Tell Your Power Shift Story!

Dear fellow Climateer,

Did you attend Power Shift 2007?  Are you one of the thousands who can’t wait until Power Shift 2009?  Did you spend the past year organizing for climate victories, helping elect progressive, climate champions to office, running Power Vote campaigns, or registering your peers to vote (and turning them out in record numbers)?

If you answered yes to any of the above, please help me tell your story!

My name is Jesse Jenkins and over the next four weeks I’m writing a series of stories for publication at ItsGettingHotInHere.org, Huffington Post, WattHead – Energy News and Commentary, DailyKos, and of course the Power Shift 2009 blog.  I want to highlight and share stories of engaged, active and excited young climate and energy activists.

In the comments section below, or in an email to me (watthead.blog@gmail.com), please answer as many or as few of the questions below as you’d like.

Questions:

What was a highlight of your experience at Power Shift ‘07?  What affect did it have on you and/or your fellow activists afterward?

If you’re planning on attending Power Shift ‘09, what are you most excited to do while you’re there?  What do you hope to get out of it?

What do you hope Power Shift ‘09 will accomplish?  What messages do you hope it will send to the nation, the global community, your elected officials?

How did you engage with the 2008 election? (ie: participate in Power Vote, organize for an elected official, vote, register voters, turnout voters, write an LTE, etc.)  Any stories to share from this experience?  (extreme cold, extreme fun, extremely long days?)

What motivated you to engage with the election in the way that you did?  (friends? the future of our country? the world?)

What are your hopes for climate action and/or policy in 2009?  What are your plans related to your climate activism and work?

If Ed Markey, Nancy Pelosi, Andy Revkin, Thomas Friedman, or others like them read these stories (and they just might), what would you want to say to them?

Anything else?

When you respond, please let me know who you are and how you’d like to be described. ie: any organization affiliations you’d like to note, favorite season, etc.

Thanks in advance and I look forward to telling your stories!

Oh yeah, and if you are not registered yet, you can do that here (early registration prices end February 1st so get on it!): http://PowerShift09.org

See you at Power Shift 2009!

Jesse Jenkins
watthead.blog@gmail.com
___________________________________
Contributing Editor, ItsGettingHotInHere.org
Founder and Blogmaster, WattHead – Energy News and Commentary
http://WattHead.blogspot.com
http://WattHead.dailykos.com
http://HuffingtonPost.com/jesse-jenkins
http://ItsGettingHotInHere.org/JesseJenkins

6 Responses to “Tell Your Power Shift Story!”


  1. 1 Jesse Jenkins Jan 26th, 2009 at 1:52 pm

    Anyone? No stories to tell? I know there’s good ones out there…

  2. 2 Nick Jan 27th, 2009 at 3:11 am

    Hey Jesse – I’m going to write something real soon! In the next couple days, I promise!

  3. 3 Nick Engelfried Jan 30th, 2009 at 1:07 am

    My Power Shift Story:

    For a college campus in the greater Portland area, Pacific University is not always the most happenin’ place. The campus is located in a small town about a half-hour drive from Portland (forty-five minutes by public transportation). I like Pacific partly because of its small student body—1,500 undergrads, the quiet atmosphere on-campus, and the fact that you can go to sleep at night without being woken up by some partying fraternity or sorority. My only problem with Pacific culture is that it’s also a little hard to stir up enthusiasm for student activism.

    By the time I heard about Power Vote, I had already helped run a few significant environmental projects on my campus the previous year—the year I first transferred to Pacific. The student environmental group there had showed a green-themed film or two, had some speakers come to campus, and gathered student support for the university’s demonstration organic farm. Still, I was unsure how much enthusiasm we could drum up over Power Vote. Could a sleepy little university like Pacific actually make a significant contribution to this national campaign? I wasn’t completely convinced.

    Still, I signed up with the Sierra Student Coalition to be Pacific’s Power Vote Coordinator—and with the Coalition’s help, we set a goal of collecting 300-400 pledges from Pacific. I brought up Power Vote with the campus environmental group, and they seemed enthusiastic enough. Maybe it wouldn’t be too hard to meet our goal after all, I thought. But convincing students interested in environmental issues that the campaign was a cool idea was one thing; getting over 300 pledges was going to be quite another.

    The first couple months of our Power Vote campaign moved in fits and starts—but our progress was pretty slow. We tabled, but a huge number of students barreled past us with tunnel vision focused the space directly in front of them. I talked up the idea of class raps—but students grew nervous about the idea of addressing their whole class, or else just forgot. The filled-out Power Vote pledges trickled in. But a week or so into October, I knew we needed more than a trickle to meet our goal. We needed a storm. No doubt about it: it was time for more desperate measures.

    I sent out emails, called up a few of the most dedicated members of our environmental group, and set a couple of dates to go dorm-storming. Not in my own residence hall—in a dorm building that’s even more quiet and introverted than the rest of the campus, I could just picture the annoyed, fuzzy looks we would get for knocking on doors and asking for Power Vote signatures. No, we would go where the payoff was likely to be biggest: the freshman dorms.

    We started out looking for rooms with their doors open, and poking our heads inside to see if the residents would like to take the pledge. That worked—so for our next night of dorm-storming, we grew bolder. Two other students and I proceeded to hammer on every door in our building-of-the-night; when we got an answer, we’d spout out our spiel about Power Vote. We collected over 50 pledges in a single evening.

    Not all the freshmen at Pacific were conveniently in their rooms for the evening, though—I knew there were still lots out there who needed to know about Power Vote. So one night I emailed my old Environmental Ethics professor from last spring, who I knew was teaching one of the First-Year Seminar classes this year. I asked if we could do a class-rap for her students—and her response was even better than I’d expected. She offered to pass along an email to other First-Year Seminar professors, and try to give us the opportunity to talk to their classes as well. It was by now about a week until the elections; I knew this could be our last big chance to bolster our Power Vote pledge count.

    On almost the last day left to collect pledges, I raced from one First-Year class to another on my bicycle, giving the Power Vote spiel in five or six classrooms in one morning. My task was complicated by the fact that more than professor gave me the wrong room number; sometimes it was an office number confused with a classroom, and sometimes the reason for the mistake was harder to discern. I pedaled madly from one building to the next, hurriedly stowing my bike in the bushes at each stop, counting on the hope that it wouldn’t get stolen in the ten minutes it would take me to find the classroom and make my speech.

    By Election Day, we had 348 Power Vote pledges—right in the range of our original pledge goal. Not only that, but a significant number of students had checked the “I’d like to volunteer” box in the bottom corner of the card, and had an expanded group with which to work on our next major project. Now it’s a new semester, and Pacific is hosting a community-wide Sustainability Summit focused on environmental issues in the suburbs just west of Portland. You can bet the new Power Vote recruits are getting plenty of emails inviting them to help out with the Summit.

    Running Power Vote at a small, quiet campus like Pacific was a bit of a challenge. But even there, we collected over 300 pledges. Had we been slightly more organized and experienced, I have no doubt we could have gotten many more. For anyone out there wondering about the vitality of the youth climate movement, I have this to say to you: the night three of us took on a whole freshman dorm building at Pacific, I felt the air thick with the vitality and excitement of our movement. Travelling from one door to another, we let more than fifty people in on the struggle to re-power this country in a single night. Pacific may be quiet, but there are students there as passionate about solving the climate crisis as I am; and though I will be graduating this spring, several younger student organizers will remain on the campus.

    At the end of February, we hope to send a delegation of Pacific students to Power Shift 2009—the largest gathering of students concerned about global warming that this country has ever seen. In the meantime, Pacific’s Sustainability Summit is poised to bring together several of the most important environmental issues in our community, and focus the attention of our elected officials on sustainability and the transition to a greener future. Even in a quiet, small-town campus like Pacific, we have a student movement that’s changing the future for the better.

  1. 1 links for 2009-01-26 - Kevin Bondelli’s Youth Vote Blog Trackback on Jan 26th, 2009 at 2:34 pm
  2. 2 “My Power Shift Story,” by Nick Engelfried « It’s Getting Hot In Here Trackback on Jan 30th, 2009 at 2:31 pm
  3. 3 Fired Up: Youth Report - First Poznan, Now Power Shift 09! « It’s Getting Hot In Here Trackback on Feb 27th, 2009 at 1:13 am

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About Jesse


Jesse Jenkins is an energy and climate policy analyst, advocate, and blogger. Jesse is currently the Director of Energy and Climate Policy at the Breakthrough Institute in Oakland, California, where he works to develop and advance new energy solutions to power America's future, secure our energy freedom, and halt global warming. He joined Breakthrough in June 2008 and previously directed the Breakthrough Generation fellowship program for young clean energy leaders. Jesse worked previously as a Research and Policy Associate at the Renewable Northwest Project in Portland, OR, helping to advance the development of the Pacific Northwest's abundant renewable energy potential. A prolific author and blogger on clean energy issues, Jesse is the founder and chief editor of WattHead - Energy News and Commentary, a member of the blogger board at the Energy Collective and policy editor at Its Getting Hot In Here. Jesse is a co-founder of the youth-led Cascade Climate Network, a board member of Focus the Nation and a graduate of the Robert D. Clark Honors College at the University of Oregon.

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Power Shift '09 ©Robert vanWaarden

Power Shift '09 ©Robert vanWaarden

Power Shift '09 Robert vanWaarden

Power Shift 09 Rally

Power Shift 09 Rally

Power Shift 09 Rally

Power Shift 09 Rally

Power Shift 09 Rally

Power Shift 09 Rally

Power Shift 09 Rally

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