| Suggested Activites |
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| Resources - Advocacy and Campaigning |
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Know what you want to campaign on, but lacking activity ideas? Below is a list of activities we’ve seen work really well for Climate Action Groups across the country. • Visit your local member of Parliament – Face to face visits are very powerful as they demonstrate how you, the constituent, feel about this issue. Remember, you don’t need to be an expert on the issue to have an opinion that your representative should listen to. A list of sitting members of is available here: In an election year, it is also worth contacting candidates other than the sitting member to let them know that their policies on climate change may influence your vote. To find out who your local candidate is contact the various parties listed below: Write Letters• Write a letter to the Prime Minister, the Premier and to Ministers responsible for climate change and energy policies, but don’t forget your local MP – Letter writing is another extremely powerful tool, especially if your letter is in your own words. If you and your members feel strongly about an issue, the more letters your MP receives on the topic, the more they will understand that they need to do something about it. Try not to send all of your letters to the Prime Minister and Premier. While they are obviously important, the only MP answerable to you directly is your local representative. They are the ones who will really feel the heat from your efforts. Write a letter to the editor – Keep your letters short, sharp and witty and they’ll have a much better chance of getting published. Local newspapers can be really influential, so don’t forget to write to your local paper. Why not tell them about what you are doing to reduce your greenhouse pollution, and challenge your representatives to do more? If you want to comment on a topical issue, it has to be timely. Try to get your letter sent off the same day as the story you want to comment on emerges, or first thing the next morning. The Age: Email to
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Call Talkback RadioTalkback radio reaches a huge audience so it’s a good opportunity to spread the word about why Victoria should get serious about reducing emissions and making the shift to a clean energy future. Remember, you don’t have to be an expert to have an opinion. You might want to say that as a parent you’re worried about your kids’ future and that you want the government to make action on climate change their top priority. Lobby LocallyHave local community groups and local councils pass a resolution on climate change - your council, union, sporting club, local school or church group could pass a resolution supporting a transformation for a clean energy future and urgent action on climate change. Send the resolution to the Premier, Opposition Leader and your local MP. You might even want to send it to your local media. Letterbox DropLetterbox drop local residents on a specific issue, or look to help out other groups who might be leafleting in your area – If you want your community to know about a particular issue, leafleting is a great way to spread the word. Unfortunately, leafleting is also expensive and can take a lot of effort. If your group wants to get involved in leafleting, why not team up with another Climate Action Group or environmental group who is already active in your area. Host a Social EventHost a social event like a Trivia or Film night – showing a film about climate change, or the action we need to stop it is a fun way of getting people together to talk about climate change. You can attract new members, and even use it as a fundraiser to get some money together for your group. Write a PetitionA petition is a great way to show your representatives that the community wants action on a particular issue. It gives concrete evidence that you have support for your campaign. Unfortunately, a petition has no legal force, no matter how many people sign it. So while you’re entire school committee, church congregation, or even electorate might sign your petition, the government or MP it is directed at isn’t actually required to do anything about it. It’s therefore really important that you consider what impact you want your petition to make, and what level of support you think you’ll need for your petition to grab the attention of the government or your MP. Once you’ve decided that a petition is the best next-step for your campaign, it’s important to get the structure right. Decide who the petition is going to. Keep the wording short and direct. For petitions to the Victorian and Federal Government, certain drafting requirements must be met for the petition to be received. For more information about petitions to the Senate, click here There are even online services that will host your online petition for you. See GoPetition to find out more Visual petitionif you find that a written petition just isn’t what your campaign needs, perhaps you could consider a visual petition. A visual or picture petition gathers together pictures of individuals or groups calling for an action. It might not be submitted formally to parliament like a written petition, but can be just a powerful directed at an MP or government. A Climate Action Group in NSW started a visual petition in 2008 calling for policy that would cause Australia’s greenhouse emissions to peak in 2010, and decline steadily after that. They called the campaign Turn The Tide, and asked other Climate Action Groups and community groups across the country to send in their pictures all with the same message. View footage of the Turn The Tide campaign A visual petition can also come from individuals, and doesn’t have to rely on other groups getting involved. Some Melbourne Climate Action Groups are now running a visual petition where individuals can tell the Prime Minister what they want done about climate change. For more information ProtestHolding protests and demonstrations are important parts of our democracy. Some people don’t like to attend protests as they might see it as too confrontational. But protests allow for a group of people to join together and show their support for or opposition to a particular issue in a way that is sure to get the attention of decision makers. You’ve written letters, held meetings and made submissions but still the government doesn’t listen. A well formed and well attended protest outside your MP’s office is certain to get their attention – particularly if you can get a story about it into your local paper. Protests have formed an important part of almost every social or political movement in modern history. From civil rights demonstrations in the US to the Save Our Sons rallies here in Melbourne against the Vietnam War. Focused on climate change, the Walk Against Warming rallies have been held in capital cities around Australia for the last four years, peaking ahead of the Federal election in 2007 when over 50,000 Melbournians and 100,000 people across Australia hit the streets to call for action on climate change. Hold a Sit-InA Sit-In is a form of direct action where protestors ‘sit-in’ either outside or inside the office of the government or MP they are targeting. Protesters will either sit-in for a set period of time or until their demands are met. SubmissionsWriting submissions is an important way you can let the government know what you think of their planned actions or policies. When the government is preparing a new policy or infrastructure investment etc, they will often open the process to submissions from the public. Your CAG can make a submission as a group, or you can encourage your members to make individual submissions. The more submissions a government receives on any planned policy or action, the more they know that the community cares about it. Therefore, if you want more support for renewable energy instead of coal, it’s important that you say this in a submission if the government is developing a new energy policy. While submissions are very important, it’s equally as important not to spend too much time on them. With all the various policy processes and planned activities by both the Federal and State governments, it’s easy to slip into submission obsession. You’ll find that you’re doing less and less campaigning in the real world and haven’t got time to be speaking or working with your community about climate change. Some groups avoid this by finding a volunteer who has a good understanding of policy and enjoys writing submissions (surprisingly to some, these people do exist). Others will sign onto the submission of another group, or encourage their members to make one page submissions with a simple message of greater action on climate change. Not sure of the submission process? Government departments will usually have information online, but you’ll also hear about the various processes open to submissions through the climate group networks. If you want more information, contact an environment group working on climate change for advice. Human SignHuman Signs are a fun way to get a community to make the call for climate action. People gather together to form the shape of letters spelling out your message, and a picture is taken from above. Human Signs can be created with a school group of 50 people, or a whole community of thousands. Two Climate Action Groups in Australia have been leading the charge on Human Signs over the last couple of years, and now have the logistics down to a fine art. Candlelight VigilCandlelight vigils provide an alternative way for large groups of people to gather in a call for action. These can be held with large or small groups, in a park, at a public landmark, at a church or school service, outside an MPs office etc. You can have speakers and maybe even a choir or prayer, or it can be silent. The same general principles apply as for other events you might host. Make sure your vigil is well advertised, the messages are clear, there is a positive vibe, and that you notify the local paper. You’ll need to remember to bring banners, a camera and importantly candles and a lighter. Hold a StallClimate Action Groups and environment groups have been holding stalls to provide their community with information about climate change, their group and how people can get active for years. If you’ve got the people to staff it, stalls are a great way to get out into the community and sell your message. You can ask an environmental group as well as your local council and government for information and materials you can hand out. Environment Victoria and other groups have campaign materials you can use, and ideas to get you started with you stall. You might also have a specific activity that you are asking people to do to attract them to you stall. It could be to sign up to your email list, sign a petition, have your photo taken as part of a visual petition. The more creative you get with this, the better. Think about your target audience, and what would attract them. You can host stalls at local fetes and markets, community events, or on the street where there is lots of pedestrian traffic. You might need permission from your council and possibly even public liability insurance, so it’s always worth checking. There is lot’s of information online about how best to prepare for running a stall, and some local councils will have documents you need too. Try these websites for information: |
| Last Updated on Wednesday, 02 September 2009 02:15 |




