Rendezvous 2019


The Friends Rendezvous is an opportunity to gather the Friends Grassroots Network to discuss current challenges to our public lands, share stories of success and inspiration and share resources to build capacity to win. This year’s Rendezvous focuses on the themes of elevating the public lands dialogue in the 2020 election, access as a principle of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion work and the role Bureau of Lands Management lands play in the global climate solutions.
Our vision, a future in which outdoor access is for all people, protected lands and waters are a solution for—not a casualty of—climate change, and politics is driven by overwhelming public support for protected public lands, will require the passion, dedication, and support of our entire network and the conservation community at large.
The Friend’s Rendezvous is a catalyst for conversation and call to action as we work towards that vision.
If you missed the 2019 Rendezvous, no worries! Please review the materials covered below to catch up!
As well, please mark your calendars for the next Rendezvous, in Spring 2021!
Saturday, 9/14
FGN Leadership Council Inventory Data Sharing
Breakout Session 1
- Kim Klein- "How to raise $50,000 in 6 weeks"
- Do you have a specific need that costs $50,000 or less? Do you need a chunk of money in a short period of time? Do you have people who offer to help you but their schedules prevent them doing anything on a long term basis? If yes, this simple campaign structure is for you. No fancy materials, no detailed planning: just “We need the money to do good work and we need it now.” In this fast paced workshop, Kim will give you the 8 steps to success with this strategy and show you examples of small organizations which have used it successfully. You will have a chance to begin planning your own campaign. Fun, intense, practical and do-able!
- The need for organizing in the 2020 elections and beyond
- Community Governance Partnership
- Rich McIntyre, Community Governance Partnership ED
- David Hunt, Community Governance Partnership Executive Trainer
- In this interactive session Community Governance Partnership will explore and discuss basic organizing principles and why organizing is critical in the 2020 elections and beyond.
Breakout Session 2
- How to raise $50,000 in 6 weeks
- Kim Klein
- Do you have a specific need that costs $50,000 or less? Do you need a chunk of money in a short period of time? Do you have people who offer to help you but their schedules prevent them doing anything on a long term basis? If yes, this simple campaign structure is for you. No fancy materials, no detailed planning: just “We need the money to do good work and we need it now.” In this fast paced workshop, Kim will give you the 8 steps to success with this strategy and show you examples of small organizations which have used it successfully. You will have a chance to begin planning your own campaign. Fun, intense, practical and do-able!
- Hope in Hard Times: Successful Legal Advocacy in the Trump Era
- Advocates for the West
- Sarah Stellberg, Advocates for the West Staff Attorney
- Lizzy Potter, Advocates for the West Staff Attorney
- Two years into the Trump administration, the attacks on our public lands are picking up pace. But citizens are using the law to successfully derail this agenda. Join this panel to learn about the latest public land threats, what they mean for your CLF Friends group, and how to use legal advocacy tools to fight back and give a voice to local communities. We will explore a wave of recent legal victories—and why legal advocacy should be a part of your toolbox.
- Connecting Dollars to Outcomes: How to Measure Outcomes that Deliver Mission Impact
- Oracle+Netsuite
- How do nonprofits measure impact when attempting to solve complicated issues that are influenced by civic, individual and corporate behavior well beyond the control of just one organization? The traditional approach to measuring nonprofit effectiveness has focused mostly on program delivery and the efficiency of that delivery, rather than program results - “outputs” rather than out comes.” But in the last decade, nonprofits are increasingly looking to establish new metrics, something other than the traditional Charity Navigator ratios – to better describe nonprofit effectiveness. One of these is 'Outcomes Measurement' which encourages organizations to shift their focus from the efficiency of what they’re doing to measuring how much they’ve actually impacted change. To explore this topic, NetSuite approached 353 nonprofit executives to ask if and how they evaluate mission effectiveness, use logic models, and correlate programs to financial metrics to create dollars-to-outcomes transparency. In this session NetSuite will delve into the findings of their research, and discuss how to think about data collection to more directly address mission impact.
- The ancient yet ever-present power of storytelling and the nexus between public lands and climate change.
- Community Governance Partnership
- Rich McIntyre, Community Governance Partnership ED
- David Hunt, Community Governance Partnership Executive Trainer
- In this interactive session Community Governance Partnership will explore and discuss the role and power of storytelling in shaping and advancing a new vision of public lands and climate change policy.
Afternoon Tracks
Supporting POC in Conservation Leadership
- Session for FGN leadership holding white identities:
- Ava Holliday, Founding Partner The Avarna Group
- Aparna Rajagopal-Durbin, Founding Partner The Avarna Group
- Using information gathered from BIPOC staff members at the spring retreat, the Avarna Group will facilitate a workshop for white leaders in the FGN to help them:
- build awareness surrounding their own whiteness and how racism impacts their work in the conservation movement;
- identify ways their black, indigenous, and POC colleagues may be impacted by racism;
- specifically, gain a better understanding of whiteness, white supremacy, white identity politics, white fragility, and white privilege and how these concepts interact with conservation;
- better understand how to be an ally or accomplice to support their black, indigenous, and POC/PGM colleagues in navigating racism;
- and address any issues regarding equity and inclusivity in the FGN that emerged from the Spring retreat.
- Resources:
- 4 Quadrants of Allyship Accompliceship
- AVARNA Group Resources
- Giving & Receiving Feedback
- Rendezvous Terms
- White Supremacy Org Assesment
- White Supremacy Org Assesment Strategies
- Civic Engagement = Winning for ALL!
- Tara Benally, Rural Utah Project Field Director (Mexican Water, Utah)
- Drew Cooper, rural Utah Project Deputy Director (Moab, Utah)
- The Rural Utah Project is a 501(c)4 founded in 2017 by a group of Utahns dedicated to seeing progress in southern Utah by empowering diverse and historically disenfranchised voters. Throughout 2018, Rural Utah Project staff registered over 1,600 voters, providing education and voting assistance to many more—resulting in the highest Indigenous voter turnout in the history of San Juan County, Utah. Now, in 2019, RUP is continuing to empower Native people in San Juan County by collaborating with the Navajo Nation on the Rural Addressing Program, an effort to provide every household located on the Utah portion of the Nation with a physical address. Participants can expect to learn about groundbreaking tactics to mobilize underrepresented voters across the rural parts of the country, and technology that utilizes local knowledge to enhance voter outreach in rural communities. When every voter is engaged, progress prevails.














