The Arc California’s

Strategic Plan for Community Organizing

June 22, 2013

The Arc California

1225 8th Street, Suite 350 Sacramento, CA 95814

Purpose Statement for the Community Organizing Initiative:

The purpose of The Arc of California’s Community Organizing Initiative is to build a powerful organized community that shapes state policy to guarantee the human and civil rights of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Customer Analysis for our Community Organizing Initiative: Do we know who they are and do we know what they really want?

The Arc needs to focus and utilize participation from any individual or chapter which wishes to engage with the community organizing initiative. They will be trained to think about themselves as agents of change (transformational), thus becoming participants instead of clients, advocating for what is rightfully theirs and not passively accepting what the state is willing to give!

We will observe how The Arc of the United States is organizing and training to exert influence on federal public policy through their national Director of Chapter Organizing and Advocacy. We will replicate their deliberative approach at the state level.

Finally while we are committed to broadening our participation, we acknowledge building consensus for action in a large and diverse state like ours can be challenging. Action may in fact be the method to achieve a broader consensus.

Customer Analysis: Identifying the Statewide Core Leaders, Regional Organizers, and Local Chapter and Community Leaders.

We will solicit individuals who are committed to this initiative and willing to be visionary Statewide Core Leaders:

1.  CCE Members

2.  Chapter Presidents

3.  Board Representatives

4.  Parents

5.  Consumers/Self-advocates

Regional Organizers and Organizations will be identified who have bought into the vision and will achieve the required results for success:

1.  Community organizing groups from within the developmental disability community (e.g. United Cerebral Palsy, Autism Speaks)

2.  Community organizing groups from other disability communities (e.g. CFILC, Mental Health)

3.  Community organizing groups from outside the disability community (e.g. Health, Housing, Transit, Justice, Labor)

4.  Individuals from The Arc of California network who are not members of the Core Leadership team

Local Chapter and Community Leaders will be identified who will be trained to support and participate in the successful implementation of the community organizing initiative.

Regular and Embedded Trainings:

1)  Develop training models to fit the needs of Self Advocates (their physical stamina, physical limitations, intellectual disabilities, etc.)

2)  Develop training models geared to the needs of the Family Members

3)  Training acknowledges the VALUE of the person being trained (Client, Family, Friends, and Staff)

4)  Training gives them recognition and increases their cognitive awareness in giving them purpose

5)  Cross training everyone to do the actions, interviews and deliver the message

6)  Trainings will be conducted in three regions

a.  Northern California (Sacramento Area/ Bay Area, Merced/King City)

b.  Central California (Bakersfield/Fresno, Paso Robles/Madera)

c.  Southern California (Los Angeles/San Diego, Santa Barbara/Ventura, Valencia/Riverside)

Significant Milestones for the Community Organizing Initiative

Year 1

·  Calendar a series of synchronized legislative forums and events throughout the state that generate ‘meetings with’ and ‘letters to’ policymakers, action on statewide issues, action on local issues, support for our lawsuit, increased voter registration, and lead to follow-up meetings

·  Follow-up meetings (from the synchronized forums) that become theme forums cutting issues into a couple winnable actions

·  “Actions are the oxygen to organizing” - complete at least 3 local actions and 1 state action.

·  Create a working plan to teach cutting issues to action and base building through 1:1 meetings

·  National training - Create a special selection process for sending people to national training (we want to send 10 advocates)

·  On-line 1 day training that is specific to our community organizing issue

Year 2

·  Continue trainings and reach 100 people annually

·  Hire a full-time organizer for our region

·  Advance team training (at least 1 team), training for an established group that is already committed to a local action

Year 3

·  Hire a full team of organizers (3 locals and 1 state coordinator)

·  Train the trainer’s workshop to achieve having 10 trainers

·  Achieve full attendance for national week long training (20 advocates)

·  Whatever has not been accomplished from previous years

Action Plans: Details for the desired milestones including plans for resources for actions not already provided.

Action Plans

YEAR ONE

Calendar a series of synchronized forums and events throughout the state that generate letters to policymakers, voter registrations, and lead to follow-up meetings and actions.

What / When
Identify 3 regions where advocates can build forums to highlight the current state of the DD System, local issues, have round table letter writing sessions, and voter registration. / March 2013
Bakersfield/Kern County Training by Gamaliel Team / Fall or Winter 2013
San Diego training at the CA Supported Living Network’s conference, with emphasis on self advocates; recruit self advocates for training at People First Conference / April 2013
June 2013
Issue Development – comes out of the synced events and the CSLN conference

Follow-up meetings (from the synchronized forums) that become theme forums cutting issues into a couple winnable actions.

What / When
Write a survey monkey assessment survey for the synced forums and events participation / September 2013
Follow-up with those in attendance at the synced forums through the survey / Dec. 2013
Schedule and hold follow-up meetings and open the forum up by discussing survey themes, open discussion on community concerns, and break it down to winnable actions. / Dec. 2013

Complete at least 3 local and 1 state actions and create a working plan to teach cutting issues to action and base building through 1:1 meetings

What / When
Organize a presence in person and on-line for lawsuit court hearings, public policy hearings, local issues, and national legislation creating maximum participation from our community / Spring, Summer, and Fall 2013
Carry out other winnable actions identified from each follow-up forum
Identify the leaders for actions (should come from those already trained in national leadership, PIP graduates, other known advocates, especially self advocates and family members / August 2013
Organize training in Sacramento / May 2013
1:1 follow ups
Prepare for celebration of victory and next steps simultaneously
Statewide special election turnout the vote

YEAR ONE and TWO

National training (we want to send 10 advocates) and Local Trainings

What / When
1 week training in the Sacramento area / November 2013
Strategic planning committee to establish criteria and the selection process / May 2013
Local trainings in Northern, Central and Southern California, including San Francisco, San Mateo, Marin, San Jose, Solano, Stockton, Napa, Placer County, Butte County, Fresno, Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura and San Diego / Spring, Summer and Fall, Winter 2013
2014
Design 1 or 1/2 day trainings to raise interest and to earn money to off- set participant cost at national training / Summer 2013
Develop a work plan in the training / May 2013

Create an on-line resource based on the 1 or ½ day training that is specific to our community organizing issue

What / When
Video tape leadership training / May 2014
Do the training in the Sacramento Area / May 2014
Marketing for the resource / April 2014
Create a course similar to College of Direct Support / July 2014

Continue the training to reach 100 people annually

What / When
Ask for referrals at each training / On-going
Keep building database of interested advocates / On-going
Book Greg Galluzzo, Mary Gonzales, and other Gamaliel Lead Organizers for the trainings / 2013 September, October, November, December
2014
Promote directly to the Partners in Policymaking graduates and students
Work on grants and fundraising to develop financial sustainability / June – Dec. 2013

Advance team training (at least 1 team), training for an established group that is already committed to a local action

What / When
Identify potential teams and define qualifications
1 to ½ day training will identify interested teams / May 2013 and 2014
Organize private training where needed
Send the team to the training and follow up / November 2013
$ - teams will have to fund their own participation

Hire a full time organizer

What / When
Develop a feasibility proposal for funding a full time organizer highlighting 4 options: (1) State centered (2) local centered (3) contract out (4) just wait for a grant source / June 2013
Grant funding to ignite the project, solicit funding from chapters and individuals, establish a contributor list / June – Dec 2013
Job description, splitting time in the region / July 2013
Use Mary’s contacts to search for organizers
Regional areas will commit to 1 collective fundraiser
State office will promote regional efforts
State office will provide organizers with relevant policy issues impacting the local constituents / Summer 2013

YEAR 0NE to THREE

Hire a full team of organizers (3 locals and 1 state coordinator)

What / When
Complete a procedural resource for what’s working for us in organizing and how to replicate and what to watch out for. / 2014
Year two results will dictate next steps for hiring a full team

Train the trainer’s workshop to achieve having 10 trainers

What / When
Identify those with interest and talent willing to practice the concepts of community organizing / Sept. 2013, 2014 and 2015
Create a team to train for stage one: (1) Trainers for 1:1 (2) Trainers for Effective Meetings, (3) Trainers for Issues and Actions
Create a team to train for stage two: (1) Self-Interest, (2) Agitation, (3) Path to Power
Shadow Greg & Mary in their trainings

Achieve full attendance for annual national week long training (100 advocates)

Strategic Plan Committee:

·  Dwight Stratton, President, The Arc California (San Diego Chapter)

·  Dick Fitzmaurice, Vice President The Arc California (Alameda County Chapter)

·  Peter Bowers, Treasurer The Arc California (Contra Costa Chapter)

·  Jim Baldwin, Chief Executive Officer, The Arc Bakersfield BARC

·  Ron Luter, Executive Director, The Arc of Alameda County

·  Barbara Guenther, Executive Director, The Arc Placer County

·  Connie Uychutin, Executive Director, The Arc San Joaquin

·  Greg Galluzzo & Mary Gonzales Gamaliel Foundation

·  Staff:

·  Tony Anderson, Executive Director

·  Tim Hornbecker, Director of Community Organizing and Advocacy

Gwen Lopez, Executive Assistant