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Laying the Groundwork for Successful Campaigns BUILDING BROAD COALITIONS Rachel DiResto, Executive Vice President CFTE Conference June 24, 2013.

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Presentation on theme: "Laying the Groundwork for Successful Campaigns BUILDING BROAD COALITIONS Rachel DiResto, Executive Vice President CFTE Conference June 24, 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Laying the Groundwork for Successful Campaigns BUILDING BROAD COALITIONS Rachel DiResto, Executive Vice President CFTE Conference June 24, 2013

2 CPEX helps create highly functional, equitable communities throughout Louisiana that capitalize on their unique qualities through community driven planning and implementation.

3 Overview Baton Rouge had one of the lowest- funded and worst-performing transit systems in the country. Capital Area Transit System (CATS) held a parishwide election in 2010. It fails 47% to 53%. 2011: FuturEBR, a new comprehensive land-use plan for the Parish, put transit as crucial first-step toward long-term plan. 2012, CATS would face a major short-fall, and would either have to cut service hours by 46% or shut down entirely in July.

4 In Feb 2011, Mayor Kip Holden asked Together Baton Rouge and the Baton Rouge Chamber to form a Blue Ribbon Commission (BRC) on public transit. Background The BRC was charged with the following items: – Compile existing data – Gather community input – Create concrete plan of action for transit, including funding and political strategy – Considering all other factors that would impact FUTUREBR implementation and transit sustainability

5 Research Baton Rouge vs. Peer Cities Research based on “peer cities” to show how Baton Rouge stacks up (poorly!) against other places that have solid transit systems.

6 Recommendation 1 – Implement Transit Proposal Focused on Ridership Expansion Recommendation 2 – Support New Public Transit Board Member Nominating Process and Criteria Recommendation 3 – Overhaul Existing Public Transit Legislation, Reform Governance Structure and Create New Capital Area Transit District Recommendation 4 – Create a Dedicated Revenue Source for Transit Recommendation 5 – Launch Public Engagement Campaign and Election Drive BRC Recommendations

7 The Baton Rouge Transit Coalition (BRTC) was formed to raise awareness of the condition of the Capital Region’s transit system Mission: Advocate for the adoption of the Blue Ribbon Commission’s recommendations Convene interested individuals, groups and stakeholders to promote dialogue and increase community awareness of the vital importance of public transportation Fulfill the vision of the FuturEBR Plan Coalition building

8 Raymond A. Jetson, Star Hill Church, Chair David Aguillard, Catholic Charities Nancy McPherson, AARP Ryan Gremillion, Baton Rouge Area Chamber Reverend Jennifer Jones-Bridgett, PICO Louisiana Alvin Herring, Working Interfaith Network Homer Charles, Group Construction, L.L.C. Helena Cunningham, East Baton Rouge Parish Mortgage Finance Authority Ann Trappey, Forte & Tablada Engineers Carmen Weisner, National Association of Social Workers Cassie Felder, Cassie Felder and Associates/Forum 35 Meg Mahoney, Baton Rouge Area Chamber Rachel DiResto, Center for Planning Excellence Chris Tyson, Louisiana State University Law School Mark Goodson, East Baton Rouge Parish Redevelopment Authority Creighton Abadie, Lindsay & Abadie Attorneys at Law, CATS Jared Loftus, CATS Leroy Watts, Liberty Bank Edgar Cage, Together Baton Rouge Ronald Williams, 4th District Association Diverse membership

9 BRAC, CPEX, Together BR and CATS held regular working meetings Fundraising efforts Developed legislative components Developed website with facts and research BRTC Public Education/ Outreach Legislation Transit Board Criteria Ballot Proposal and Advocacy Monitoring of Transit Progress Campaign/ Fundraising Campaign structure

10 Decrease wait times from the current average of 75 minutes to 15-20 minutes Build 3 new transit hubs to replace “spoke” system with “grid” system Overhaul bus stops with new shelters and benches Add GPS tracking to fleet, with exact arrival times accessible on cell phones Overhaul all signage for transit stops, providing detailed route and time information Increase service from 19 to 37 routes, expanding to high-demand areas that currently are not served (near hospitals and malls) Increase peak-hour buses from 32 to 57 Create 3 New Express Lines: Downtown to LSU; Florida Blvd (from Airline to Downtown); Plank Road (with service to Airport) Campaign components

11 CATS – not a trusted, reputable agency CATS budget shortfall – system predicted to shut down in July 2012 Campaign timeline shifted from Fall 2012 to April 2012 Single issue campaign – other risks/issues Campaign Issues

12 Outreach and Education Huge effort of citizen education (Civic Academies) Compelling presentations with data and facts Trained team of leaders to conduct “civic academy” sessions. Conducted (with partner orgs) to host 120 separate events, reaching more than 5,000 people Education sessions CHANGED THE DIALOGUE

13 Great cities have great transit. Period. 13

14 Akron, OH Alameda, CA Albuquerque, NM Ames, IA Ann Arbor, MI Antioch, CA Arlington, VA Asheville, NC Atlanta, GA Austin, TX Bakersfield, CA Batavia, OH Bay City, MI Bellingham, WA Benton Harbor, MI Billings, MT Birmingham, AL Bismarck, ND Bloomington, IN Bradenton, FL Bremerton, WA Brunswick, OH Buffalo, NY Burlington, WA Canton, OH Cedar Rapids, IA Chapel Hill, NC Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Charlotte, NC Charlottesville, VA Chicago, IL Cincinnati, OH Cleveland, OH Colorado Springs, CO Columbus, GA Columbus, OH Commerce, CA Concord, CA Corpus Christi, TX Corvallis, OR Culver City, CA Cumberland, MD Dallas, TX Davenport, IA Davis, CA Dayton, OH Denver, CO Detroit, MI Duluth, MN El Paso, TX Elk Grove, CA Everett, WA Fairfield, CA Flagstaff, AZ Flint, MI Fond du Lac, WI Fort Collins, CO Fort Myers, FL Fort Smith, AR Fort Wayne, IN Fort Worth, TX Fredericksburg, VA Gardena, CA Gary, IN Glendale, AZ Grand Forks, ND Grand Rapids, MI Grand River, OH Granite City, IL Other cities with dedicated revenue for transit … 14

15 Great Falls, MT Greensboro, NC Gretna, LA Hanford, CA Hesperia, CA Highland Falls, NY Holland, MI Houston, TX Huntington, WV Indianapolis, IN Iowa City, IA Jackson, MI Jacksonville, FL Jefferson City, MO Kalamazoo, MI Kansas City, MO Kent, OH La Mirada, CA LaCrosse, WI Lafayette, IN Lakeland, FL Lancaster, CA Lansing, MI Laredo, TX Largo, MD Las Cruces, NM Lawrence, KS Lewisville, TX Lexington, KY Livermore, CA Logan, UT Lompoc, CA Long Beach, CA Los Angeles, CA Medford, OR Miami, FL Minneapolis, MN Missoula, MT Moline, IL Montebello, CA Monterey, CA Murfreesboro, TN Napa, CA New Orleans, LA New York, NY Norwalk, CA Oakland, CA Oceanside, CA Olympia, WA Omaha, NE Orange, CA Oxnard, CA Peoria, IL Petaluma, CA Phoenix, AZ Pinole, CA Pittsburgh, PA Pompano Beach, FL Port Huron, MI Port Washington, WI Porterville, CA Portland, OR Providence, RI Redondo Beach, CA Richland, WA Riverside, CA Rockville, MD MORE cities with dedicated revenue for transit … 15

16 Sacramento, CA Saginaw, MI Salem, OR San Antonio, TX San Bernardino, CA San Carlos, CA San Diego, CA San Francisco, CA San Jose, CA San Juan, PR Santa Barbara, CA Santa Clarita, CA Santa Cruz, CA Santa Fe, NM Santa Maria, CA Santa Monica, CA Santa Rosa, CA Savannah, GA Scottsdale, AZ Seattle, WA Sioux City, IA South Bend, IN Spokane, WA Springfield, IL St. Cloud, MN St. Johns, MI St. Joseph, MO St. Paul, MN St. Petersburg, FL Stockton, CA Sugar Land, TX Tampa, FL Tempe, AZ Thousand Oaks, CA Thousand Palms, CA Toledo, OH Topeka, KS Tucson, AZ Union City, CA Urbana, IL Vallejo, CA Valparaiso, IN Vancouver, WA Ventura, CA Visalia, CA Washington, DC Waterloo, IA Wenatchee, WA STILL MORE cities with dedicated revenue for transit … 16 No dedicated funding means losing millions in federal match funding and grants.

17 What will this cost me? The cost depends on your home value: The 10.6 millage is less than the BREC, library or public school millage.

18 Accountability Publicized and Scrutinized Accountability Scorecard Benchmarks Measured Quarterly Performance Reports Review by Board and Public Accountability

19 Why Now? Shift Starts AtMust Be At Transit Stop 6 am3:30 am 7 am4:30 am Class Starts AtMust Be At Transit Stop 8 am5:30 am Day Ends AtArrive Home At 5 pm7:30 pm 6 pm8:30 pm 7 pm9:30 pm Average Wait Time is 75 Minutes ► Average Travel Time 1 Hour “We have job opportunities. But if people can’t get to the opportunities, there might as well not be opportunities.” Adam Knapp President and CEO Baton Rouge Area Chamber

20 Securing broad support

21 Focused on transit-dependent households Built a GOTV army through Civic Academies Conducted detailed voter analysis Precinct leadership structure and precinct teams Intense, 5-weeks of GOTV (walks, phone calls, yard signs) Get out the vote

22 This was a campaign led by civic sector – diverse partners Know your partners roles and capacities Know your politics Communication is key Did not waver from components – voters knew what they were buying Outreach, outreach, and more outreach Respond to opponents – but don’t waste energy Focus on win – who will vote Lessons Learned

23 Re—emergence of BR Transit Coalition Monitoring system performance and accountability Keep community engaged Need to see early delivery on campaign promises It’s not over --until it works

24 BUILDING BROAD COALITIONS Rachel DiResto rdiresto@cpex.org WWW.CPEX.ORG WEBSITE FOR BR TRANSIT COALITION: http://brtransit.blogspot.com


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