Why I Stay

Last week (July 17, 2018), was my TENTH anniversary at the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. I was honored that at our annual retreat, which kicked off on that very day, the staff took a moment and recognized me, my contributions, and acknowledged the changes that have taken place over that decade – both at CCAN and in the world. Through 4 governors in Virginia, 2 in Maryland, 3 DC mayors, countless legislator turnover, loss and gain of so many colleagues – more has changed than has stayed the same since 2008. So, I wanted to take a moment and acknowledge for a broader audience why I have stayed…why I continue to stay. Because I’m extremely proud of CCAN and I feel extremely lucky to have found this home and this outlet for my calling to be a part of this movement.
Everybody likes Top 10 lists, right? 10 points for 10 years. Plus, that’s a way to keep me from droning…so here goes, in order of length so you know it gets easier:
Number 10: CCAN’s size limits bureaucracy and maximizes flexibility.
I don’t know if I can communicate adequately how much this means to me. When a coalition partner wants us to sign a letter of support for their efforts, our campaign team and a member of the executive committee confer and we make a decision. It takes about 5 minutes. When I got to CCAN and realized that our health coverage was cumbersome and expensive, my colleague reached out to our broker, got 3 quotes and we changed it before the next fiscal year. What’s more – I stay because we realize this size is an advantage. Although we’d relish a random donor to come in and double our budget – we’d use it to strengthen our existing campaigns, offer more support to the frontline communities we’re fighting alongside, hire 2 more organizers, pay all of our interns instead of offering 3 paid internships a year, hire 1 administrative support staff, 1 full-time fundraiser (bringing that department to a total of TWO dedicated staff), and then give everyone raises and/or additional benefits because we live in one of the most expensive regions of the country and have to fight for every dollar to pay our staff of 15 living wages. Any takers? Accepting donations now. ☺
Number 9: CCAN has no permanent friends and no permanent enemies.
Well, we probably do…but, my point is that we’ll work with almost anyone/group who wants to truly address the climate crisis and we’ll call anyone out who hinders that progress (privately or publicly, depending on the weight of their actions and whether they’re usually friends or usually enemies). That includes politicians of all stripes, other advocacy groups, corporations, and individuals. For example…when VA governor Terry McAuliffe kept paying lip service to the climate while standing alongside Dominion Energy’s CEO to announce his support for its MASSIVE and unnecessary fracked-gas pipeline – we decided we’d given that Democrat enough chances. We pushed back harder than we had on any governor before, even orchestrating arrests outside his home to protest his critically ignorant and harmful move. We knew we were burning that bridge, and we knew someone had to. It’s worth noting that right before he left office, as he saw his “green” reputation in jeopardy, he took an action we’d be asking him to for 4 years – he issued an executive order linking Virginia to a regional carbon cap agreement, his first concrete, significant step for the climate. I stay for moments of impact like that.
Number 8: Our scope of work is like the porridge that is “just right.”
I have a four-year-old and am heavy in storybookland. CCAN is a regional group. Our name results in so much confusion thanks to the popularity of the Chesapeake Bay…but, it’s meant to give a regional title and ‘Chesapeake’ sounds so much better than ‘Mid-Atlantic,’ right? But, after working here, I’m convinced we’d be farther along in the climate movement if there were more regional groups that focused on grassroots organizing. We have a central leadership team that brings consistency to our work, communications support and expertise, and just enough administrative support to ensure that the majority of our staff is insulated from the worst of it. Meanwhile, our campaign staff knows the geography, politics, and constituencies of Maryland, DC, and Virginia inside and out. It’s a beautiful arrangement and I wish there more CCANs out there…with clearer names that don’t insinuate a knowledge they don’t have (please don’t ask me about phosphate in the Bay). ☺ Sometimes I think I should leave to go start one of these groups. Don’t worry, Mike, I have no immediate plans.
Number 7: CCAN has seen me through some life-changing times.
My mom was diagnosed with cancer just months before I found out I was pregnant with my first child. I spent a week per month over the course of 8 months working remotely to be with her and my family with Mike’s only question being: what else can we do to support you? I spent much of the winter that she died in North Carolina, doing work when I could, thankful for the escape it brought and thankful to leave it behind as needed. The entire CCAN team was patient as I made my back to the world, in a fog at first, with more clarity as time passed…only to embark on the next fog with the birth of my two children over the next few years. I’ve been able to carve out a role that supports CCAN, the climate, me, and my family and I’m so grateful.
Number 6: We take chances on people.
CCAN has launched and furthered the careers of DOZENS of change agents. We often hire young, inexperienced staff because we value fresh eyes, we value passion mixed with a readiness to learn and take on big responsibility, and we thrive on the energy and creativity that new advocates and organizers bring to our campaigns. Our alumni are running other climate and environmental organizations or programs, making a living running a nationally known podcast, starting up their own consulting careers supporting clean energy, and litigating climate protection, to name a few. CCAN has trained and supported many of them over the last decade, and while I’d never take credit for their success, I’m proud to be a part of it.
Number 5: CCAN takes risks.
We are – as an organization, from the top to the bottom – willing and ready to take risks and push the envelope. Most of the time that pays off, and when it doesn’t we learn from it and move on. We’ve dumped a ton (literally) of coal on a Senate lawn garnering national media coverage (yay!), and we mailed letters along with little packets of coffee beans to legislators in Annapolis to prove a point about how little of an investment we were asking for offshore wind…the amount of a cup of coffee…resulting in a building-wide Anthrax scare (oops – we learned a valuable lesson or two!). We sit down with legislators, but we also sit-IN their offices if that’s what’s needed. I stay because this inspires me.
Number 4: CCAN has a culture of learning.
How can we be better, more effective, more just, win faster, win slower to go faster, take more risks, take fewer risks, build more power, build more strategic power, etc. etc.? Most of our annual retreats and in-person quarterly staff meetings are spent tackling our weaknesses, offering trainings to strengthen our skills, and debriefing our recent efforts to document things we did well and things we’d do differently next time around. I stay because I’m proud of that culture – our people and our planet deserve it.
Number 3: We also know when to compromise so we can live to fight another day.
We have passed legislation in Maryland and DC that set national precedent and we’ve passed bills that are far from what we wanted because we realized that the tiny investment in clean energy in Virginia was all we were gonna get until some new leadership came along. In deciding to pursue legislation as one of our strategies, compromise is a given. But, we push as far and as hard as we can, and that’s one reason I stay.
Number 2: We win.
Our list of victories is long and getting longer each year. We’re efficient, we’re smart, we’re tenacious. And, as I’m always teaching our staff at CCAN – we are good planners and time managers. So, with that…I’ll skip listing them all out even though it’s one of the most important reasons I stay. Because I need to get back to work.
Number 1: We have a culture of gratitude.
Thank you to CCAN for this second home. Thank you to Mike Tidwell for having the sheer will and passion it takes to sustain this organization. Thank you to each and every staff person past and present who supports me, teaches me, and inspires me to keep doing this work. Thank you to each and every volunteer and coalition partner who makes this a MOVEMENT, not a job. Here’s to another decade working for climate justice.

Kirsten’s first staff retreat in 2008.

My Top 3 Highlights from CCAN's 11th Annual Polar Bear Plunge

We said we wouldn’t let a blizzard stop us – and you proved us right. Last Saturday, nearly 200 brave plungers turned out at National Harbor to join our 2016 “Keep Winter Cold” Polar Bear Plunge, jumping into the (literally) freezing Potomac River to fight climate change.
We all had a blast and it was all for a very good cause: We’ve raised $81,995 and counting to support our work to move DC, Maryland, and Virginia off of dirty fossil fuels and to clean energy solutions. That’s pretty impressive – especially given the hiccup in our plans thanks to “Snowzilla.” For the first time in the history of CCAN’s Plunge, we were forced to postpone by a week due to extreme weather.
You can still help us reach our goal of raising $90,000. Go to www.keepwintercold.org and donate to your favorite plunger!
Without further ado, here are some of my favorite highlights from the day – check out more photos here:
1. The costumes!! There were some creative get-ups, but one of my favorites was from Lori Hill (veteran plunger and green living expert), who dressed up like an oil slick.
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2. We had some amazing “plungers” address the crowd – including a heartfelt tribute to a fallen plunger and inspiring words from 13-year-old Audrey, who used this year’s plunge as her mitzvah project for her upcoming Bat Mitzvah.
PBP16-Audrey-edited
3. We had to break through the ice AGAIN. For the second time in the Polar Bear Plunge’s history, CCAN staff donned wetsuits to break through a layer of ice on the Potomac so we could take our dip. Thanks Jon and Brooke!
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We thank all of our plungers for your energy, your activism, your fundraising and your bravery. Your fundraising will provide a critical boost to our work – it’s nearly the equivalent of funding two full-time CCAN organizers!
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Big thank you to our sponsors and prize donations for the plunge: MLJ Event Management, Perfect Settings, Zeke’s Coffee, Waste Neutral, Baklava Couture, Blue Planet Scuba, Bobby McKey’s Dueling Piano Bar, The North Face, Port City Brewery, Patagonia, The Pub and the People, Commissary, the pig, Redstone American Grill.
Don’t miss out on the ice-cold fun next time around – please mark your calendars for next January’s plunge!
Warmly (now) –
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Kirsten

Kids vs. Coal – Warner/Webb chose Coal

Senator Mark Warner and Senator Jim Webb acted disgracefully yesterday, and I hope you’ll join us in holding them accountable.

Senator Webb: (202) 224-4024
Senator Warner: (202) 224-2023

It was not a surprise when Senator James Inhofe, a known climate denier, introduced a back-door political maneuver to gut the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) regulation of mercury and other air toxins.

Maybe it shouldn’t be a surprise that our coal-state senators were two of the five Democrats who bucked their party and voted with the likes of Senator Inhofe on his proposal yesterday. But I can’t help but be outraged every time our elected officials side with Big Polluters over the health of their constituents. This vote could provide no clearer example of that.

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We came. We marched. We got drenched. This is just the beginning…

 

What do you get when you put over 200 CCAN supporters out in the rain in downtown Richmond on a Saturday? A drenched but fired-up community ready to stand up to Dominion’s Dirty Power!

If you’re on CCAN’s Virginia list, then you surely heard about last Saturday’s event – the March to End Dominion’s Power Madness.  After 5 weeks of spreading the word, managing logistics large and small and reaching out to the media, we were ready. So, when we saw the forecast and woke up to drenching rain last Saturday morning, we were a little worried. But, we knew it would take more than a downpour to keep CCAN activists from standing up to the commonwealth’s biggest climate change contributor.  We were right!

People came out in droves to Kanawha Plaza, across the street from Dominion’s Richmond offices, with energy and enthusiasm I’ve rarely seen.

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Important info for Saturday's Polar Bear Plunge

Hello Polar Bear Plungers!

We’re very excited about how things are looking for this Saturday’s 7th annual Polar Bear Plunge at National Harbor on the Potomac River. Thanks for all you’re doing to solicit sponsors of your plunge and for participating in this important action!

This blog post is filled with IMPORTANT logistical information, so please read the whole thing:

Volunteering: We are a little short of volunteers to help make the event run smoothly. If you and/or someone coming to support you can get there by 10 am to do this, please contact Ted Glick at ted@chesapeakeclimate.org or 240-396-2155.

Arrival time: You should plan to arrive at 10:30 am so you can park, get registered and be able to listen to our short program  beginning at 11am, featuring Mike Tidwell, James Hansen, Congresswoman Donna Edwards, and a few other special guests – we promise to keep it brief! We’ll move over to the changing tents by 11:30.

 

Waiver forms: Please print out the waiver forms, sign them and bring them with you on Saturday, even if you checked off the box about this when you signed up at the website. We need you to personally sign these two forms. It will help a lot to expedite the registration process and move things along if you’ve done so in advance. You will receive these via email tonight (Tuesday) or tomorrow, but you can also email Ted and ask for them if you missed that – ted@chesapeakeclimate.org. 

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Rally for Sanity Left Me Fearful

Chances are, if you’re reading this, you were also on the Mall on Saturday, or maybe watching it on TV. Having organized rallies in DC, I was blown away by the turnout. With all the climate-denying happening these days, it was inspiring to see so many people travel from all over the country in the name of sanity. It felt good to be among fellow sane people.

If you organize around political issues long enough, it’s easy to get cynical. I fight that urge all the time. Rallies and protests are practically a monthly occurrence and it’s often hard to see how they move the ball forward. But, we justify the hard work it takes to organize those kinds of events because they also serve other purposes. Good rallies can inspire people, indirectly leading to future action. And, having a drumbeat of rallies and protests on any one issue might finally get through to our lawmakers and/or the media.

I left the Stewart/Colbert rallies trying to make those same justifications, but have come up short. Did you leave inspired? I left lukewarm, at best. Did you get a sense of what’s next? I didn’t. Continue reading

Congress wants to pass the Dirty Air Act?

Ok, here’s a shocking statement (insert sarcastic tone):

As reported by The Hill on September 14th: U.S. Chamber of Commerce, American Petroleum Institute, National Mining Association and National Association of Manufacturers want to block the EPA from regulating pollution that causes climate change!

Is that news to you? Of course the country’s biggest polluters want to stop action that would curb pollution Continue reading

Copenhagen: Turning Point or More of the Same Old Same Old?

This coming week, in New York City and Pittsburgh, there will be important United Nations and G20 meetings that could advance the process of coming up with a new international treaty to address the climate crisis. This coming week will also see the opening salvo of “civil society” groups in the streets taking action to press their demands for not just any treaty but one that is strong and fair, one that reflects the deepening of the crisis.

From December 7-18, in Copenhagen, Denmark, 190 or so nations will come together in for the annual U.N. Climate Conference, but this one is particularly important. One reason is that it will be the first one in eight years where the U.S. delegation will be led by people who believe that climate change is real, serious and that action is needed to address it. But much more significant is that this is the U.N. conference that was planned, two years ago at a UN climate conference in Bali, Indonesia, as the place and the time that the world had to come up with a much stronger international climate treaty than the Kyoto Protocol.

The Kyoto Protocol became operative on February 16, 2005, and as of sometime in 2012 it will no longer be in effect. The countries which signed it and agreed to reduce their emissions by an average of 5% below 1990 levels have until then to do so. At that point, if there is no international treaty that has been negotiated, ratified by enough countries and gone into effect, there will be nothing that replaces the expired Kyoto treaty.

Since it is expected that it will take at least two years for enough countries to ratify a treaty, the Copenhagen conference has been seen as critical so that there’s no gap in between Kyoto and a new treaty. However, as we’re less than three months out from Copenhagen, with 15 actual negotiating days between now and the end of Copenhagen (including five days in Barcelona, Spain Nov. 2-6), and with a significant number of major issues unresolved and points of conflict, especially between the countries of the Global South (developing countries) and the Global North (developed), it is not looking hopeful for any kind of treaty, much less a good one, to be adopted and signed at Copenhagen. Continue reading