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Join us April 16th!

Join us for the next AHEAD meeting on April 16th from 6-8 p.m. at the Cambridge Center, 418 N. Central Ave. in Lima. We will have our usual potluck, a great speaker on climate change, and planning on Issue 1 and other topics.

Our speaker will be Mike Holm, an Ohio native who attended Al Gore’s Climate Reality Leadership Corps training in Pittsburgh last year. His full bio is posted in the Facebook Event discussion, which can be found here.

Following the potluck and speaker we will have breakouts to plan around Issue 1, the redistricting initiative that will be on the ballot in May. If you have suggestions for ways we can help get the word out and you can’t come to the meeting, please contact AHEAD at ahead.oh@gmail.com or on Facebook. We appreciate all insight!

For more information, please visit the Facebook Event: April 16th AHEAD meeting.

We hope to see you there!

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Who should attend council meetings? We all should!

Why should we attend village, town, or city council meetings? Beth Fenton, a councilor for the Village of Ada, offers her take on how councils operate and how and why citizens can and should get involved.

Beth Fenton: How Citizens Engage with Village Council

As a councilor for the Village of Ada for the past 7 years, I have made numerous observations about citizens’ impressions as to how the Village of Ada is run. (Let me point out that the following observations and opinions are solely mine.)

Even though council meetings are open to the public (except for executive sessions),  residents rarely participate in the process. I don’t know if this is because they think it is pointless (I have heard many people say things such as “it doesn’t matter; council has already made up its mind.”); individuals’ busy schedules, etc. It is frequently my impression that the residents of the Village of Ada feel that they don’t have a voice.

In my opinion, this is simply untrue; all 7 of us (6 councilors & the Mayor) were elected to serve Ada’s residents, not our own interests. Council always welcomes & encourages residents to attend meetings to share their opinions, or just observe, yet this rarely happens. In my experience, most people only attend meetings if there is an issue that directly affects them as an individual, and not for the betterment of the village as a whole.

Nearly every ordinance (there are exceptions) has three readings (councilors’ votes are taken at each of the three readings). This gives the public time to comment. Let’s say, for example, that there is a proposed ordinance, and you read about it in the newspaper/online/or hear it from someone (and, as always, feel free to contact any councilor to clarify any issue(s)). If you don’t like what you’ve heard/read, come to the next council meeting, where there would be a second reading of the proposed ordinance. During the public comments portion of the meeting (which would take place before the second reading), that is your opportunity to speak (ditto for the third reading).

Council has, on several occasions, engaged in very lively discussion as a result. On the third & final reading of a proposed ordinance, for example, I once changed my vote as a result of being persuaded by a different viewpoint that was voiced by a resident who had attended & spoke at the meeting. Had that particular resident not been there, and given a well thought out, compelling argument, my vote would not have changed.

To me, the most valuable meetings are not always the council meetings. I believe that the committee meetings, which are also open to the public, are where things really happen. Ada has the following committees: Streets; Safety; Personnel; Finance; Buildings & Grounds; and Utilities (I am chair of the Utilities Committee). There may, for example, be a Streets Committee meeting scheduled after the regular council meeting adjourns.

The committees meet as a whole; i.e., every councilor participates in each particular committee meeting. To continue the Streets Committee example, let’s say that a new street improvement project is being considered. Council will likely see things such as photos of the street(s) in question, discuss where the money for the project might come from (is any grant money available, for example?), etc.

Committee meetings, are, in my view, the best opportunity to learn about what may or may not happen in the future; they are invaluable to a councilor’s job. The media comes to most committee meetings, yet members of the public rarely attend them. The only occasions where I can recall an individual or a group attending committee meetings are if, once again, a project directly affects their personal interests. If anyone does decide to attend a committee meeting, however, that person or group may or may not be permitted to speak – that is solely up to the chair of that particular committee’s meeting.

I hope that this helps. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me.

–Beth Fenton

Thank you, Beth, for sharing with AHEAD your perspective as a councilor for the Village of Ada. If anyone would like to reach out to Beth, the contact information for every councilor, including the Mayor, can be obtained by calling the Village of Ada at 419-634-4045.

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Don’t forget AHEAD’s 1st birthday this Saturday!

Saturday, February 24, 6-8 pm
AHEAD birthday party
Bluffton Town Hall, 154 N. Main St.

Join us THIS SATURDAY to celebrate AHEAD’s 1st birthday! It will be a lovely evening with music, potluck AND cake, a silent auction, slideshow, and presentations (details below).

Facebook event link here.

Special musical guests will include the Resistance Singers!

Special guest presentations at the birthday party will include:

  • Tina Ward-Pugh, 2016 Hillary campaign organizer for Allen and Hardin counties.
  • Bluffton University professor Perry Bush, who will speak about the impact that groups like AHEAD are having nationally.

Silent auction items still needed: please email ahead.oh@gmail.com for donation details if you have an auction item you would like to donate.

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Save the date for AHEAD’s 1st birthday party!

Saturday, February 24, 6-8 pm: AHEAD birthday party (Bluffton)

AHEAD is a year old! Special guests at the birthday party will include:

  • Tina Ward-Pugh, 2016 Hillary campaign organizer for Allen and Hardin counties.
  • Bluffton University professor Perry Bush, who will speak about the impact that groups like AHEAD are having nationally. 

We’ll also have a slideshow, our usual potluck WITH CAKE, and other merriment.

Location: Bluffton Town Hall, 154 N. Main St. Facebook event link here.

 

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AHEAD 2017 Reflections, part 2

Lisa’s reflections on her experiences during AHEAD’s first year, included below, are from the outside in. Sometimes wearing the clothes that are specific to a cause can make that cause all the more real, and your impact all the more powerful, internally and externally!

I was thinking today as I was making my sign for our Women’s March about what has changed for me over the last year since AHEAD was founded.

I was thinking of how my clothes have changed! I am now the proud possessor of:

  • thermal boots, purchased for winter protests. Their first use was at our protest of the ACA repeal in January 2016 in Bluffton.
  • winter and summer pussy hats. The winter hat was knitted on Amtrak as I traveled to the DC Women’s March–in a train packed with bobbing pink pussy hats in every shape, size, trim, and shade. Hurray!
  • my AHEAD T-shirt and button, of course. I carry the button in my purse so I am ready if I have to go from work directly to an event. I wear both proudly and I am so proud of us being so active–I realize every time I put the button or T-shirt on how active we are!
  • an Indivisible T-shirt in 100% cotton for summer protests. Also evenings at home–it’s so comfy!
  • These aren’t clothes, but I now have a supply of pasteboard and colored pens at home for making protest signs. Last summer I just kept a sign that said “Portman to 700,000 Ohioans: No Health Care for you!” in my car all summer just in case!

I have developed a new possible career path: political forum moderator. Have done three this year–Jim Jordan’s Town Hall, Janet Garrett’s candidate Forum, and Bluffton Village Council forum.

Most important reflections: 1) I always felt so alone and isolated as a liberal in this area–but I have learned there are way more of us than I thought and that we are determined; 2) I have gotten to know a whole, new, wonderful group of people in Western Ohio House Districts 4 and 5 that I love socializing with and working with and who I think are beautiful people; 3) how beautiful it is to see individuals who are passionate about one piece of the fight–an anti-racism protest, an organized set of social events, candidate forums, Fair Districts petitions, a run for office, etc.–take leadership and then the group pitches in.

We are on the move in 2018 and we’re not going to stop until our country has chosen a better way!

What have you learned in the last year of activism? Please share your thoughts – write to ahead.oh@gmail.com.

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The Importance of Redistricting

We live in a democracy, right? One person, one vote?

Not quite. Ohio sends 16 representatives to the U.S. Congress. Each representative is elected by Ohioans living in one of 12 areas, or districts. But the lines of these districts are drawn in ways that include or keep out certain voters.

The result: each district will always tilt toward one political party, choosing representatives of that party, time after time. As a result, it’s harder for a representative to lose a race – and they have less incentive to listen to the people who are in their district.

Ohio redraws district lines every 10 years, and we have a once-in-a-decade chance to draw the districts in a way that lets every vote count, and every voice be heard. There are two very different plans in play.

The Fair Districts Fair Elections plan, led by the League of Women Voters, would be a big step forward for democracy. A bipartisan commission would draw the district lines, and would be required to keep communities together.

The other plan would still result in strangely shaped, tilted districts. The Ohio Statehouse is likely to support this second version – even though most citizens don’t.

If you care about democracy, contact the the Ohio Statehouse, and tell them to support the Fair Districts Fair Elections plan. Make your vote count!

Here are the Senators deciding what plan to put forward:

  • Chairman Bill Coley – (614) 466-8072
  • Vice Chair Joe Uecker  (614) 466-8082
  • Senator Kevin Bacon – (614) 466-8064
  • Senator Troy Balderson – (614) 466-8076
  • Senator Bob Peterson – (614) 466-8156
  • Senator Kris Jordan – (614) 466-8086
  • Senator Frank LaRose – (614) 466-4823
  • Senator Matt Huffman – (614) 466-7584
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AHEAD 2017 Reflections, part 1

Beth’s reflections on her experiences during AHEAD’s first year, included below, remind us that we shouldn’t give up when our efforts aren’t 100% successful, and that we need to always take care of ourselves as we continue along this long road of repairing our country. Thank you for the wonderful insights, Beth!

Calling our Senators and Members of Congress does make a difference—though not every time. We have to keep at it, for those times when it does work. Even if we can’t change their votes, we can make them nervous.

Making change is a marathon, not a sprint.  Conserve energy for the long run. No one human being has the time, energy, or sanity to do everything. Choose one or two issues you care most about, and focus on calls, letters, and other activism concerning those issues. Don’t feel guilty that you can’t do it all. Take a break when you need to, so you can jump back in when you can.

There’s more, but I’m taking my own advice and not being exhaustive.

What have you learned in the last year of activism? Please share your thoughts – write to ahead.oh@gmail.com.

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Martin Luther King Day Event and Upcoming Dialogues

Above is one of the slides from January’s event in Kenton.

In January, AHEAD members participated in wonderful Martin Luther King Jr. Day event in Kenton, led by Payne Chapel A.M.E. Church, on the theme of voter rights. We enjoyed wonderful speakers, including Rev. Randall Forester encouraging social justice action by the religious community. “A church should be a thermostat, not a thermometer,” he said. The event also featured discussion and song.

Check out the event video and Kenton Times article.

And, stay tuned for the “Dr. King Dialogues,” building on this event. These dialogues will let our community discuss issues related to race, opportunity, and the America we all want to see. The first will be March 13, 2018, at Payne Chapel in Kenton. Contact ahead.oh@gmail.com for more info.

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Mark your calendars for the January 16th AHEAD meeting!

Don’t forget to earmark Tuesday, January 16th from 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. for the next AHEAD meeting. This month the meeting will be held at Somewhere, 804 W. North St., in Lima.

Our educational speaker will be Kim Butler of PFLAG Lima. PFLAG supports families, allies, and people who are LGBTQ.

We’ll also have a potluck and discussion of AHEAD plans and priorities for 2018. Bring your ideas! Facebook event page for January’s meeting: AHEAD at Somewhere

We hope to see you there; you couldn’t possibly have SOMEWHERE better to be that Tuesday evening!

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Don’t forget to RSVP for the Monday, Dec. 4th AHEAD meeting!

This Monday, December 4th, the monthly AHEAD meeting will be held at Lima’s IBEW Hall (1975 N West St). Please note that the meeting location has been moved to this larger facility. The meeting will include a training session with Sherrod Brown’s campaign staff and Lima Mayor Dave Berger will kick off the event.

Sherrod’s campaign staff will teach us “the most convincing messages about Sherrod and the 2018 Senate race, to strengthen your grassroots activism and mobilize voters and activists alike.” We will also plan specific activities on behalf of Sherrod Brown.

The meeting will include our usual potluck.

RSVP for the AHEAD December 4th meeting and Sherrod Brown training by following this link:
RSVP for Grassroots Training: Building a Powerful and Persuasive Message

Please RSVP using the link above so that organizers know how many will be attending the training, and spread the word!