Students Gain Skills at Annual Activist Summit

When I first heard about the Greenpeace Activist Summit, I didn’t immediately sign up to attend. My first thought was, “I have been to, put together, and even co-facilitated activist trainings before— been there, done that.” The email sat in my inbox for some time before I got a call from Fiona, the Student Network Intern at Greenpeace who convinced me that it would least be fun to be out in the woods, in the beautiful state of Virginia, with like minded people, and that one could probably never go to too many trainings.

She was right. I left the 2012 Greenpeace Activist Summit with much more than indulgent memories of camaraderie and camping. I was invited to be part of the Training Team by attending a training for trainers pre-summit gathering (T4T), specifically I was asked to play around with some introductory and closing activities for the summit. When I met with David Pinsky, one of the organizers of the Summit, I was struck by the thoughtfulness and attention he gave to me for the seemingly straightforward exercises he was having me lead.

That thoughtfulness and intentionality was carried throughout the T4T, and into the Summit. The Greenpeace staff who trained myself and the other students who would run the Summit tried to impress upon us the most effective ways to communicate, engage and educate. They taught by example. We were asked us to think about what is effective communication and how we both engage and interact with those who we try to inform. Consistently the T4T trainings had moments for us to draw from our experiences, feelings, and reflections.

After a day and a half of T4T, all of the participants made their way from as far as Puerto Rico and San Diego to Prince Williams Forest, Virginia. Jet lagged and road weary, there was still an atmosphere of excitement as we set up camp the first night. The range of experiences that people had had with Greenpeace were from people on the Student Network Board and alumni of the Greenpeace Semester, to others like myself who had never been a part of anything with Greenpeace. Some participants looking to get involved in the environmental movement for the first time while others were running their own campaigns.

The trainings bridged many of those gaps. All four days were based on experiential learning – every training had a breakout session or role play. No matter how often you had canvassed, or talked to the media, you were asked to think about how you could do that more effectively. The trainings covered an amazing amount of skills from how to best build leadership, run a meeting, use social media, or escalate your campaign. When individuals introduced themselves, or told their personal stories, interacted in the trainings or talked around the campfire again and again people brought up their shared hopes, fears, desires and needs of themselves, their allies, their friends and our movement. Punctuating the student run activities, energizers, and trainings were call to action speakers and presentations.

Gabe Wisniewski spoke on the first night about Greenpeace’s coal campaign, and the fight against climate injustices across the movement. Meena Hussain gave a presentation on how we can maximize our work using social media tools, and how Greenpeace has used those tools in the past. Emily James showed her film Just Do It: A Tale of Modern-day Outlaws, which brought us behind the scene of UK’s environmental direct action movement, and challenged us to think about the direction our movement here in the US.

Lili Molina of Energy Action Coalitionpresentation on Anti-Oppression and Environmental Justice was the most pertinent. While the larger environmental movement has nailed down many of its tactics, it hasn’t consistently empowered or included everyone into our movement. Our movement is increasingly becoming a youth movement, a more diverse movement, and one that is bringing more of the fight to frontline communities. Lili illustrated that we need to be a movement that is thoughtful in our inclusiveness, our sensitivity and our awareness of social and economic inequalities as we try to address regional and global environmental injustices.

The long weekend ended with a NVDA training by Greenpeace’s James Brady which went over the uses of NVDA in the fight to protect the environment. It had been a long, hard, hot, fun, exciting week of leading and participating in trainings. As bittersweet as it was to say goodbye, everyone was really pumped to take everything we had learned back to our communities and share our education and experience with our peers.

- Lucas Burdick is a Sophomore at the College of the Atlantic

MSU Banner Drop Launches 100% clean energy week of action

Quit Coal at Michigan State

Authored by MSU Greenpeace Volunteer Natalie Davenport.

Today, MSU Greenpeace launched a nationwide week of action demanding our Board of Trustees reject the university’s unambitious, incomplete, and flawed energy transition plan.

Four student activists unfurled a large 20ft x 20ft banner on a parking garage at a busy intersection near the Hannah Administration building, home to the university’s executive offices of the President and Board of Trustees.This begins two weeks of action where campuses nationwide will join MSU Greenpeace demanding the MSU Board of Trustees pave the way for a clean energy future by voting NO on MSU’s faulty, unambitious energy plan.  Continue reading

Shutting Down Michigan State University’s Coal Plant

The Michigan State University (MSU) T.B. Simon coal plant is the largest on-campus coal plant in the country. The MSU coal plant burns 200,000 tons of coal every year, and is one contributor to the 31 annual deaths in the Lansing area due to coal-fired power plants.

Since 2009, hundreds of MSU students have been waking up and saying “today I am going to shut down our campus coal plant!” For nearly three years, two student groups, MSU Greenpeace and MSU Beyond Coal, have been working tirelessly to pressure their administration to shut down the coal plant and transition to 100% clean energy.

QuitCoalMSU

Following relentless grassroots organizing from students, the administration finally responded – with an unambitious energy transition plan that calls for 40% clean energy by 2030. The plan also contains false solutions such as burning biomass and natural gas. Greenpeace and Sierra Club energy experts have concerns about the methodology used to create the plan. The ultimate goal of the plan is 100% clean energy. However, with a current timeline that extends to 2030, meeting not even half of the 100% goal, MSU students are calling on the MSU Board of Trustees to reject the current energy transition plan.

On April 13th, the MSU Board of Trustees has the power to reject this unambitious plan and demonstrate leadership on clean energy. The Board of Trustees must vote NO and request that MSU’s President Lou Anna K. Simon prioritizes clean energy by creating a science-based, ambitious energy transition plan including 100% clean energy like wind, solar, and geothermal. Natural gas, especially from fracking, isn’t progress. It’s a downright insult to MSU students, future generations, and communities impacted by natural gas drilling.

MSU students need your help in this critical moment. We need to stand together, asserting that dirty energy will no longer be tolerated by the millennial generation, and we must push forward, embrace existing technology and shift towards a 100% clean energy now.

For the first two weeks in April (2nd – 6th and 9th – 13th) MSU Greenpeace is asking
students from across the country to flood the MSU administration’s phone lines, email
inboxes, and – most importantly – the decision making room on Friday, April 13th.
You can find out more and sign up here!

As young people we are constantly pushing social movements. This is our time to
come together – MSU Students need you to stand in solidarity with them.
MSU students are calling on the larger youth climate movement and activists from all across the country to stand in solidarity with them in the fight for a clean energy future.

The Rainbow Warrior come to Duke Energy’s home turf, North Carolina

Post by Dan Cannon, Greenpeace Student Network

Dan giving a tour on the bow of the Rainbow Warrior

Dan giving a tour on the bow of the Rainbow Warrior.

It’s not everyday the Rainbow Warrior, a 190 foot sailboat, shows up in the small quiet town of Southport, NC, but this last weekend that’s exactly what happened. The boat was so large, instead of docking, Captain Willcox had to anchor the ship in the middle of the Cape Fear River. Hundreds of North Carolinians lined up to be chartered over to the ship and given a tour. While others stopped traffic on coastal roads so they could get out and take a full frame picture of the ship. Continue reading

The GOT – A Marvelous Victory

 

 

Posted on behalf of Bessie Rose, GOT Spring 10 Alum:

 

 

I’ve just returned from the most life changing experience I’ve had yet in my 19 years on this beautiful Earth.  The experience I speak of is the Greenpeace Organizing Term. This semester, also called the GOT, provides students that have a passion for environmental activism, organizing, or are just curious about environmental issues in general an outlet to turn their concern into action.

 

When I signed up for the GOT, I’ll admit, I wasn’t entirely sure what I was getting myself into. Once I had completed the interview, and then been accepted, I realized my vision – to act on something I cared deeply about – would become a reality.

The semester was filled with action (quite literally) on all ends.

Some major highlights for me were the campaign simulation, the trainings, and the expedition trip. The campaign simulation gave each student two days to prepare, plan and implement a hypothetical environmental campaign on their campus or in their community using the tools we had gained while on the GOT.

It was hard but rewarding work, and after completion of the simulation, my confidence in my ability to run an environmental campaign increased ten-fold.

Our expedition trip to Canada to bear witness to the tar sands was perhaps the most eye-opening experience for me while on the GOT. Before leaving for the trip we spent weeks studying the tar sands.

We learned just how detrimental the tar sands are both to the land which contains large amounts of Canada’s wetlands and vast amounts of biodiversity, and also for the people including indigenous populations whose rights have been endlessly violated by oil companies.

Once we got to Canada, we went on an exclusive tour through the tar sands. Along with the DC GOT class and Greenpeace Canada, we successfully planned and carried out an action in front of the BP headquarters in Calgary.

Our action coincided with BP’s annual general meeting in London and other protests going on as part of the “BP Fortnight of Shame” to re-brand BP as an environmentally destructive company and demand that they divest from tar sands development.

 

 

The Calgary BP action was tons of fun to plan and carry out, but also required lots of hard-work, organization, and focus since it was almost entirely up to the GOT to plan and organize the event. Luckily, Greenpeace Canada was kind enough to give us space and materials to work, and also helped coordinate media to arrive at the event.

It’s hard to encompass exactly what the Greenpeace Organizing Term did for me in a few paragraphs. I want to say that if you decide to join the GOT, I promise you won’t be disappointed.

The GOT has and taught me how to align my beliefs with action that matters. For me, that’s the core of hope. And that, in itself, is a marvelous victory.

-Bessie Rose, Greenpeace Organizing Term Spring 2010 Alum

My Inspiration

I don’t have to tell you that the threats that face the planet are absolutely dire. People are doing things they never imagined in hopes of ensuring that our children’s children have a planet that is livable.

What keeps me inspired through all of this? Working with youth that are willing to put their lives on hold, to join the Greenpeace Organizing Term. Every semester, 25-30 students are taking time off of school, fundraising to cover tuition, convincing parents to let them join, and moving their lives sometimes across the country to learn how to become leaders in the environmental movement.

The Greenpeace Organizing Term is a semester long program where students learn basic to advanced campaign and grassroots organizing skills. Students spend 12 weeks learning how to build the movement back home, pressure big corporations and elected officials, and how to inspire coming generations of environmental activists.

During the program students’ travel to work on campaigns in the field, where they get to use their new skills on Greenpeace campaigns. On their expedition trip, they get a chance to see how environmental issues effect global communities, and have a chance to support those communities through organizing. .

Check out this awesome slideshow that we put together of a few of our over 200 alumni sharing why they decided to take a stand:

Do you want to be apart of this growing movement of youth who are willing to take a stand for the environment? Check out the G.O.T.’s website for more info and to apply!

The Organizing Term is an amazing experience for current undergraduate students who are 18-24. If you are, or know someone whois currently a student who is passionate about environmental change, check out our site at http://www.greenpeace.org/got and apply today for our Spring 2010 semester!

Student activists fighting to save the climate!

This fall, the Greenpeace Student Network is fighting for our planet’s future and demanding climate action now. All across the country, student activists are holding their first meetings of the semester, having kickoff events, and turning up the pressure on decision makers to implement science based solutions to global warming.

Here are some highlights of what’s been happening across the country:

At Iowa State, student activists began their semester by gathering hundreds of petitions and rallying against a dirty coal plant on campus. They even made headlines!

In Atlanta, Georgia State student activists are planning a huge rally for the October 24th International Day of Action on Climate. They are expecting hundreds of people with prominent guest speakers, media, and a unified message that world leaders must act now on climate.

In Virginia, student activists at James Madison University are mobilizing their campus to take on climate this semester. They are doing a large recruitment drive and getting new volunteers each day! A movement, like none before, is growing on campus.

While Congress and President Obama have failed to be leaders on climate, our current generation is stepping up to the plate to deliver results! I am so inspired by the amazing work already underway this semester. Working with student activists has taught me one thing: they are a driving force for positive change.

Are you inspired like me? Are you ready for climate action? Then don’t miss a second of the action! Stay in the know about important updates with the Student Network. Join us on Facebook and on Twitter.

To get involved with the Student Network, email us!

Get ready for a movement like you’ve never seen before!

David

Greenpeace Youth: The New Climate Leaders

The last few weeks of summer are finally here and for many students that means sleeping in as much as possible, final visits with hometown friends and earning some last minute savings before heading back to school. But as enticing as the final lazy days of summer are, some students decided to dedicate their last week to developing their leadership skills and preparing for an active semester.

On Thursday, August 13th, 70 young activists from across the US and Canada arrived in Algonquin, Illinois for Activist Camp, a 4-day summer training program hosted by Greenpeace and Forest Ethics. Activist Camp provided an opportunity for these activists to develop their grassroots organizing skills, discuss Greenpeace and Forest Ethics campaigns in depth, network and have fun.

Photo by Melanie Smith 

There were a variety of trainings offered throughout the weekend including coalition building, advanced media, creative activism, recruitment and banner making. All of the trainings provided the young activists with skills that will be beneficial to working on a Greenpeace or Forest Ethics campaign on their campus or in their community.

“At Activist Camp I learned how to train trainers. I can now go back to my campus and build the capacity of my club by sharing the skills I learned with students at my school,” said Tina Robinson of Penn State University.

Photo by Melanie Smith

With a new set of skills, these Greenpeace students will be returning to their respective campuses to continue to tackle the issue of global warming and build the youth climate movement.

An Activist Camp participant, Rachel O’Connor, has already been recognized in her hometown for her demonstrated leadership.

Want to get involved? The Greenpeace Student Network is seeking student activists that are eager to lead the clean energy fight on their campus. If you’re dedicated and passionate about tackling top environmental issues then apply to be a Greenpeace campus coordinator at your school.

Get Down with the GOT

My friend Kate and I think the Greenpeace Organizing Term is pretty rad; so much so, that we’re currently working for it!  We’re talking to students all across the country about the student activist training program that Greenpeace runs, and here’s what Kate has to say about her awesome experience in the GOT:

Hello from San Francisco!

My name is Kaitlin Finneran, and I’m a student at the University of North Carolina—Greensboro.  In the fall of my sophomore year, I joined a brand-new environmental club on campus.  One day, a girl came in to talk about Greenpeace, so I checked out the website and found the page for the Greenpeace Organizing Term. I was in awe over the program description and applied right then!
 
When I was accepted into the program, I thought I would learn about environmental issues and work with Greenpeace for a bit. What I ended up getting out of it was so much more valuable: I now have the skills and the confidence to organize people around a cause, and I’ve learned how to pass those skills on to others. I also discovered the importance of collective effort, and that we must learn how to unite people in order to tackle the major problems that face the earth today.

My action-packed semester with the GOT included some awesome trips around the world, from getting community support in Tucson, Arizona, that successfully pressured Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords to sign onto the Safe Climate Act, to joining a direct action in Hamburg, Germany, against the construction of new coal-fired power plants. And one of my favorite success stories was getting the University of California—Berkeley to kick Kleenex off of its campus… I even helped write the resolution that was passed by the university’s Student Senate!

The Greenpeace Organizing Term is literally an action-packed semester, and is basically the best hands-on training for student activists like you to become environmental leaders.  Kate and I are confident telling you this because the GOT is going to give you a lot more skills and experience than you would ever learn in a typical internship.  Think about it: When was the last time an environmental victory was won by fetching coffee for a guy in a suit?

The grassroots organizing and campaign skills that you’ll learn from trained professionals will lay the foundation for you to succeed in future semesters as part of the Greenpeace Student Network, as well as the rest of your life and career.

Take a look at what some of the GOT alumni are doing now:

  • Emily Russell-Roy (Fall ’04 alum): Working for the Pacific Forest Trust on climate policy
  • Zo Tobi (Fall ’04 alum): Northeast Regional Organizer for the Sierra Student Coalition
  • Andi Plocek (Spring ’05 alum): Director of Marketing, Sky Fuel
  • Rohini Banskota (Summer ’05 alum): Working on making Colorado College climate neutral
  • Kyle Saari (Spring ’06 alum): Greenpeace field organizer
  • Gabe Gerow (Spring ’06 alum): Greenpeace Organizing Term coordinator
  • Suzanne Graham (Summer ’06 alum): Greenpeace field organizer
  • Christine Irvine (Summer ’06 alum): Youth Organizer, Southern Alliance for Clean Energy
  • Christy Hartman (Fall ’06 alum): Sierra Student Coalition Organizer in WV, OH and PA
  • Whitney Kraner (Fall ’06 alum): Arizona PIRG
  • Georgia Hill (Fall ’06): City Coordinator, Greenpeace Los Angeles Frontline program
  • Christina Alexa-Liakos (Fall ’06 alum): Board member, Greenpeace Student Network
  • Audry Mills (Fall ’07 alum): Board member, Greenpeace Student Network

Ready to make a change for yourself and the environment?

Apply now to be a part of the Greenpeace Organizing Term!

Your fellow activists,

Josef Palermo and Kate Finneran