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Planting Seeds.


A Many-Headed Student Group Gets Out the Green Vote

In recent years, young voters have deafened deaf·en  
v. deaf·ened, deaf·en·ing, deaf·ens

v.tr.
1. To make deaf, especially momentarily by a loud noise.

2. To make soundproof.

v.intr.
 pollsters with their silence, heralding the arrival of what could be seen as a new silent majority for our time. In the 1994 congressional elections, only 15 percent of eligible young people voted.

The Center for Environmental Citizenship (CEC (Central Electronic Complex) The set of hardware that defines a mainframe, which includes the CPU(s), memory, channels, controllers and power supplies included in the box. Some CECs, such as IBM's Multiprise 2000 and 3000, include data storage devices as well. ) is using a green message to try and turn that apathy apathy /ap·a·thy/ (ap´ah-the) lack of feeling or emotion; indifference.apathet´ic

ap·a·thy
n.
Lack of interest, concern, or emotion; indifference.
 around. The small nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive.

Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law.
 group is an expanding resource, teaching young people to become environmental and political leaders on their campuses and in their communities. "Once you turn people out at the polls," says Rani ra·ni also ra·nee  
n. pl. ra·nis also ra·nees
1. The wife of a rajah.

2. A princess or queen in India or the East Indies.
 Corey, field director of CEC's Campus Green Vote, "politicians will listen."

CEC was started in 1992 by Brian Trelstad upon his graduation from Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College


Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
. While at school, he had worked with various environmental organizations on local Earth Day events, but noticed that none of the groups were targeting 18- to 24-year-olds, or environmental issues in campaigns. "I felt we could bring the students' interest in the environment to bear on the presidential election of 1992," says Trelstad. "Many of us were unhappy with Bush's record on environmental issues."

Trelstad and student partner Chris Fox spent the election season urging young people to "Vote Green!" The result was the largest national youth turnout since 18-year-olds were enfranchised en·fran·chise  
tr.v. en·fran·chised, en·fran·chis·ing, en·fran·chis·es
1. To bestow a franchise on.

2. To endow with the rights of citizenship, especially the right to vote.

3.
 in 1972. The Center for Environmental Citizenship was established soon after because, Trelstad says, "I thought it would make sense to have the group focus on environmental citizenship, not just political participation."

That initial idea has evolved into CEC's Campus Green Vote program. While several organizations focus on just getting them to the polls, "We do a lot of work to give young people the skills they need to hold their elected officials accountable, and make sure they're actually out there working to protect the environment," says Corey.

The results have been significant. During the 1998 election, so many University of Washington students turned up to vote that two polling stations ran out of ballots. At St. Mary's College in Maryland, Campus Green Vote activists used a skit to educate voters, and offered free rides to the polls, getting 80 percent of the students they registered to vote.

"We focus on students and campuses to maximize our resources," explains CEC Executive Director Susan Comfort, "but we also do other programs for high school kids, and for young people who aren't students." For instance, CEC otters Summer Training Academies, which are four-day, low-cost programs held across the U.S. The idea is to teach young people political skills for effective environmental activism, on either "campus" or "community" tracks. "Some people say they learned more in four days than they did in four years of school," says Corey.

In response to past participants' feedback, the workshops try to focus on regional issues. CEC also keeps students together according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 their home or school's region, so they can form a support network of area activists. "We try to teach what it means to be a citizen--and an environmental citizen," says Comfort. "Citizenship doesn't begin and end at the voting booth."

To extend its reach, CEC also offers EarthNet, which began in 1993 as a project to teach environmental groups how to maximize Internet resources. "For a movement that's short on resources and long on problems, the Internet is an ideal organizing tool. Its a cheap, quick way to communicate? says Comfort. The largest listserve of its kind, EarthNet updates over 5,000 subscribers on environmental issues in Congress, conference information, grassroots efforts and job announcements. A recent brief in the "Shadow Congress" section alerted readers to a pending Senate vote on logging subsidies, while the "Corporate Corner" gave an update on the Bureau of Land Management's consideration of further exploratory oil drilling inside the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument: see National Parks and Monuments (table). .

Yet another CEC project, the National Environmental Wire for Students (NEWS), was launched after a study revealed that 95 percent of college students read their campus newspaper at least once a week. NEWS taps into that readership by offering campus newspaper editors free environmental bulletins. During the school year, NEWS e-mails and posts current articles on its website daily, and follows up with calls to offer additional information to editors. In addition to regional and national environmental updates, features are campus-focused, covering such topics as the toxic impact of class ring production and revelations about university investments.

Last June, the NEWS division sponsored the Environmental Journalism Environmental journalism is the collection, verification, production, distribution and exhibition of information regarding current events, trends, issues and people that are associated with the non-human world with which humans necessarily interact.  Academy (EJA EJA Elder Justice Act
EJA East Journal on Approximations
EJA Ergonomic Job Analysis
EJA Environmental Justice Alliance
) to teach almost 100 aspiring student journalists from across the U.S. about environmental issues. Speakers during the six-day program included environmental journalists and editors from The Washington Post, National Public Radio, Navajo Times, and High Country News. Workshops covered interviewing, finding and pitching a story, job searching, and the differences between reporting and activism. A mid-week field-trip to see an inner-city youth group's efforts to dean up Washington's Anacostia River The Anacostia River is a river that flows about 8.4 mi (13.5 km) from Prince George's County in Maryland, USA and through Washington, D.C. where it joins with the Washington Channel to empty into the Potomac River at Hains Point.  put the EJA participants in the middle of a breaking story.

In the works for the 2000 political season are pre-primary conferences, forums for candidates and a new publication written by and for student activists. During primaries, an electric vehicle dubbed dub 1  
tr.v. dubbed, dub·bing, dubs
1. To tap lightly on the shoulder by way of conferring knighthood.

2. To honor with a new title or description.

3.
 the "Clean Green Voting Machine voting machine, instrument for recording and counting votes. The voting machine itself is generally positioned in a booth, often closed off by a curtain to assure secrecy for the voter. " will travel the coasts to register voters and literally drive them to the polls. And this August will mark the launch of the Eco-Campaign School, in which 20 young people will be trained to work on environmental ballot initiatives and then placed on campaigns across the country.

"2000 is a big year for us and for the entire environmental community," says Corey. "It's a chance for us to get issues out there in the media in a way that people can get excited about." The group's members are hoping to influence the debate with a green message that will trickle down Trickle down

An economic theory that the support of businesses that allows them to flourish will eventually benefit middle- and lower-income people, in the form of increased economic activity and reduced unemployment.
 to local races. Joining Campus Green Vote is an impressive coalition of such like-minded groups as the League of Conservation Voters The League of Conservation Voters (LCV) is an independent, nonpartisan political advocacy organization that was founded in 1969 by the noted American environmentalist David Brower. , the Youth Vote Coalition, Rock the Vote and the Public Interest Research Group.

CEC is still run by an executive director and staff who are under 30, a rarity even among nonprofits. And the group's own board is balanced with input from a student advisory board. "CEC will continue to have a focus on students, so our work will never be done," says Comfort. "Every fall there is a new class of freshmen, and every spring more graduate. We try to focus with our programs on change, and hope our little bits of change will have a ripple effect ripple effect Epidemiology See Signal event. ." CONTACT: Center for Environmental Citizenship, 1611 Connecticut Avenue NW, #3-B, Washington, DC 20009/(202)234-5990/ www.envirocitizen.org.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Center for Environmental Citizenship Campus Green Vote program
Author:O'Neil, Kathleen
Publication:E
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 1999
Words:1097
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