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Organize Now. Don’t
wait for a crisis. Develop a membership base and communication
system now so that you are
prepared when an advocacy crisis looms. Collect names, addresses,
phone numbers and e-mail addresses of other people who care
about preservation in your area. Get together on a regular
basis to share
ideas.
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Focus on One Key
Project. Select one preservation
project to tackle and focus your limited resources on achieving
that
goal.
Select a high-visibility project that will have a big
impact on the community and will help motivate people to join
your
efforts.
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Get the Facts. Don’t
rely on rumors. Research local ordinances and talk to local
officials.
Find out who makes the decisions and
what the process is for making decisions.
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Learn
Your Political Landscape and Establish Relationships With
Decision Makers. Find out not only who the local
decision makers
are but also who their constituents are. Understand
which constituents would support your position
on your issue
and seek them out. Visit
with elected officials and decision makers before
the issue heats up. Getting to know people face
to face will
help you when the
going gets rough.
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Invite Elected
Officials and Community Leaders to Address Your Group. Invite
local officials to your meetings,
allow them to address
your group and participate in the public
ceremony. Use events as opportunities to educate local
officials about
your group and its
objectives. Ask for their viewpoints on preservation
issues. Make sure they know how many voters
your group represents, and keep
them informed of your activities by making
sure they are on your mailing list. Follow-up with
a positive
thank you letter to let
them know how much you appreciate their efforts.
Thank them for a job well done.
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Have a
Simple Message. Craft a clear, simple message
about your preservation issue
and how
it benefits
the local community. Write
it down, publish it and train your members
to communicate a consistent message every
time they
speak with someone.
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Communicate Your
Message. No one will know about your efforts
unless you publicize
them.
Write letters
to the
editor, send press
releases on activities, meetings
and events, post flyers and newsletters at
local businesses,
churches
and other
gathering spots. If you
can raise the money to do so, mail
a letter directly to the residents who
are affected
by the preservation
issue.
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Be Respectful
and Develop a Responsible Reputation. Ranting and
raving will not save buildings or
neighborhoods. Your patience,
cooperation and tenacity will
demonstrate that you are an organization that
deserves respect
and carries
weight
with voters.
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Volunteer for
Political Campaigns. Once you have determined
which candidates support
your
preservation
issue, don’t be
afraid to endorse them by
helping them get elected
(unless you
are a 501 (c) (3)). Go door-to-door,
stuff envelopes, work the
phones, go the polls on Election
Day. If they are elected,
they will remember who helped
them
get there.
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Learn From
the Process. If
you try your best and
are unsuccessful
on your
specific
preservation
project,
take what you have learned
and apply it to the next
issue. You
can lose a battle, but
still win the war.
Work with
elected officials
and other community leaders
to take a proactive approach
to preservation and anticipate
future problems. It
is much easier to
work on solutions
before situations
reach the crisis stage.
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Be a Part of
the Preservation Community. Network
with preservationists in other
communities. Learn
from their successes
and
challenges. Join
the Cleveland Restoration
Society, the
leading preservation
organization in Northeast
Ohio. Through
its Preservation
Resource Center,
CRS has
been helping
bring
together
local organizations
and private citizens
to preserve our shared
heritage.