Word on the Streets

Attend your Precinct Caucus!


 



Attend Your Precinct Caucus in Minneapolis!



Tonight’s the night!  If you’ve been wanting to get involved as a bicycle advocate in Minneapolis, attend your precinct caucus tonight.  Here are some frequently asked questions and some simple answers.



1. What the heck is a precinct caucus?



It’s a meeting organized by a political party



2. What is a precinct?




  • The smallest political subdivision of our state


  • Your neighborhood


  • All the people who vote at the same location



3. What is a caucus?



Most simply, a group of people



4. What is a caucus for?




  • Political parties choose issues


  • Resolutions can be proposed for potential inclusion in the party platform


  • Political parties choose candidates


  • Political parties endorse candidates


  • Candidates get the party’s nomination


  • Ordinary people (called delegates) vote for the candidates they want their party to endorse


  • Political parties build their base



5. Who can go to a precinct caucus?




  • You must reside in the precinct


  • You have to pick your party


  • You must be eligible to vote on November 5, 2013, to become a delegate, offer resolutions or vote on precinct business



6. What happens at a precinct caucus?



There are 3 main caucus activities:




  • Elect a precinct chair and precinct officers


  • Elect delegates and alternates to the ward and city conventions


  • Propose and vote on resolutions



7. What are delegates?




  • A delegate is a person who wants to go to the next level of their party’s caucus system


  • Precinct caucuses are open invitation, but only delegates can attend conventions



8. What are resolutions?




  • A resolution is a statement for an issue that you support


  • Resolutions can be used to get your issue on to the party platform


  • Resolutions should be presented in writing



9. Why be involved?




  • Meet your neighbors and build community


  • Support an issue (like Bikeways for Everyone!)


  • Support a candidate


  • Be a delegate



10. How do I get involved?




  • Choose your political party, then Google it with Minneapolis


  • Find out where and when your precinct caucus meets


  • Show up, run to be a delegate, offer a resolution

Biking & State Transportation bill


The State Legislature and Governor Dayton have been talking some about transportation funding this year. While the primary focus is funding for Twin Cities transit and statewide roads and bridges, a bill could also provide the first-ever dedicated state funding for walking and biking.



But there is plenty of work to happen before that becomes a reality. Read on for the situation and how you can help. This week is go time!



Background



Earlier this year, the Minneapolis Bicycle Coalition took our first-ever legislative position--in support of a comprehensive package of transit, biking, and walking funding promoted by the Transit for a Stronger Economy Coalition. That proposal was turned into a bill sponsored by Rep. Melissa Hortman (DFL-Brooklyn Park) and Sen. Bobby Joe Champion (DFL-Minneapolis), which was one of several transportation finance proposals offered. It would provide about $50 million a year for local governments for biking, walking, and transit investments and an additional $282 million for transit in the Twin Cities and the rest of the state. It used a metro area sales tax increase as the funding mechanism--as has been proposed by Governor Dayton and used in many other regions aroung the country. That bill was heard in both the House and Senate and left for possible inclusion in the "omnibus transportation finance bill," which is being finalized this week.



The omnibus transportation finance bill is quite messy right now (a technical term!) because of differences of opinion about if and how to fund roads and bridges (some details in this Star Tribune story). Before the messiness, it was looking likely that some significant dedicated funding for biking and walking would be included in the bill (along with transit and roads). Advocates are still fighting for a bill with new transit, road, and bike/walk funding and that could still very much happen this year.



What you can do



Want to help support a once-in-a-generation opportunity for transportation funding and first-ever state funding for biking and walking? Here are a few things you can do:



1. Contact Governor Dayton and your Legislators



Governor Dayton: 651-201-3400 or 1-800-657-3717 (or fill out this online form)

Message: Thank you for your great leadership on sales tax funding for Twin Cities transit! I hope that you will support a comprehensive transportation package this year that also includes funding for roads, bridges, biking, and walking.



Your Legislators

Find your legislators here or use this easy contact form from Transit for Livable Communities

Message: I strongly support new transportation funding this year to support needed investments in transit, biking, walking, roads, and bridges. Please do what you can to get transportation funding done this year.



2. Do outreach, phone calling, or attend a rally this week



There are opportunities every day this week to make a difference:




  • Monday, 4-15: Meet up with Mayor Rybak and City Council Members to talk to bus riders downtown. Meet at 3:30 at Minneapolis City Hall on the Light Rail side near the Humphrey statue. Directions and materials will be provide--and you'll get to do it alongside some of our elected officials.


  • Tuesday, 4-16: Join a Transit for Stronger Economy phone bank from 6-9pm at the United Labor Center (312 Central Ave NE). Register here.


  • Wednesday, 4-17: Join a transportation rally at 10am at the State Capitol. Details here.


  • Thursday, 4-18: Meet up with Mayor Rybak and City Council Members to talk to bus riders downtown. Same details as Monday.

Joy Ride Series: Bikes and Brewvies


You may have seen the earlier ride recap from the Joy Ride Series:  Bikes and Brewvies.  Check out a few more images from our chilly, lovely evening,  



100 eager riders congregate outside Freewheel Bike on the Midtown Greenway to sign in, talk about bikeways, and enjoy some stellar pump up jams (Andy hauled four car batteries to power the speakers in his trailer!)



 




 


 


Students, business professionals, an Aussie, moms and dads, even a baby all came.  With snow melting, sun shining... as the clowds parted, we rolled on.


 




 


Check out all the helmeted, red-light respecting cyclists in the middle of downtown.


 




 


 


Fulton was packed with beers and smiles.  (See all the helmets in the crowd?)  While many of us stayed inside to warm up, while the most winter-hardy watched movites outside.


 




 


Dozens of compatriots joined the festivities throughout the night filling Fulton, dangerous Man, and Indeed with stories and laugher.


 




 


Closing out the night watching movies at Indeed.


 




 


Want to get involved planning the next event in the Joy Ride Series? Contact one of the ride coordinators:


 


Kevin Kalligher, [email protected], 612-868-8743


Andy Legeson, [email protected], 612-875-8882


Michael Petesch, [email protected], 612-325-7640


Adriane Marten, [email protected], 920-342-0148


 



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