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Organizing a Town Hall
Meeting on Bringing the Guard Home from Iraq and Afghanistan
A town hall meeting is a large public meeting where
community members are allowed to share their views with their elected
representatives present. Elected representatives have the opportunity to hear
from their constituents and to share their own views and positions in return.
The following is a suggestion on how to organize a town
hall meeting. You will want to modify it to fit your circumstances.
- Decide who the sponsoring organization(s) should be.
To draw a large group it may be good to invite other organizations to
co-sponsor.
- Decide on a choice of 3 or 4 possible dates for the
town hall meeting.
- Call potential co-sponsoring organizations to solicit
their interest. Explain that each co-sponsor can give testimony of 3-5
minutes. Each co-sponsoring group should commit to bringing 10 people to
the town hall meeting (or whatever number of people you decide.)
- When you know who will be sponsoring the event call
the NY State Senator(s) and Assembly member(s) in your area to see if they
will participate and what dates would work for them.
- If you can’t get elected officials to attend this
time, you could turn the event into a Bring the Guard Home Community
Teach-In.
- Secure a location to hold the town hall meeting. If
you think you will be able to recruit 100 people to come to the meeting,
don’t pick a room that holds more than 100. If you expect a big crowd
arrange for a sound system.
- Decide which topics you want covered in testimony.
For example:
a. Reasons all troops should be brought back from Iraq and
Afghanistan.
b.
Testimony on what the war is like for Guard participants and their
families and communities.
c.
Description of the bills in the legislature, including the legal basis of
an order by the governor to bring the NY Guard home. (This works best if
accompanied by a written handout that people can take away with them.)
d.
Arguments on why the Guard is needed here in NY.
- Invite people you want to testify: For example an
active or retired Guard member; an Iraq or Afghan War vet; a family member
of a Guard Member who has served. Co-sponsoring groups can also divide up
topics to cover. Based on previous experience it’s important to be
realistic about the time you have and don’t invite too many people to speak.
(The entire town meeting, including questions and discussion, should not
last more than 2 hours.)
- Prioritize publicity for the Town Hall meeting. You
need to get enough people to come. A poorly attended meeting can
communicate to the elected officials that our cause has little support.
- Produce and distribute a poster.
- Send e-mail and postal mailings, making use of
listserves.
- Make phone calls.
- Get listed in community calendars
- Send out a press advisory. Follow up with calls
to ask the media to cover the event.
- Select a moderator, who has the skill to move the town
hall meeting along; who can cut off long winded testimony; who can deal with
hecklers or opponents who might show up; and who can adjust the times
depending on how much testimony there is. Also provide a timekeeper to
assist the moderator.
- Prepare the program for the event.
·
Welcome and introduction of event and elected official(s) 5
minutes
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Prepared Testimony 40 minutes
·
Audience Testimony – open mic with each person limited to 2
minutes. 40 minutes.
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Elected official testimony 20 minutes
·
Closing summary of the meeting and next steps in the campaign
5min
- On the night of the town meeting, set up with a large
Bring the Guard Home sign. Have a registration table for people to sign in;
have people circulating the Bring the Guard home petition; set up a
literature table. Start the meeting on time.
Prepared by Upper Hudson Peace Action
33 Central Avenue, Albany, NY 12210
www.peaceact.net ,
info@peaceact.net
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