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Making Florida a Blue State, One Election at a Time

June 9, 2009

March & Rally for Single Payer Healthcare in North Miami June 27th

Organizing for America asked Americans to gather together on June 6th to discuss health care reform.

Progressive Democrats of North Miami Dade had a productive meeting that evening in North Miami Beach, which included attendees from Broward because there is not yet a PDA chapter here.

A march and rally supporting single payer health care was planned for a couple of weeks from now. Here is the summary of the meeting and that plan:

We had a great meeting with a lot of personal stories about the inequities, absurdities and tragedies of the U.S. for-profit medical industry, and some good analysis of the underlying political and economic culture of exploitation, corruption and inhumanity that has produced this terrible mess.

More importantly, we developed a plan of action to build support in our local community for a national, not-for profit, publicly-funded healthcare system.

Our work will climax in a March and Rally for Single Payer Healthcare on Saturday June 27th in North Miami. Here is the tentative plan. Please let me know asap if you have suggestions for changes to this plan:

- We will gather in Griffing Park in North Miami at 5 p.m. (West Dixie and NE 122nd Street).
- We will march up West Dixie Highway to NE 125th Street, and then along NE 125th Street to MOCA Plaza (before NE 8th Avenue).
- At the major intersection at NE 6th Avenue, we can pause for a honk-and-wave and to distribute flyers.
- We will hold a rally in MOCA Plaza at 6 p.m. with several speakers.

Between now and then:

* We will each write to and call our elected representatives in Congress to tell them that we support HR676 and S703. We will ask Representative Meek, who has co-sponsored HR676, to take a real leadership role on this issue. We will ask Representative Wasserman Schultz and Senator Nelson to reject plans to expand the corporate for-profit medical industry and instead sign on to HR676 and S703.

* We will each spread the word through our own contact networks, by phone, e-mail and text-messaging. Our goal is to activate others to join the single payer movement and do all the things20that we are doing. We recognize that this is a “viral” movement that is taking over the country via word-of-mouth and the internet, so we will maximize these strategies.

* And we will stay in touch with each other to organize door-to-door canvassing, leafleting in public places20and other activities. If you want to do some canvassing or leafletting at a particular place and time, let the rest of us know and hopefully you won’t be out there alone – this sort of work is easier and more fun that way. We will work as a democratic group and share initiatives and ideas with each other.

Here are some online resources that should be helpful:

PDA web site: www.pdamerica.org

To order FREE Healthcare not Warfare flyers (you only pay for the postage):
www.pdamerica.org/pdastore/index.php?act=viewProd&product Id=139

Physicians for a National Health Program web site (lots of good resources and info): www.pnhp.org

The Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Healthcare (National Nurses Organizing Committee and California Nurses Association): www.guaranteedhealthcare.org

PDA board member David Swanson sends out concise and informative action alerts on healthcare and warfare issues. You can sign up at: www.afterdowningstreet.org

David’s web site currently has a link to the House Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions Subcommittee hearing on Single Payer Healthcare at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, hopefully with a video feed when the time comes.

For further information about the Progressive Democrats of America North Miami-Dade Chapter and the July 27th March & Rally, contact:

Sandy Davies
Progressive Democrats of North Miami Dade
peacetopower@aol.com

June 5, 2009

Three Points to Remember when Asking for Campaign Volunteers…

I’ve volunteered for a lot of campaigns over the years. I pretty much know what’s going to go smoothly and what should probably be avoided. If you’re expected to be there for hours upon hours and there’s no mention of access to food or water, then avoid. Some events even have catering donated, and I’ll go anywhere for a free buffet. The important thing, of course, is what the campaign is trying to accomplish, but a lot of time can be put in for little or no result if you fail to anticipate how well organized those employed by the campaign will be… or won’t be.

I should have anticipated that there might be some otherwise unforeseen problems when I signed up for a 3pm to 6pm shift at the Fountainbleau Hotel for Fair Districts Florida. First of all, they had asked for volunteers to get petition signatures to re-district the state from Florida Democrats gathered for meetings before the annual Jefferson Jackson Dinner, but it took a few emails from me to get info on parking (no free parking) and what to wear (red T-shirt, if you have one). I had also never received a response from anyone about their website not working, which meant I had been unable to make a donation… that was a sign of potential trouble, but I forged ahead with volunteering anyway.

Despite the fact that there are unpaid volunteers working towards a cause that should benefit us all, there have to be at least 3 basic standards for a campaign, especially for those who are paid to work there:

1) Do not abandon your volunteers when you’ve asked them to commit to a particular shift and you are coordinating what they are there to do. Remain in the area where your volunteers are working, or at least be available by telephone if you leave the area.

My shift was 3-6pm on May 30th at the Miami Beach Fountainbleau Hotel. I was on time, and I kept working throughout the conference areas until 6pm. I also paid for my own parking, which turned out to be $12 by the time I exited the parking garage. One volunteer had taken the bus from the University Drive area to gather signatures at the Fountainbleau.

I was in other parts of the hotel and conference rooms collecting signatures and talking to voters about the issue. When I got back to the Fair Districts Florida table just before 6, everything had been packed up and removed.

According to the one volunteer who had been manning the table, she saw some guy come along and pack everything up before 5 o’clock, including my umbrella, but she didn’t know who he was, and he left her no instructions about what to do if anyone from the campaign was needed after they had apparently decided to leave early. The conference and hotel areas remained very busy even after the Fair Districts Florida campaign workers had taken off.

I had phoned the Deputy Campaign Manager, Julia Lopes, who was in charge of the volunteers that day, over and over again during the next ninety minutes while I remained on the property because it was continuouly pouring outside and I wanted my umbrella back. To this day I haven’t gotten a call back. I had also called two other numbers, and had gotten a call back from Ellen Freidin, Campaign Chair, later that evening, and she had assured me that the issues we’d experienced would be attended to and that I’d hear from someone. That didn’t exactly happen.

2) Ensure that your website is working, and respond to any reports of non-working links and malfunctions, let alone any other emails.

Other volunteers at the Fountainbleau last Sunday had reported the same experiences with the FairDistrictsFlorida.org website that I had. The website had not been able to process donations, probably because the minimum donation is $50. Many people will attempt to fill in a lesser amount in the OTHER box, but any other amount would get an ERROR message. The website also would not accept email addresses entered into the ‘Send this Website to a Friend’ section of the site.

I had emailed Campaign Manager Jackie Lee about those issues on May 1st, but I had never received a response. There were other volunteers at the Fountainbleau who had reported the same experience. One volunteer claimed to have met Jackie at the hotel and told her that she had also reported website problems without a response, and she alleged that Jackie had responded, “Oh yeah, we’re working on that.”

3) Be sure to collect all signed petitions and other campaign materials from your volunteers before they leave the premises.

Julia’s email to me today finally addressed the fact that I am still in possession of petitions, fliers, a clipboard, etc. She wrote:

“As far as the petitions, you can put them in the mail to PO Box 330868 Miami, FL 33233.”

Uhhh… I don’t think so. For all she knows, I could use them for the bird cage I’m going to get for the bird that I’m going to buy just for the purpose of crapping all over those signed petitions.

Do not simply trust your volunteers whom you only just met to eventually get needed materials back to you unless you’ve provided a simple and easy way to send them in or drop them off, or… better yet, have them picked up, especially if you’ve mistakenly taken somebody’s umbrella.

Maybe I’m overreacting, but I was faced with walking several long blocks to my car in the pouring rain with signed petitions and no umbrella.

And I do know this: I committed to driving down there, paying for parking, and looking stupid for three hours wearing an ill-fitted T-shirt covered with various campaign buttons while approaching strangers and bugging them for their time while they were all wearing business attire and looking a lot less kooky than I, and most of them had felt like they had already “given at the office.”

Will I volunteer for Fair Districts Florida again? No. Do I hope Florida is fairly re-districted? Yes- but I expect to work on that on my own time from now on, not on theirs.

Oh yeah… Julia Lopes finally got back to me yesterday. They lost my umbrella.

Democrats for State Offices

Filed under: Uncategorized — David F. Carr @ 1:30 pm

Thanks to Phil Busey for this summary:

State Senator Dave Aronberg has filed to run for Florida Attorney General (web site link below). This appears to be the first time since at least 1970 (ignoring 1988 which was unusual because only Secretary of State and Treasurer appear to have been elected) in which all cabinet races have been free of incumbents:

U.S. Senate:
Tyrone K. Brown, Sr. (DEM), Pastor, Cathedral of Faith Ministries in Daytona Beach
Kevin Burns
(DEM), Mayor, City of North Miami Beach
Kendrick B. Meek
(DEM), Congressman, 17th Congressional District of Florida

Governor:
Joe Allen
Michael E. Arth (DEM)
Mark Shepard (DEM)
Alex Sink (DEM), Chief Financial Officer, State of Florida

Attorney General:
Dave Aronberg (DEM)

Chief Financial Officer:
(no Democrats yet)

Commissioner of Agriculture:
Eric Draper (DEM)
Randy Hatch (DEM)
O. R. (Rick) Minton, Jr. (DEM)

Webmaster’s note: None of these folks has so far posted a campaign listing on BlueBroward. All are welcome to. All it costs is a blurb and maybe a local campaign contact. Free publicity. Doesn’t anybody like free?

As the Bare Naked Ladies sing it, “Can’t even give this suff away, why would I sell it?”

June 4, 2009

Disorganizing for America?

Filed under: Uncategorized — David F. Carr @ 6:11 pm

According to the Organizing for America website (the post-campaign incarnation of my.barackobama.com), there are supposed to be two “Listening Tour” events tonight in Broward County, one in Tamarac and another in Pembroke Pines. They’re supposed to be happening just five hours from when I’m writing this, but both are listed as location TBD. One of these events had already been scheduled and then canceled (at the very last minute) for Tamarac a couple of weeks ago. I suspect both of tonight’s events tonight are going to be canceled as well, even though 212 people are shown as having signed up for one of these and 119 for the other. (Update: The appointed time came and went, and still no revision to the event listings or communication from OforO).

I’ve been trying to find out what was going on so I could share that information. On Monday, a staffer wrote back apologizing, saying that the two events were going to be combined, and that the location for the combined event would be announced soon.

Then, nothing.

This is sad because superior organization was supposed to be what made the Obama campaign special, and Organizing for America was supposed to have inherited some of that special sauce. I’m sure there’s some excuse, and no I’m not perfect either.

But it does annoy me to see organizations that really need help from volunteers treating them shabbily by failing to show respect for their time.

How to Post a Blog Entry

Filed under: BlueBroward News,How-To — David F. Carr @ 3:32 am

Come on, help me out here, folks. I’m looking for a few other people to post occasional blog entries here on whatever thoughts they would like to share. It would add variety and generally be more fun than me doing this all myself.

Just log in, click on the “Post a Blog” button on the right side of the screen, and you should ent up at a screen like the one shown below.

You will see that there’s a nice little “rich text editor,” which means you don’t have to deal with HTML coding, you just highlight a world or phrase and click the B button to mark it bold or the I to mark it italic. You do the same thing with the button that looks like a link in a chain to add a link to another website or web page. You’re working in WordPress, one of the most popular blogging tools, so it’s pretty slick.

WordPress editing screen

WordPress editing screen

When it looks pretty good to you, you can click Publish. Or save it as a draft and come back to it later.

If you want to get a little fancier, you can also assign your entry to a category like “Volunteers Needed” or add free-form tags (a tag might be the name of a candidate or a topic not included in the categories list).

Give it a try and tell me what you think.

This is intended as a resource for the occasional blogger, who has opinions to share but doesn’t want to go to the trouble of setting up an independent blog, as well as for the more established bloggers who would like to post here occasionally, if only to link back to material on their own blogs or websites.

This is an experiment for me, too, but all I really ask is that your posts reflect the mission of building the Broward Democratic Party and the grassroots volunteer community. It’s OK to be provocative and stir up a good argument with your fellow Dems. If I have to remove offensive or inappropriate posts, I will, but in general I would rather foster a climate of healthy debate.

June 1, 2009

Things you can do with your BlueBroward.org password

Filed under: Uncategorized — David F. Carr @ 8:34 pm

Things you can do with your BlueBroward.org password:

* Post an event
* Volunteer to post events regularly on behalf of a club, organization, or campaign (write me at david@bluebroward.org, and I’ll set that up for you).
* Post a campaign listing, with information about why people should help with their time and/or money. Include a link to the campaign’s own website.
* Endorse a campaign
* Cross-post an event or campaign listing to Facebook, Twitter, and other social networking websites
* Post entries to the shared community blog. Pontificate on any topic of your choice. (Webmaster reserves the right to edit posts, but with a light touch)
* Post a profile on our members page

If you don’t remember your password, there is an “email me my password” function on the login page to help remind you. If you don’t yet have an account, sign up.

BlueBroward membership does not require you to embrace any particular brand of Democratic politics. It is meant to be a resource for the entire community.

You don’t need to get my permission to post any of the items listed above to the website; it’s meant to be almost 100% self-service. For events, it helps if you can get the information posted prior to 10 a.m. on the Sunday morning before your event, because the BlueBroward.org Calendar roundup email broadcast goes out at that time.

You can ask me to highlight an event or campaign for special attention, which is more of a judgment call on my part.

Mostly, I want people to take full advantage of this website as a community resource.

- David F. Carr, webmaster, david@bluebroward.org

Invitation to Candidates

Filed under: Uncategorized — David F. Carr @ 5:22 pm

We’re getting into the season where a lot of new candidates are starting their campaigns. Please help spread the word about BlueBroward.org as a free resource for campaign listings, event listings, networking, and volunteer recruiting for all Democrats. This is potentially more useful for local candidates who don’t have their own websites, or who could use a few more links to their websites. But even for the bigger campaigns, with their own web and email campaigns, my argument would be that if it a listing on BlueBroward brings in one more volunteer or one more check, then it’s worth it, right?

Just because it’s free doesn’t mean it’s not worth something.

The campaigns currently registered on BlueBroward are here:
http://www.bluebroward.org/campaigns.php

In case it’s not clear, participation in BlueBroward doesn’t require the campaign to embrace any particular brand of Democratic politics other than, perhaps, an emphasis on grassroots organization.

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