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Category: About Civic Engagement

Free FOIA Workshop

Free FOIA Clinic

Thursday, October 11, 2012(05:30 PM – 07:30 PM)

Questions about the Freedom of Information Act? Looking for help with a denied request? Need help formulating your FOIA request and asking for the right documents? Sign up for a one-on-one 15-minute session with an attorney at no charge! Meet with a FOIA expert for free legal advice on how to get your request answered. (Appointment necessary.)

Co-hosted with Kirkland & Ellis LLP and the Center for Open Government at Chicago-Kent.

Questions about the Freedom of Information Act? Are you looking for help with a denied request? Need help formulating your FOIA request and asking for the right documents?

Sign up for a one-on-one 15-minute session with an attorney at no charge! Meet with a FOIA expert for free legal advice on how to get your request answered.

A scheduled appointment is necessary. Contact Stephanie Simon at ssimon@bettergov.org or 312.821.9042 for an appointment. Additional information is required before an appointment can be scheduled.

This FOIA Clinic will be held in downtown Chicago at:

Center for Open Government
Chicago-Kent College of Law
565 W Adams, #600

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Posted on September 14, 2012November 22, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, News, Training

CivicLab Needed To Change The Score

Chicago needs a place and space like the CivicLab to help citizens do democracy. According the State Investigation Project from The Center for Public Integrity, Illinois gets a miserable grade for public integrity. According to Statehouse reporter Amanda Vinicky, dispite some recent legislative efforts, there has been no real change here.

I teach civics and this is a failing grade.

“But in some ways, they are like nips and tucks — cosmetic facelifts that conceal a host of ethical loopholes. Despite wide knowledge of its crooked history, Illinois remains a state where lobbyists do not have to disclose their fees, where legislators cannot be sanctioned for conflicts of interest, and where the judges who make it on the bench are those with the best political connections.

In a study released on Feb. 15 by the University of Illinois at Chicago and the University of Illinois Institute for Government and Public Affairs —which ranked the per capita number of government appointees, employees, and others convicted of public corruption— Illinois came in a dismal second among states, behind Louisiana (the District of Columbia was the worst).  According to the report, since 1976, the state tally of convictions is 1,828 – or around 51 per year; “at the heart of most convictions,” the study said, “is a payoff for something that is a sweetheart contract or a law or permit necessary to do business.”

And just Friday, the Illinois Legislature expelled Rep. Derrick Smith from the House – the first time that’s happened in over 100 years. Federal prosecutors accused Smith of writing a letter of recommendation on behalf of a day care center for a $50,000 grant in exchange for the fictitious operator kicking back $7,000.

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Posted on August 19, 2012November 22, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, Get Involved, News

Training At The Midwest Academy

I’m at a training session for community organizers this week in Chicago run by The Midwest Academy, one of America’s foremost organizing training centers. They are a Chicago treasure, established in 1971 by Heather Booth and Steve Max.

 “The Midwest Academy is a national training institute committed to advancing the struggle for social, economic, and racial justice. From local neighborhood groups to statewide and national organizations, Midwest Academy has trained over twenty-five thousand grassroots activists from hundreds of organizations and coalitions. Midwest Academy teaches an organizing philosophy, methods and skills that enable ordinary people to actively participate in the democratic process. Courses and consulting services are designed for progressive organizations and coalitions that utilize civic engagement activities to build citizen power at all levels of our democracy.”

From the first day of training, a very hard truth: “Being right doesn’t mean you win.” The Number One rule for social change? People in charge will not give you anything unless you organize for power to demand it and then only if the people in charge believe that you have organized enough power to hurt or help them.

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Posted on August 14, 2012November 22, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, News, Training1 Comment on Training At The Midwest Academy

Join Global Conversation on Physical Space as Catalyst for Civic Engagement

Join an online dialogue on Physical spaces as catalysts for greater digital citizen participation

August 8 to 14, 2012

Join Rising Voices, Social Media Exchange (SMEX) and the New Tactics online community for an online dialogue on Physical spaces as catalysts for greater digital citizen participation from August 8 to 14, 2012. CivicLab co-founder Tom Tresser is one of the discussion leaders.

Across the globe, new physical spaces are emerging that are acting as catalysts for greater citizen participation using digital technologies. Telecenters are going beyond providing computer access to communities, to providing workshops to train citizens on how to use digital technology effectively to promote change. Hacklabs offer a physical space where activists and technologists can come together to find innovative solutions to local problems. These are just a few examples of the innovative use of physical space to encourage and empower greater digital citizen participation!

Although the internet has provided new ways for people to work together virtually, people are finding complementary energy from working face-to-face. Mobilizers and mentors for users of these spaces have a commitment to see their local communities become more active through the use of digital tools.

This dialogue is an opportunity to exchange innovative examples of how these physical spaces are being used as catalysts for greater citizen participation. Join us on August 8!

How can you participate?

This online dialogue is open to anyone interested in sharing their experiences and ideas on this topic! All you need to do is join the New Tactics online community by going to https://www.newtactics.org/user/register and add your comments to the dialogue.

For help, visit these FAQs:
How to register for an account on the New Tactics website: goo.gl/QyI6C
How to participate in an online dialogue: goo.gl/eSNo9

Link to dialogue: goo.gl/1R9Mw

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Posted on August 8, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, Get Involved, Making the Space

Tom has Big Idea #5

CivicLab co-founder, Tom Tresser, has Big idea #5 in the August issue of “Chicago Magazine” on how to make Chicago even better. It’s about establishing a public bank for Illinois.

“THE RATIONALE: A state bank could help Illinois reduce its budget deficit and make more credit available, thereby boosting the economy.

THE PROPONENT: Tom Tresser, cofounder of Illinois Citizens for Public Banking and a former teacher who coorganized the opposition to the 2016 Olympics

HE SAYS: “Illinois has more red ink than any state but California. It owes $34 billion in principal on its bonds; pension debt stands at $76 billion, the highest in the nation; and it pays a ton in bond interest and fees, not just because it has a poor credit rating but also because it also uses big out-of-state banks and investment firms to do the deals.

“Contrast that with North Dakota. Since the economic downturn began in 2008, North Dakota has had a budget surplus every year. It has no state debt, excellent credit, and the country’s lowest unemployment rate [3 percent]. While student loans in Illinois carry interest of 8 to 12 percent, in North Dakota it’s 4 percent.” Read the full story.

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Posted on July 12, 2012July 12, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, News

New Report Documents U.S. Dismal Civic IQ

From the Educational Testing Service, “With the presidential election approaching, a new study from Educational Testing Service (ETS) shows that weak civics knowledge among young people is linked to less voting, less volunteering and greater distrust in government. The report calls for sustained efforts on the part of parents, the public, the educational system, and local and national leaders to address these fault lines in our democracy that threaten our nation’s civic well-being.

Fault Lines in Our Democracy: Civic Knowledge, Voting Behavior, and Civic Engagement in the United States was written by Richard J. Coley of the ETS Center for Research on Human Capital and Education and Andrew Sum of the Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University. The report takes an in-depth look at civic knowledge, voting and civic engagement, and examines how they differ across important segments of our population. In all cases, civic participation was strongly related to one’s age, level of education and skills, and income.

The report warns that many students in U.S. schools lack acceptable levels of knowledge about civics:

  • In the most recent national assessment, only about one-quarter reached the “proficient” level, demonstrating solid academic performance.
  • Only 27 percent of fourth-graders could identify the purpose of the U.S. Constitution.
  • Only 22 percent of eighth-graders could recognize a role played by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Lower voter participation among growing segments of the population is rising just as the United States faces challenges of historic proportions — including a struggling economy, budget deficits, a growing national debt, health care issues, an aging infrastructure, global terrorism and a host of other problems.”

Download the summary.

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Posted on June 7, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, News, Research

“West Side Story” Meets Occupy Wall Street

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Posted on April 25, 2012April 26, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, News

Make Your Own Schoolhouse

From The New York Times: “ON a recent Monday night, a gaggle of 20-somethings crammed into a former Curves fitness center along the industrial edge of Carroll Gardens in Brooklyn. The storefront gym had been carved into two classrooms. In one, a rugged blond man, Brandon LeNoir, was teaching a class called “Let There Be Light.” A dozen students, huddled at long butcher-block tables littered with wires and scissors, learned how to make a simple lamp. “Don’t worry about neutral and live wires,” said Mr. LeNoir, 34, an interior designer by day. “It doesn’t matter for us.”…It was just another school night at the Brooklyn Brainery, a hipster schoolhouse started by a pair of underemployed polymaths, where students can learn abstruse subjects like the secret lives of bacteria, taught by teachers with few teaching credentials. Tuition is $5 to $30, enrollment takes place online and PayPal is accepted.”

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Posted on April 6, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, Making the Space

Maker Spaces – Re-doing Education (and Democracy)

Watch this ten minute video and you will get the what and why of The CivcLab. We are part of something very cool, very important and very much needed. The speaker is James Carlson, the founder of Milwaukee based BucketWorks and the director of the School Factory.

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Posted on March 30, 2012March 30, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, Making the Space, News

Take Brief Online Survey On Civic Activities

Got three minutes? Take our quick online survey about your civic engagement activities and help us understand how people get involved in public life and why. We’re trying to make participation in civic engagement activities easier and more compelling.

Go to  http://tinyurl.com/CivicLabSurvey or scan this QCode:

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Posted on March 24, 2012Author TomTeeCategories About Civic Engagement, Research

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