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Anneke Campbell - Be The Change: How to Get What You Want in Your Community

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Anneke Campbell Be The Change: How to Get What You Want in Your Community
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Inspired by five true stories of communities who were tired of corporate political power entitlements running roughshod over their townships, Be the Change offers solutions for how individuals can stand up and take back their local governments.

Thomas Linzey, a graduate of Widener University School of Law, is the cofounder of both the Daniel Peacock Democracy School and the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund. He is a frequent presenter to groups and governments, including Bioneers. He lives in Spokane, Washington.

Anneke Campbell is a writer and documentary filmmaker who has worked for many years to advance the causes of justice and respect for all humanity and the environment. She lives in Venice, California.

How-to steps for community empowerment

(20100121)

Anneke Campbell: author's other books


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Be the Change
How to Get What You Want in Your Community
Thomas Linzey with Anneke Campbell
Be the Change Digital Edition v10 Text 2009 Thomas Linzey with Anneke Campbell - photo 1

Be the Change

Digital Edition v1.0

Text 2009 Thomas Linzey with Anneke Campbell

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except brief portions quoted for purpose of review.

Gibbs Smith, Publisher

PO Box 667

Layton, UT 84041

Orders: 1.800.835.4993

www.gibbs-smith.com

ISBN: 978-1-4236-1335-0

To Stacey, Richard, Ben, Gail, Shireen, Ellen, Steve, Michael, Mari, Shannon, Kai, and Chadthe ones who went first; to all of the municipal officials who have taken the plunge with them; and to the woods, where this great adventure began.

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.

Margaret Mead
Preface

In the pages that follow, you will meet people from all walks of life who have left their comfort zones to become community leaders.

You will meet Gail Darrell from New Hampshire, who left gardening to stop water-withdrawal corporations from taking her towns water, and Michael Vacca, from western Pennsylvania, who pours concrete by day and tries to stop coal corporations from destroying his community by night. You will meet Cathy Miorelli, a local elected official and nurse who, at a diminutive five feet, has fearlessly led her borough council in taking on some of the largest waste corporations in the state of Pennsylvania. And you will meet Rick Evans, a Spokane, Washington, member of the Laborers Union, who is working with others to protect the constitutional rights of workers.

If you met these people on the street, you wouldnt think twice about them. But if you were to meet them in city hall, in a town meeting, or in a public hearing, you would watch them transform into fighters for their community and advocates for local self-government. These people know that they have the inalienable right to alter, reform, or abolish their government in order to achieve a better, stronger community. And theyre willing to devote their lives to making it happen.

Its been a great pleasure over the past ten years to work with these people. All have become colleagues, and many have become close friends. None of them waited for someone to give them permission to act in defense of their communities. They didnt wait for an environmental group to come along and try to save them, or for a state or federal agency to intervene. Just as important, they refused to listen to anyone who told them there was nothing they could do to keep their communities from being damaged or destroyed.

They just did it. They did it because they had run out of hope that anyone else would.

And so they stood up and began reprogramming their local governments. They demanded that their elected officials find a new way to protect the rights of residents. In so doing, they have transformed the members of their local governments from mere administrators into the lead wave of a movement toward sustainability through local self-governance.

That, of course, sounds complicated. But the people laying the groundwork for a broader movement would tell you that theyre just bringing their local governments in line with the principles laid out in the Declaration of Independence. And the one principle from the Declaration that has been driven into every single state constitution is this: governments exist primarily to protect the rights of people and communities, and when they stop doing so, they must be changed or abolished.

Giving up hope that someone else will do this for them has freed them to do whatever they need to dowhich includes slamming themselves up against 140 years of well-settled law.

Giving up hope has liberated them to take whatever steps they need to takedeclaring that ecosystems have rights that need to be defended within their communities, forcing their local elected officials to resign when they refuse to do the will of community majorities, and getting sued for challenging court proclamations which claim that corporations have more rights than the communities in which they do business.

Its structural change theyre after, because theyve become convinced that nothing short of this will actually take their communities off the defensive and put them in a place where they control their own futures. In short, they do it because theres nothing left to lose anymore in their communities. The cost of doing nothing now outweighs the cost of acting.

You may be surprised to learn that most of the people who appear in the pages ahead dont know each other. That will be changing in the years to come, as community leaders across the country join hands to begin a journey that will end with new local and state constitutions, and perhaps even the rewriting of the United States Constitution. These people are convincedfrom the things theyve seen, heard, and experiencedthat nothing short of a complete overhaul will solve the problems they face in their communities. And the results of their battles will eventually determine the course of a much larger challenge: whether we will continue to allow others to destroy our communities and the planet, or whether we will somehow find a way to align our governance and law with sustainable living.

So as you head into the pages that follow, we hope that you go beyond merely cheering for these folks who have pioneered a different kind of activism. They are relying on you to help them by doing the same in your community.

In the end, youll hear them saying something quite simple: its time to give up on the hope that others will help you. Get on with doing the work that will save the communities and places that you love. In taking action, you will become part of a group that, when joined with others, will create a movement that will be impossible to stop.

Thomas Linzey

Introduction
Thomas Linzey and the Democracy School

Three thousand environmental activists have gathered together for the annual Bioneers conference in San Rafael, California. Its a pantheon of environmental movers and shakers: rain forest protectors, GMO opponents, the elite of green designers and green tech innovators, as well as indigenous leaders and social justice advocates, all gathering to gain the inspiration and energy to wage the good fight for another year. But who is this guy standing at the podium in a suit and tie who looks like a Republican bubba? Who has even heard of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund? Two minutes into his speech, the crowd is riveted. When he declares that the only thing environmental regulation regulates is environmentalists, his audience cheers in recognition. When he quietly states, There has never been an environmental movement in America because movements drive rights into the Constitution, and rivers and cougars and ecosystems have no rights, people in the crowd rise up, stamping their feet.

This affirmation bespeaks the frustration of activists who have watched as federal laws such as the Clean Air and Clean Water acts, and similar state laws, have actually legalized environmental harms by shifting focus away from the harms themselves to regulating how much pollution or destruction of nature is allowed. Once an activity is declared legal by federal or state governments, local governments are prohibited from banning that activity, no matter what the future damage. Many of these same activists are unaware of the common cause at the root of their specific problem, which consists of a complex layering of law that keeps communities from exercising their right to say no. Its as if the abolitionists tried to regulate the number of whiplashes that could be used on every separate plantation but never declared the practice of slavery itself illegal.

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