INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Category: Canvassing

  • TO KNOCK OR NOT TO KNOCK?

    Contributed by Cindi Sternfeld.

    Canvassing in a Pandemic?  You Betcha!

    What is the big dilemma of a GOTV Warrior like me at the cross section of a pandemic and a presidential election?  TO KNOCK OR NOT TO KNOCK?    

    For the past year, ILNH has been intrigued and excited by the idea of deep canvassing with Changing The Conversation Together (CTC)!  Many of us trained and participated in the CTC deep canvassing program up until March of this year.   

    When the pandemic hit, things changed. Some did phone banking with CTC and had phone calls using these same relationship building strategies.  In-person or on the phone, the conversations are all about talking with voters about who we love and the values we care about, and then bringing home the idea that our president does not match up with those values. Phone calls were alright but as anyone who has canvassed knows, they are a distant second to in-person conversations.  

    As CTC weighed the pros and cons of not canvassing, the organization called on public health and medical experts to determine whether there was a safe way to get back out and talk to people face-to- face. What emerged from that process were CTC protocols for Safety First Canvassing. The guidelines are stringent and helped me to decide to go ahead and get back to door knocking!  I’ve been out twice and have felt safe because of the attention to detail of the folks at CTC.

    In addition to the deep canvassing training components that were in place prior to the pandemic, CTC has added a 90-minute training that digs down into the protocols.  All volunteers are required to participate in a Safety First training before volunteering to go on a canvass. In addition to the training, we are required to have a clear covid test that is administered no more than seven days prior to the event.  Once we complete the test, we must quarantine, take temperature twice daily and commit to mask wearing and social distancing when life requires that we leave home. 

    After the canvas, all volunteers are required to test again, about three days after the canvas.   If volunteers plan to drive together, or if they are driving together to their canvassing turf, they must not sit in the same row of the car.  All cars are limited to two people and asked to drive with masks on and windows open. On top of all of that, on the day of canvass all of the registration areas and materials have been sanitized and are re-sanitized after use. During before and after canvass meetings for training and debriefing, all chairs are arranged six feet apart, with safety monitors equipped with yardsticks, keeping us all separate and honest.    

    The canvassing script  itself is mostly unchanged from pre-covid times, with a few modifications to reflect the Safety First standards. Each canvasser is equipped with vote-by-mail and voter registration applications on clipboards with pens in packets.  Each packet‘s contents have been sanitized and placed in plastic bags, and we have been trained on how to handle these packets before and after the voter has used them. We are also supplied with free masks to give to the voters. All conversations occur outside the home with all participants wearing masks. 

    CTC has focused its work in Philadelphia, and I’ve had several great conversations with voters. My most rewarding conversation was with a woman who was in her 80’s. She answered the door and asked if I was a census worker.  When I said, “no, my name is Cindi. I’m here and talking to voters about Donald Trump.”  She asked me if I was “for or against?”  I bluntly answered, “Against.”  She laughed and said, “Well Cindi,  I guess you must be if you’re here to talk to me during a pandemic! Call me GG!”   

    We laughed and shared our stories.  I told GG about my mom who was a nurse and had always been committed to helping others, even at times when it was inconvenient or difficult, that she even helped a dying neighbor who had been unkind to my family because we are Jewish. GG got weepy as she talked about her parents who were sharecroppers and came to Philadelphia to raise her and her sisters in the North. She talked about their kindness and their loving hearts and that everyone who came into their home felt welcomed and were always well fed.  She talked about her mom’s cookies and her dad’s homemade wine.  She told me that if it were not for Covid, she would invite me in for a cup of tea… and then offered to bring me a cup to enjoy on the front porch while we chatted.  She talked about what it was like to live during the civil rights movement and how sad it was for her to see what is happening to the country now.  I agreed with her when she said, “Trump’s gotta go!”   

    It was such a nice visit that I had to remind myself that I had many more doors to knock. As we ended our visit, GG committed to making sure that every one of her 23 grandkids would vote!   

    One of the final questions on the canvassing script asks about how the voter felt about our safety protocols. She said she felt very safe and she felt respected because I was so concerned about her health. She said she wished her kids and grandkids would be that careful.  GG’s story has been with me in the weeks since I had the privilege of meeting her.    These are conversations like no other and I am grateful for the chance to be a part of them. 

    I guess the best part of the CTC Safety First Canvassing is that everyone at CTC is just as committed to safety as they are to voting Donald Trump out of office!

  • ILNH FYI

    ILNH FYI

    Environmental Art Show to Bring Attention to Climate Crisis

    Do you want to get inspired about the environment? Then check out Love Mother Earth 2020, an environmental art and performance show on Saturday Feb. 29 from 12 – 5 p.m. at Prallsville Mills in Stockton.

    A joint venture between Indivisible and the Sunrise chapters of Hunterdon and Lambertville, the show will feature local artists in any medium, poets and performers whose topics are based around the environment. The exhibit will include traditional visual arts such as drawings, paintings, and sculpture, as well as song, dance, poetry and spoken word.

    More than twenty artists have already committed to the show. More are encouraged to participate. The deadline to submit an application to participate is Feb. 15.

    Volunteers are needed for set up on Friday, Feb. 28, parking during the event, and clean up on Sunday, March 1. If you are available and able to help, please sign up here:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1iNYeW6A45S1A8xmWWTrKjceYMA40Q_p0zYOUccKnM08/edit

    Sunrise Movement is a youth organization to end the climate crisis and advocate for the Green New Deal. The Hunterdon and Lambertville chapters, called hubs, are part of an international organization.

    More information about the exhibit:

    The exhibit is free and open to the public. For more information and to sign up to attend, click here:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/love-mother-earth-2020-tickets-91449025497

    If you are interested in participating as an artist or performer, please apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSepAIBmmcpQa-xTzLidW5Hk6EtKiAb386e5s4ekXCOgOE7lHA/viewform 

    Environmental or youth organizations are invited to have a table at this event.  Please apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5kuZGOxfWyVyIR-ZtmlFRxQelizJHl1p298mPzZD1vE0HLw/viewform

    Did You See This? New York Times Covers Change the Conversation Bucks!

    Several of ILNH’s leadership team were captured and quoted in a recent NYTimes article that covered Change the Conversation Together and a recently held training and canvassing in Bucks County. In To Sway Swing Voters, Try Empathy, by Michael Massing, Cindi Sternfeld is quoted, Susan Shapiro and Elycia Lerman are in the photos. The piece has already heightened interest and attracted more people who want to join the cause. How about you? 

    Meet ILNH’s new co-Treasurer John Woods

    I started hanging around Indivisible LNH about a year and a half ago. I’m a 73 year old retired gay guy who worked in Human Services for many years. After the 2016 election results and what began to emerge, I became really worried about what was happening in our country. Our values as a democracy were under attack by super wealthy white guys who seemed to only care about money and power, no matter what. So I attended a couple of ILNH Community Meetings, got hooked up with a canvassing team before the 2018 elections, canvassed in Hunterdon and Bucks counties. I got involved early with Change the Conversation, a really unique way of connecting with potential voters. I got on the ILNH Slack site and began to be part of planning and feedback around various issues. 

    My experience with ILNH to date has been fantastic. I’ve been part of many kinds of organizations over my lifetime and I have never seen one with such constant, organic-like, communications that are so effective at accomplishing many objectives. I asked if there were other things I could do. The next day I was asked to help as an organization treasurer. Admittedly, I’m a bit overwhelmed at learning the specifics of the job, but feel great to be helping in an important way. Whether you are a joiner, a hermit, an angry citizen, shy, not a people person or whatever. . .there is an important place for you here, where you can make a difference in getting our democracy and values back. 

  • Just the Facts on GOTV effectiveness

     Contributed by Olga Vanucci.

    • Door-to-door canvassing is the most consistently effective method of voter mobilization, and the success of canvassing can be attributed to the personal, face-to-face delivery of the GOTV messages.
    • Personalized messages delivered in a conversational manner over the phone may be as effective as canvassing.
    • Impersonal GOTV methods, such as mass email and robo calls, are chronically ineffective means of mobilizing voters.
    • The manner in which the messages are delivered–personally and conversationally–is more important than the content of the messages themselves.

    Source:  https://isps.yale.edu/node/16698

  • Changing the Conversation Bucks

    Contributed by Deb Kline.

    We know that it’s the undecided or irregular voters that can make or break the next election and put us back on the path of a democracy that’s equitable, inclusive, caring and supportive of all the people. Changing the Conversation Bucks is aimed at having discussions with those voters who may not have voted, may have voted for Trump and regretting their decision, or even those who consider themselves Republicans but don’t like the direction the country is headed under the current administration. 

    These are one-to-one conversations, in which the canvasser flat out asks the voter if they had “five minutes to tell Trump what they think about the job he’s doing for them and those they care about, what would they say?” Canvassers then share a personal story about someone they care about, and subsequently asks the voter if they have a similar story. The goal is to build a relationship in which labels disappear and voters think about whether the current president is really someone who supports them, their loved ones and their values. Check out this video of Cindi Sternfeld sharing her experience from one of the recent trainings and canvassing. 

    Scary? Well, somewhat. But as Eleanor Roosevelt said, “Do something every day that scares you.” We need it for our growth and understanding, and for saving our country. The good news is that there are trainings on a monthly basis through the election. The main focus is flipping Bucks County, although the training is transferable to any location. 

    Check out the Facebook page for Changing the Conversation Bucks here and sign up for notifications of upcoming trainings. 

  • Changing the Conversation Together – Round One in Bucks County

    Contributed by Deb Kline.

    In Doylestown on a very warm, late summer Sunday, close to 50 people participated in the pilot training of Changing the Conversation – Bucks (CTC). CTC offers a new model for canvassing – one based in dialogue, personal stories, active listening and discussion about what’s important to the people who opened the door to CTC canvassers. 

    Adam Barnabel-Fried, director of CTC, and several of his team traveled from Brooklyn to lead and mentor the newbies, supported by more local folks including Cindi Sternfeld and Jennifer Jarrett. Participants spent the morning watching videos and role models, then practicing what to do when a voter’s door opens and to this question: 

    “If President Trump was with us right now and you had two minutes to talk with him, what would you want to say?”

    Encouraged to develop and use personal stories of caring about the people we think of when we pull the lever, participants attempted to elicit responses that broke from the normal canvassing methods and its focus on candidate talking points. 

    In real life, conversing with strangers pulled from the Eagles game or a block party proved to be both challenging and rewarding. Responses to the possibility of speaking with Trump about what’s on their minds were varied and often surprising. Some wanted to tell him to stop Tweeting or that he was doing a good job; others wouldn’t speak to him, or wanted to tell him how awful he was. But, just because someone didn’t like him, didn’t automatically mean they planned to vote Democrat. 

    The day ended with an evaluation session back at the University, covering experiences and next steps. Most participants were excited, despite the challenges of sharing and attempting to elicit personal stories. 

    Undoubtedly, there is more work to do in many areas from training to timing, and especially learning how to have a respectful, caring dialogue with people who think Trump is doing a great job. But it’s a start, and one that’s sorely needed. 

    The next training is scheduled for November after the election. Sign-up capability will be sent out in the near future.