Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,557,981 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Nothing beats a good message: RecreAction Network is a good resource for NRPA.


A little more than 10 years ago, the National Recreation and Park Association leaped boldly into electronic advocacy by launching the RecreAction Network--an online advocacy network that allows NRPA NRPA National Recreation and Park Association
NRPA Natural Resources Protective Association (Staten Island, NY)
NRPA Niagara Regional Police Association (Canada)
NRPA National Rifle and Pistol Association
 members to contact their legislators. In those days "electronic advocacy" consisted of nothing more than blast-faxes sent to a core group of about 100 park and recreation advocates nationwide. By today's standards it was pretty primitive--one-way communication by thermal-printing fax machines, with no opportunity to edit or receive feedback, or to even verily ver·i·ly  
adv.
1. In truth; in fact.

2. With confidence; assuredly.



[Middle English verraily, from verrai, true; see very.
 if the message had been received much less responded to.

Today, the RecreAction Network has evolved into something quite different--an advanced messaging system Software that provides an electronic mail delivery system. It is made up of the following functional components, which may be packaged together or independently.

Mail User Agent
 enabled by powerful, precise software that allows thousands of advocates to send editable messages to their own members of Congress by just one click of a mouse.

NRPA's advocacy for legislation and national public policy development takes many forms. It ranges all the way from the most personal one-on-one contacts to literally millions of members and advocates with mass distributions of messages in cooperation with other national organizations. The astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 growth of the Internet as an advocacy tool has enabled this revolution and changed the way membership and service organizations and associations like NRPA get messages to members.

The explosive growth of this Internet-based communications medium has also dramatically changed the way congressional offices deal with the daily flood of incoming messages. A time-honored axiom of advocacy is that "Nothing beats a personal letter." And even well into the Internet age this remains true--a well-crafted personal letter from a constituent to a representative or senator is read, often by the legislator LEGISLATOR. One who makes laws.
     2. In order to make good laws, it is necessary to understand those which are in force; the legislator ought therefore, to be thoroughly imbued with a knowledge of the laws of his country, their advantages and defects; to
, and generates a letter in response.

However, fears of terrorism and the unprincipled mailing of deadly chemical or biological agents to congressional offices such as the widely reported mailing of anthrax anthrax (ăn`thrăks), acute infectious disease of animals that can be secondarily transmitted to humans. It is caused by a bacterium (Bacillus anthracis  spores in 2001 have changed that time-honored tradition irrevocably. Yes, a letter still may be the single best way to get your message to a member of Congress, but unfortunately, it may take three months to arrive and be brown and crumbly crum·bly  
adj. crum·bli·er, crum·bli·est
Easily crumbled; friable.



crumbli·ness n.

Adj. 1.
 from irradiation irradiation /ir·ra·di·a·tion/ (i-ra?de-a´shun)
1. radiotherapy.

2. the dispersion of nervous impulse beyond the normal path of conduction.

3.
 and storage. Unless you are willing to take the long, and we mean long view, the personal letter has lost much of its effectiveness as the best advocacy tool.

But there is still power in people, and the more writes that are raised from communities across our nation about the value of parks and recreation in every community, the more legislators sit up and take notice. NRPA's RecreAction Network gives that power to our people. A well-crafted, carefully written, addressed and personalized per·son·al·ize  
tr.v. per·son·al·ized, per·son·al·iz·ing, per·son·al·iz·es
1. To take (a general remark or characterization) in a personal manner.

2. To attribute human or personal qualities to; personify.
 email has the capability to be an effective message that gets results, and just one year's worth of experience has shown that members are using this tool and value it for its effectiveness in advocacy for parks an recreation.

"I think this is a tremendous service to NHPA NHPA,
n.pr See Nurse Healer's Professional Association.
 members," wrote Parks and Recreation Director Steven Grimes Grimes is a surname, that is believed to be of a Scandinavian decent and may refer to
  • Aoibhinn Grimes
  • Ashley Grimes
  • Barbara Grimes, a Chicago murder victim
  • Burleigh Grimes (1893–1985), US baseball player
  • Camryn Grimes
  • Charles Grimes
 in Bettendorf, Iowa Bettendorf is a city in Scott County, Iowa, United States. The population was 31,275 at the 2000 census. The 2006 estimates shows slight growth to 32,394. It is one of the Quad Cities. . "Keep up the great work. This is the type of service that will help make NRPA and its members a more effective organization."

NRPA's public policy staff in Washington, D.C., upgraded NRPA's advocacy capability just one year ago in early 2003 by licensing software from a national advocacy provider. This software enables the creation of advocacy campaigns, action alerts and dedicated e-mail messages in HTML HTML
 in full HyperText Markup Language

Markup language derived from SGML that is used to prepare hypertext documents. Relatively easy for nonprogrammers to master, HTML is the language used for documents on the World Wide Web.
 and plain text formats that can be instantly sent to the entire NRPA online membership, who in turn, can edit and personalize these messages, and with one mouse click, send them directly to their senator or representative.

The upgrading and modernization of the RecreAction Network has been so successful in such a short time that since its implementation, more than 400 individual messages have been sent by NRPA members and advocates to more than 400 individual members of Congress. NRPA's e-mail messages, action alerts and online advocacy campaigns have prompted thousands of direct phone calls and hundreds of Beltway meetings. In this short time, NRPA Public Policy staff have launched six critical issue campaigns and 20 action alert messages. NRPA's online advocacy has generated positive feedback from advocacy experts outside of NRPA, and NRPA messages have been quoted on national Web sites and media outlets.

Perhaps even more important than the e-mailing of targeted messages to legislators, has been the extraordinary value of this Internet tool for instantly getting accurate, correct information to thousands of NRPA members who learn the issues and legislative developments more quickly than ever before, and thus are able to take effective action with unprecedented speed.

NRPA's electronic advocacy does not stop with the RecreAction Network. In addition to the advanced messaging campaigns of the RecreAction Network, NRPA's advocacy efforts are enhanced and expanded on the NRPA Web page at www.nrpa.org. Background and issue papers are posted on the NRPA Web pages and members can take time to explore legislation in depth and follow links to even more detailed information from linked sites.

NRPA has truly entered the age of digital advocacy, and by all measures we have been successful. Legislators are hearing our messages and they are responding. Nothing may beat all old-fashioned letter or phone call, but NRPA's digital advocacy network is proving that nothing beats a thousand well-crafted personal messages either.

We need you to join the RecreAction Network and add your voice to the thousands of NRPA members who advocate for parks and recreation in America. Please send us your e-mail address See Internet address.

e-mail address - electronic mail address
 and we will add you to this growing and increasingly effective network. Just email us at public_policy@nrpa.org.

Senior Policy Associate Richard Dolesh and Outreach Coordinator Michael Phillips Michael Phillips may refer to:
  • Michael Phillips (psychiatrist)
  • Michael Phillips (theatre critic)
  • Michael Phillips (rugby player), rugby union
  • Michael Phillips (producer)
  • Michael Phillips (skater), figure skater and icedancer
 are located in NRPA's Public Policy Office in Washington, DC.
COPYRIGHT 2004 National Recreation and Park Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Advocacy Update
Author:Phillips, Michael
Publication:Parks & Recreation
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:940
Previous Article:In Calumet, Ill., fame only costs 37 cents.(Leave It Better Than You Found It;Calumet Memorial Park District Hall of Fame )
Next Article:Parks hit home run with youth.(Tip-Off)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Help From ActiveParks.org.(Brief Article)
Legislation at critical juncture: act now to keep key parks and recreation programs funded.(United States)
NRPA advocacy in action online.(National Recreation and Park Association, online advocacy tool)(Brief Article)
In praise of partnerships: golden opportunities for you and NRPA.(NRPA Perspective)
Meet us in St. Louis! Your guide to the 2003 NRPA National Congress & Exposition.
It's time for legislative action.(NRPA Perspectives)(National Recreation and Park Association lobbies Washington)
LWCF grants: going, going ... gone? A perfect storm of problems could result in decreased funding.(Advocacy Update)(Land and Water Conservation Fund)
Logjam may break on reauthorization of TEA21.(Tip-Off)
Perspectives: anyone can be an advocate: we all share a responsibility to actively participate in the political process.(A MESSAGE FROM NRPA'S...
Passion in advocacy.(From the Editor)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles