks to organize a two- hour community energy forum, and spending seven months to plan an eight-week summer program, simply trusting that each will have an impact to justify all that time.

This ‘work’ is so powerful because it is a true expression of deep love for the world, and hope for the future. I was introduced to this concept at a summer camp where I worked two years ago, where the phrase “Work is love made visible” was often thrown around. However, it was not until Summer of Solutions that I fully understood what this means.  My work with Summer of Solutions helped me fully embody the idea that to work in developing the green economy is not just about getting things done, but also about continuously enacting our loving the world.

This concept is expressed beautifully by the poet Kahlil Gibran, who writes:

“Always you have been told that work is a curse and labour a misfortune.
But I say to you that when you work you fulfill a part of earth’s furthest dream, assigned to you when that dream was born,
And in keeping yourself with labour you are in truth loving life,
And to love life through labour is to be intimate with life’s inmost secret.”

This other important thing about ‘my work’ is that it really is mine. As Gibran puts it, the work that we do was assigned to us when the Earth’s dream that we are fulfilling was born.  ‘My work’ is beyond my choice. It seems too integral to my being to be something I could ever get disillusioned about.

My goal as I leave Summer of Solutions and begin a year of launching a brand new program (New York City- it’s on!) is to carry my passion for ‘my work’ into all my interactions. My hope is that I can engage new people in this movement by fully demonstrating that this work makes me feel fulfilled and happy and grounded, not just when I win or succeed, but just because I’m doing ‘my work.’

Elana Bulman- Twin Cities Program Leader