Tag Archives: local blogs

Why Blogging Local Government Matters

It’s Wednesday morning, and I have packed my bags for a long flight to Pittsburgh to attend Netroots Nation.  It will be my third year going as a blogger from Beyond Chron – but my first as a speaker.  Evan Coren, who parlayed his blog activism to win a seat on the City Council in Columbia, Maryland has recruited me for a panel discussion on Friday afternoon called Local Blogs: Covering City and County Government and Empowering Activism.  We will be joined by panelists from Philadelphia, Chicago and New Orleans – for a superb line-up of bloggers who play a key role in their local governments.  The following is my story about covering San Francisco politics …

Local government has a bigger impact on our lives than most of us realize.  As one local candidate for public office once said, “local government can make the difference between an unmitigated disaster – and just a regular disaster.”  The big decisions are made at the federal and state level, but local government is where the rubber hits the road – where we make decisions like allocating stimulus money, or blunt the damage of draconian budget cuts that come from the top.  It’s where zoning laws can make a crucial difference in what gets built in your community.  Local politicians are far more accessible – and a small but vocal group of citizens can show up at City Hall and have enormous power.

Bloggers play a crucial role – not only to mobilize community activists around a common issue, but to spread information about what goes on in local government.  As newspapers cut back on their staff and cover local municipal meetings with less and less frequency, often the only way people can learn about a critical hearing in their neighborhood is through a blog.  And it’s the reason why we started Beyond Chron for San Francisco.

Beyond Chron is unusual for most liberal blogs, in that we are published by a local non-profit organization – the Tenderloin Housing Clinic – that has incorporated it into the type of work that we do.  It allows me to get paid for what I write, which is a huge advantage relative to most blogs that are 100% volunteer operated.

The Tenderloin Housing Clinic – and its Executive Director, Randy Shaw – has played a key role in San Francisco for 29 years.  Founded to give free legal advice to low-income tenants in the City’s most impoverished Downtown neighborhood, we have expanded our mission to provide money management services for clients on government assistance, manage fifteen residential hotels that serve as the main housing referral for the City’s homeless, and community organizing to improve the life of Tenderloin residents.  Randy has written three books – The Activist’s Handbook, Renewing America and the recent Beyond the Fields, which chronicles the legacy of Cesar Chavez.

The San Francisco Chronicle has long been the bane of progressive activists in the City – and we have often made fun of it.  But because it’s the Bay Area only “paper of record,” whatever makes it in the Chronicle dominates news coverage for the next few days – to the detriment of tenant activists.  It became most apparent in the 2003 Mayoral election, when the Chronicle’s coverage of the Newsom-Gonzalez race was akin to how Fox News covered the Bush-Kerry race.  We had to fight back, and in April 2004 started Beyond Chron.  We are now one of the top local San Francisco blogs.

I was in law school when Randy started Beyond Chron, but had worked as a community organizer at the Tenderloin Housing Clinic from 2000 to 2003.  When I graduated from law school in 2006, I joined Beyond Chron as the Managing Editor – where I have been working ever since (despite having passed the California Bar Exam on the first try!)

Most recently, I have done extensive work at Beyond Chron analyzing the San Francisco budget.  In these tough times, every city government is going through painful budget cuts – but in San Francisco we have been hit by California’s budget crisis (Netroots Nation will also have a panel discussion Saturday on the state budget.)  Moreover, non-profits like the Tenderloin Housing Clinic are always a “political football” during budget season between the Mayor and the Board of Supervisors – so we fully expected to see drastic cuts from Gavin Newsom.

Add the fact that we have a dysfunctional city government culture – where the Mayor refuses to engage the Board of Supervisors, Gavin Newsom is running for Governor and is preparing every move with an eye on the statewide electorate – and we have a genuine recipe for disaster.

On June 1st, Newsom released his budget proposal for the 2009-2010 fiscal year – which the Supervisors then have a month to scrutinize and offer amendments.  In typical Newsom fashion, he spent an hour going through details – in a wonkish sounding presentation that sounds very impressive for those unaware of the context.  His budget would have no tax increases, no layoffs of police and firefighters and only $43 million in Health Department cuts (as opposed to the much higher numbers we were afraid of.)  And besides, said Newsom, he cut 28% out of the Mayor’s Office.

It sounded too good to be true, because it was.  Not laying off police or firefighters sells well to Southern California voters – but meanwhile the City has a $500 million deficit.  After his speech in front of a packed press conference, most reporters simply turned to members of the Board of Supervisors and got a quote or two reacting to the Mayor’s speech.  I didn’t see the point, because the Supervisors didn’t know anything more than we did.  So I picked up the Mayor’s budget, and tried something revolutionary – I read it.

Newsom wasn’t cutting $43 million out of Public Health – it was over $100 million.  And the Mayor’s Office was actually getting a 60% increase in funding, although most of that was from federal grant money that the office would dole out.  He was downsizing his staff – but only by 8%, and those positions were just being re-allocated to other City agencies.  In other words, the Mayor lied – and had the nerve to think he could get away with it.  And he almost did, since no one else in the media bothered to read the budget.

I like to tell this story, because it shows how easy it is for bloggers willing to put in the hard work to break a significant story at the local level – because the traditional media has abdicated its responsibility.  Over the next several weeks, I attended numerous Budget Committee hearings at City Hall – and pored over the Budget Analyst’s reports on City departments.  Beyond Chron became one of the “go-to” websites for those wanting to follow the San Francisco budget, and I am proud of the work we put into that effort.

A month later, an unprecedented $43.7 million in crucial programs that serve the City’s poor were saved by the Board of Supervisors – thanks to the hard work of community organizers to fight cuts in health & human services.  But the process was deeply flawed; much of the Mayor’s pet projects remain, and the Fire Department – despite getting a $6 million cut – is still bloated and top-heavy.  And now that we got more bad news from the state budget, San Francisco has to make $18 million in mid-year cuts – with probably more down the line.

It’s why we still need local political blogs … and why the work you do to cover City Hall in your own community is crucial, and can have a decisive impact in peoples’ lives.

Please join us on Friday at 1:30 p.m. in Room 315/316 at the Convention Center – soon after the Arlen Specter-Joe Sestak debate.  If you want to send a question for the panel on Twitter before or during the panel, please use the hash-tags #nnlocal or #nn09.  If you cannot attend, a video of our panel will be archived at http://www.netrootsnation.org/video.

Paul Hogarth is a lawyer and community organizer at the Tenderloin Housing Clinic, a non-profit in San Francisco that also publishes Beyond Chron – voted the Bay Area’s “Best Local Website” in 2008. Paul is Beyond Chron’s Managing Editor, where he covers City Hall, affordable housing, and marriage equality. He is a former elected member of the Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, and almost filed to run for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors this year. Paul has appeared on CNN’s “Blogger Bunch” to discuss Prop 8, and is a frequent guest on Bay Area radio shows about local politics.

Local government has a bigger impact on our lives than most of us realize.  As one local candidate for public office once said, “local government can make the difference between an unmitigated disaster – and just a regular disaster.”  The big decisions are made at the federal and state level, but local government is where the rubber hits the road – where we make decisions like allocating stimulus money, or blunt the damage of draconian budget cuts that come from the top.  It’s where zoning laws can make a crucial difference in what gets built in your community.  Local politicians are far more accessible – and a small but vocal group of citizens can show up at City Hall and have enormous power.

Bloggers play a crucial role – not only to mobilize community activists around a common issue, but to spread information about what goes on in local government.  As newspapers cut back on their staff and cover local municipal meetings with less and less frequency, often the only way people can learn about a critical hearing in their neighborhood is through a blog.  And it’s the reason why we started Beyond Chron for San Francisco.

Beyond Chron is unusual for most liberal blogs, in that we are published by a local non-profit organization – the Tenderloin Housing Clinic – that has incorporated it into the type of work that we do.  It allows me to get paid for what I write, which is a huge advantage relative to most blogs that are 100% volunteer operated.

The Tenderloin Housing Clinic – and its Executive Director, Randy Shaw – has played a key role in San Francisco for 29 years.  Founded to give free legal advice to low-income tenants in the City’s most impoverished Downtown neighborhood, we have expanded our mission to provide money management services for clients on government assistance, manage fifteen residential hotels that serve as the main housing referral for the City’s homeless, and community organizing to improve the life of Tenderloin residents.  Randy has written three books – The Activist’s Handbook, Renewing America and the recent Beyond the Fields, which chronicles the legacy of Cesar Chavez.

The San Francisco Chronicle has long been the bane of progressive activists in the City – and we have often made fun of it.  But because it’s the Bay Area only “paper of record,” whatever makes it in the Chronicle dominates news coverage for the next few days – to the detriment of tenant activists.  It became most apparent in the 2003 Mayoral election, when the Chronicle’s coverage of the Newsom-Gonzalez race was akin to how Fox News covered the Bush-Kerry race.  We had to fight back, and in April 2004 started Beyond Chron.  We are now one of the top local San Francisco blogs.

I was in law school when Randy started Beyond Chron, but had worked as a community organizer at the Tenderloin Housing Clinic from 2000 to 2003.  When I graduated from law school in 2006, I joined Beyond Chron as the Managing Editor – where I have been working ever since (despite having passed the California Bar Exam on the first try!)

Most recently, I have done extensive work at Beyond Chron analyzing the San Francisco budget.  In these tough times, every city government is going through painful budget cuts – but in San Francisco we have been hit by California’s budget crisis (Netroots Nation will also have a panel discussion Saturday on the state budget.)  Moreover, non-profits like the Tenderloin Housing Clinic are always a “political football” during budget season between the Mayor and the Board of Supervisors – so we fully expected to see drastic cuts from Gavin Newsom.

Add the fact that we have a dysfunctional city government culture – where the Mayor refuses to engage the Board of Supervisors, Gavin Newsom is running for Governor and is preparing every move with an eye on the statewide electorate – and we have a genuine recipe for disaster.

On June 1st, Newsom released his budget proposal for the 2009-2010 fiscal year – which the Supervisors then have a month to scrutinize and offer amendments.  In typical Newsom fashion, he spent an hour going through details – in a wonkish sounding presentation that sounds very impressive for those unaware of the context.  His budget would have no tax increases, no layoffs of police and firefighters and only $43 million in Health Department cuts (as opposed to the much higher numbers we were afraid of.)  And besides, said Newsom, he cut 28% out of the Mayor’s Office.

It sounded too good to be true, because it was.  Not laying off police or firefighters sells well to Southern California voters – but meanwhile the City has a $500 million deficit.  After his speech in front of a packed press conference, most reporters simply turned to members of the Board of Supervisors and got a quote or two reacting to the Mayor’s speech.  I didn’t see the point, because the Supervisors didn’t know anything more than we did.  So I picked up the Mayor’s budget, and tried something revolutionary – I read it.

Newsom wasn’t cutting $43 million out of Public Health – it was over $100 million.  And the Mayor’s Office was actually getting a 60% increase in funding, although most of that was from federal grant money that the office would dole out.  He was downsizing his staff – but only by 8%, and those positions were just being re-allocated to other City agencies.  In other words, the Mayor lied – and had the nerve to think he could get away with it.  And he almost did, since no one else in the media bothered to read the budget.

I like to tell this story, because it shows how easy it is for bloggers willing to put in the hard work to break a significant story at the local level – because the traditional media has abdicated its responsibility.  Over the next several weeks, I attended numerous Budget Committee hearings at City Hall – and pored over the Budget Analyst’s reports on City departments.  Beyond Chron became one of the “go-to” websites for those wanting to follow the San Francisco budget, and I am proud of the work we put into that effort.

A month later, an unprecedented $43.7 million in crucial programs that serve the City’s poor were saved by the Board of Supervisors – thanks to the hard work of community organizers to fight cuts in health & human services.  But the process was deeply flawed; much of the Mayor’s pet projects remain, and the Fire Department – despite getting a $6 million cut – is still bloated and top-heavy.  And now that we got more bad news from the state budget, San Francisco has to make $18 million in mid-year cuts – with probably more down the line.

It’s why we still need local political blogs … and why the work you do to cover City Hall in your own community is crucial, and can have a decisive impact in peoples’ lives.

Please join us on Friday at 1:30 p.m. in Room 315/316 at the Convention Center – soon after the Arlen Specter-Joe Sestak debate.  If you want to send a question for the panel on Twitter before or during the panel, please use the hash-tags #nnlocal or #nn09.  If you cannot attend, a video of our panel will be archived at http://www.netrootsnation.org/video.

Paul Hogarth is a lawyer and community organizer at the Tenderloin Housing Clinic, a non-profit in San Francisco that also publishes Beyond Chron – voted the Bay Area’s “Best Local Website” in 2008. Paul is Beyond Chron’s Managing Editor, where he covers City Hall, affordable housing, and marriage equality. He is a former elected member of the Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, and almost filed to run for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors this year. Paul has appeared on CNN’s “Blogger Bunch” to discuss Prop 8, and is a frequent guest on Bay Area radio shows about local politics.

a challenge to the netroots

(An interesting essay, and an important challenge. – promoted by SFBrianCL)

At some point early last fall I got an email from a Berkeley grad inviting me to a Drinking Liberally event here in Oakland.

I went.  I drank.  I was liberal.  And, in the process, I met Matt.  

Matt and I rapped a bit and, as things go in the East Bay, subsequently hung out some more and had some interesting discussions about blogging and local politics.  I told Matt about how I had recently worked with this interesting Oakland progressive political activist, Joshua Grossman, who had some really vital ideas about local blogs and targeting for the 2006 Congressional races.  

Matt and I, inspired by some of Joshua’s thinking, discussed the incredibly underused power of local blogs, we talked about how blogging might impact the 2006 Congressional races.  Par for the course, eh?   Well, then something really interesting happened…

Matt went and did something about it.

Matt just didn’t found a blog.  That would have been simple enough.  People do that every .0005 seconds it seems.

Matt started a blog with the sole purpose of defeating Congressman Richard Pombo in California’s 11th Congressional District.  More than that, Matt got others involved, as well: folks like babaloo, VPO and Delta who volunteered to write and to attend events.  The blog these activist bloggers collaborated on, SayNotoPombo, has become, in my mind, a model for the interaction between netroots and grassroots activism on the local scale.

The folks behind SayNotoPombo went to political meetings…and then wrote about those meetings online. That’s sunshine. The folks behind SayNotoPombo got to know the writers in the local press, and then covered their coverage of the race in CA-11.  That’s accountability.  Matt and his colleagues created a website that became a “must visit” for everyone who cares about the outcome of one of the most important Congressional races facing our nation.  SayNotoPombo raises money and awareness about Democrat Jerry McNerney’s run to defeat Congressman Richard Pombo in an innovative way that just didn’t happen in 2004.

And that’s my challenge to the netroots today.

You see, CA-11 is just one of many, many local races that deserve this kind of coverage…this level of netroots involvement. SayNotoPombo has shown that one can have a big impact in a very short period of time.  It’s not too late to do the same thing with a Congressional or local race near you.

In fact, there’s never been a better time to start or join a local political blog.

Now, you may ask, what’s the ulterior motive here? What’s the catch?  What’s the downside?

Let me be honest and straight up.

When I left the Front Page of dailyKos and took the proverbial step of “doing my own thing“…I learned some hard lessons about blogging.  

It’s not the same out there on the wild, wild internet.  The number of readers you get on your little blogspot blog (or wordpress, or drupal, or typepad)…pales in comparison to the attention you can get here or the other big community blogs.  If you are looking for splash and the “thrill” of instant comments and recognition, if you’re looking for an “ego boost” or a hot discussion about what we all just saw on national TV…well, don’t get involved with local blogging.

On the other hand, if you are looking to make an impact, if you are looking to build something that has a cumulative effect on your community, if you want to write where the netroots rubber hits the road: then I would argue building or contributing to a local blog like SayNotoPombo is the most significant thing you can do.

In fact, I would go further.  I would say that if you believe that the time frame between this election cycle and November 2008 represents the moment when the netroots will play a crucial role in “Taking our Country Back” and “Crashing the Gates” then it behooves you to, in addition to participating here and your other favorite national blogs, get involved in local blogging.  If you can’t found a blog…then help with one that already exists.  (And there are so many exciting blogs out there begging for input.)

If you don’t live in a district with a contested race where a progressive is fighting to take our country back, then find one close to you and pitch in.  This is our chance to up our leverage; to make netroots mean something more than the outrage of the day.

Let me make this clear.  I’m a writer, not a politico. I’m best at expressing ideas in a way that get’s people exited and energized. My forte is getting people to see things in a way they might not have seen things before. But all that being said…in the course of working on my own small blog, in the course of working and discussing the 2006 elections with folks like Joshua Grossman and Matt, and in the course of doing a recent project on Progressive Electoral Politics on Booman Tribune one thing has become crystal clear to me:

We need to increase the leverage of local blogs. We need to make it so that when folks in the press say the “netroots” they mean local bloggers just as much as they mean the national blogs that get most of the attention.

There are so many good candidates who aren’t getting the focus they deserve. There are so many GOP villains out there who are getting away with a easy road to reelection simply because the netroots are so busy hyping the national outrage of the day that we simply cannot give Deborah Pryce or Elton Gallegly or Robin Hayes the attention they deserve.

If you ask me, that’s a crying shame.   And that’s where local blogs come in.  When neighbors criticize a candidate, when we talk to each other and organize…that’s when the powers that be get nervous.

I’m going to ask each of you to do me a favor tonight. Pick a GOP incumbent or a progressive candidate from your region on the list below (selected for their “B-list” yet winnable status) and click on the “google blog search” that I’ve hotlinked to.

Make this race and the local blogs covering it “yours”. Adopt it. Take it on. Follow the stories and issues that surround your race or candidate or blog. Put the local blogs that cover it in your favorites bar. Write about them here on Calitics. Or, if you think you can do better, then by all means, start a local blog of your own. Better yet, get some activist friends to join you like Matt did. (And if you have a blog or race or candidate who’s more important…by all means…list it in the comments below.)

I know this sounds goofy, but I’m convinced that it’s only when the online energy of the netroots links up with the offline activism expressed in local blogs that we will truly start to turn the tide.  2006 is when netroots must link up with grassroots.  The Lamont campaign was a great example of that.  As SteveinMI pointed out last night, there’s so much more work to do.

It’s not too late.  All I’m asking you to do is click…and then get involved at the level you can.

::

Western Region:

  • Heather Wilson (GOP Incumbent, NM-01, opposed by Democrat Patricia Madrid)
  • David Reichert (GOP Incumbent, WA-08, opposed by Democrat Darcy Burner)
  • Jon Porter (GOP Incumbent in NV-03)
  • Jack Carter (Dem, US Senate, NV)
  • JD Hayworth (GOP Incumbent, AZ-05)
  • Ed Perlmutter (Democratic Candidate CO-07 Open Seat)
  • Elton Gallegly (GOP Incumbent, CA-24)
  • Debra Bowen (Democratic Candidate for California Secretary of State)
  • Ted Kulongoski (vulnerable Democratic Governor of Oregon)
  • Gabrielle Giffords, Patty Weiss and Jeff Latas (Democrats running for the open seat in AZ-08)
  • Dennis Rehberg (GOP incumbent Montana At Large)
  • David Dreier (GOP, CA-26, lean GOP district, tough one)
  • Jim Ryun (GOP, KS-01) or, the longer shot effort by Dem John Doll in KS-02 (h/t Scout Finch).
  • Midwestern Region:

  • Mark Kirk (GOP Incumbent in IL-10)
  • Deborah Pryce (GOP Incumbent in OH-15)
  • Pat Tiberi (GOP Incumbent OH-12)
  • Joseph Knollenberg (GOP incumbent MI-09)
  • Claire McCaskill (Democratic Candidate for US Senate, MO)
  • Tom Latham (GOP, IA-04)
  • Amy Klobuchar (Democratic Candidate, US Senate, MN)
  • Gil Gutknecht (vulnerable GOP incumbent, MN-01)
  • Chris Chocola (vulnerable GOP incumbent IN-02)
  • Bruce Braley (running for the open seat in IA-01)
  • Paul Ryan (GOP, WI-01, tough one)
  • Thaddeus McCotter (GOP, MI-11, another tough one)
  • Steve Chabot (GOP Incumbent in OH-01)
  • Eastern Region

  • Curt Weldon (a vulnerable GOP incumbent in PA-07, opposed by Joe Sestak)
  • Jim Walsh (below-the-radar incumbent in NY-25)
  • Frank LoBiondo (an incumbent in NJ-02 who’s got to be feeling the heat now)
  • Jim Saxton (GOP, NJ-03)
  • Paul Hodes (running against GOP incumbent Charlie Bass, NH-02, h/t Miss Laura)
  • Tim Murphy (GOP, PA-18)
  • John McHugh (GOP, NY-23)
  • Charles Dent (vulnerable incumbent, Pennsylvania’s 15th Congressional District)
  • Deval Patrick (Dem Candidate, Governor MA, h/t dnta)
  • Nancy Johnson (vulnerable CT incumbent GOP Congresswoman, CT-05)
  • John Bonifaz (Dem voting rights champion for MA Secretary of State)
  • Jeb Bradley (NH-01, another vulnerable notheastern GOP incumbent)<
  • Phil English (under-looked at GOP incumbent in PA-03)
  • Melissa Hart, (GOP incumbent in PA-04)
  • Shelley Moore-Capito (the GOP West Virginian Congressperson, deserves our attention)
  • Southern Region

  • CW Bill Young (GOP incumbent in Florida-10)
  • Clay Shaw (GOP, getting a run for his money in FL-22)
  • Robin Hayes (GOP incumbent, NC-08 v Dem Larry Kissell)
  • Jim Webb v. GOP George Allen for US Senate in VA (h/t Delicate Monster)
  • MZM encrusted Virgil Goode in VA-05
  • Charles Taylor (GOP incumbent in NC-11, hot race)
  • Mike Rogers (little known in Alabama-03)
  • Thelma Drake (a GOP incumbent in VA-02 who I really hope gets some attention)
  • And three longer shots….Erik Fleming, Candidate for US Senate in Mississippi
  • Steve Sinton (Democratic Candidate for Congress, Georgia)
  • Anne Northup (the incumbent GOP Rep from KY-03, more Conservative than district by a mile)
  • That’s forty names in four regions.  I know there are easily forty more races that bear watching and giving our best efforts to.

    What I’m asking is simply that you pick one and dig in.  Make it your own, just like Matt did with SayNotoPombo.  Better yet, team up with some activist friends and “blur the line” between netroots and grassroots and found your own blog.  Working on a local blog will pay off as the local press pays attention to you; and, I can guarantee you, you will get google hits from Washington D.C. as GOP Congresscritters read up on what you’ve exposed them for.

    That’s a great feeling.

    It is not too late, and this race for the heart and soul of our government will not go to the swift but to the persistent.  

    Friends, that’s us!

    ::

    Update: For those serious about starting a local blog from scratch please read this essential, but unfortunately-titled, essay by Chris Bowers.  Very worthwhile tips and a must read for local bloggers to be.

    Local blogs mentioned in the comments section from the original diary on dKos:

  • asmokefilledroom (PA)
  • northcoastblues (OH)
  • bluejersey.net (NJ)
  • Calitics (CA)
  • Yankee Doodler (Northeast)
  • Blue Granite (NH)
  • NH-02 Progressive (NH-02)
  • Louisiana Fourth(New tonight! LA-04)
  • states roots project.org (USA)
  • truthandprogress (USA)
  • bluemassgroup (MA)
  • Juanita’s (TX)
  • the word from AZ’s fifth (AZ-05)
  • NotGeorgeAllen (VA)
  • rochester turning (NY)
  • art of the possible (NY)
  • the rural partriot (NY)
  • the walsh watch (NY-25)
  • SoapBloxChicago (IL)
  • ryan’s take (MA)
  • Ellen’s Tenth (IL-10)
  • Charlie Brown For Congress (CA-04)
  • SquareState.net (CO, but you knew that)
  • NYCO’s blog (NY)
  • Green Mountain Daily (VT)
  • My Left Nutmeg (CT)
  • Democracy for New Mexico (NM)
  • Pacific NW Portal (WA, OR)
  • Fireside 14 (IL-14)
  • Blogolodeon (CA-04)
  • Take 19 (NY-19)
  • Take41 (NY, State 41, Brian Keeler)
  • SkiptheLifeFantastic (MN)
  • OH 2nd (OH-02)
  • Blue Stem Prairie (MN-01)
  • NJ-05 (NJ)
  • Long Beach Politics.org (CA)
  • DeminSouth (SC)
  • LeftyBlogsVA (VA)
  • Santa Barbara Progressive