Join us April 24th for Text, Talk, Act on Mental Health – Part II Electric Boogaloo

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As you know, NCDD is part of the collaboration running the Creating Community Solutions national dialogue effort aimed at tackling mental health issues in our communities. We have been supporting the effort in many ways, including collaborating on the “Text, Talk, Act” nationwide text-enhanced dialogue last December.

We are pleased to announce that another installment of the Text, Talk, Act conversation will be taking place this April 24th.

The Text, Talk, Act to Improve Mental Health conversation will be an hour-long event that uses text messaging to get people talking about mental health and encourage them to take action. The hope is that through this event, young people (and not-so-young people!) can have a conversation with their peers and give voice to an issue that can otherwise be difficult for them to speak about.

Last year’s event was a big success, with an estimated 2,000 people participating in the conversation (600 phones). Participants described the event this way:

We encourage NCDD members–especially those of you based at universities and high schools–to participate in this important effort. On April 24th, you can dial in and participate in the conversation, or better yet, you can convene your own dialogue event on mental health and use the Text, Talk, Act event as a starting point for your own conversations. We would love to see NCDD members hosting their own conversations, and if you do, we ask that you register your event so that it can be listed on the Creating Community Solutions dialogue map.

It’s easy to get plugged into the event by following these simple steps:

  1. At any time on April 24th, gather 3-4 of your friends, family, classmates, students, and/or colleagues;
  2. Text “start” to 89800; and
  3. Receive polling and discussion questions via text messaging while having a face-to-face dialogue with your group.

Learn more by visiting www.creatingcommunitysolutions.org/texttalkact. You can also watch and share the informational video on the campaign.

We hope to see many of you join in this important nationwide conversation on April 24th!

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Invitation to join the new Transpartisan Listserv

On behalf of all the founding participants, NCDD is pleased to invite you to join the new Transpartisan Listserv. Our intension for this moderated email discussion list is to provide a simple, safe communication channel where individuals and organizations that are active in this boundary-crossing work can connect and learn from each other.

The list is hosted by NCDD through a partnership of NCDD and Mediators Foundation.  The following amazing group of people are co-founding the list:

  1. Austin2008-NiceToMeetYouMark Gerzon, Tom Hast and John Steiner of Mediators Foundation
  2. Sandy Heierbacher, National Coalition for Dialogue & Deliberation (NCDD)
  3. Tom Atlee, Co-Intelligence Institute
  4. Steve Bhaerman, humorist and author
  5. Dr. Don Beck, The Spiral Dynamics Group
  6. Joan Blades and Debilyn Molineaux, Living Room Conversations
  7. Laura Chasin, Bob Stains, Dave Joseph and Mary Jacksteit, Public Conversations Project
  8. Lawry Chickering and Jim Turner, co-authors of Voice of the People: The Transpartisan Imperative in American Life
  9. Jacob Hess and Phil Neisser, co-authors of You’re Not as Crazy as I Thought (But You’re Still Wrong)
  10. Margo King, Wisdom Beyond Borders-Mediators Foundation; John Steiner’s networking partner
  11. Mark McKinnon, NoLabels.org
  12. Ravi Iyer and Matt Motyl, CivilPolitics.org
  13. Evelyn Messinger, Internews Interactive
  14. John Opdycke, IndependentVoting.org
  15. Michael Ostrolenk, transpartisan organizer and philosopher
  16. Pete Peterson, Pepperdine University’s Davenport Institute
  17. Amanda Kathryn Roman, The Citizens Campaign
  18. Michael Smith, United Americans
  19. Kim Spencer, Link TV and KCETLink
  20. Rich Tafel, The Public Squared
  21. Jeff Weissglass, Political Bridge Building Advocate

The purpose of this listserv is to introduce potential colleagues to one another, to expand our knowledge of transpartisan theory and practice, and to showcase ongoing activity in the transpartisan field.

Please consider being part of the Transpartisan List if any of the following are true:

  • You are interested in learning more, and sharing what you know, about current efforts to transcend and transform unproductive partisan politics.
  • You want to meet potential colleagues who share your concern and are working to improve research, dialogue, deliberation, collaboration, and improved decision making across party lines.
  • You want to share what you (or your organization) do in this field that you consider “transpartisan” – conversations that break out of the narrow, predictable ideological exchanges.
  • You believe this subject is vital to our country’s future and simply want to learn more about how you might get involved.

You can subscribe to the Transpartisan List by sending a blank email to transpartisan-subscribe-request@lists.thataway.org. Together, we can ask the questions that need to be asked about this challenging field, and seek the answers as a learning community.

This listserv is one of several exciting transpartisan developments that will be rolling out in the next few months thanks to the leadership of Mediators Foundation – including a strategic convening of transpartisan leaders that will take place the day before this year’s National Conference on Dialogue & Deliberation (October 16th if you’d like to mark your calendar!).

About a week from now, Mark Gerzon and others at Mediators Foundation will share some new resources that may be of interest, including:

  1. “Transpartisan:”An Evolving Definition
  2. A Map of the Transpartisan Field
  3. The Transpartisan Reading List 1.0

As Katrina vanden Heuvel wrote in her Washington Post editorial on January 27th, “The Promise of Transpartisanhip”:

“At a time of paralyzing political polarization, partisanship has naturally gotten a bad rap. But a reactionary shift toward bipartisanship — toward an anodyne centrism — isn’t the solution. Passion, deftly deployed, is actually an effective political tool with which to advance good ideas. That’s the promise of transpartisanship.”

If you decide to join us on the Transpartisan Listserv, take a moment to read over the listserv guidelines first. The list will be moderated according to this set of ground rules, in order to ensure the list remains safe, productive, civil, and focused.

Sneak peek of what we’ll cover on March 5th on Slow Democracy

Susan Clark says the idea of comparing local democracy to the Slow Food movement came to her while working in her garden. And, why not? Just as many cooks and food lovers have become more intimately involved in local food production, Susan and co-author Woden Teachout saw an opportunity to help citizens sow and grow a healthier democracy in their own towns and communities. The result was their book, Slow Democracy: Rediscovering Community, Bringing Decision Making Back Home.

Susan, an NCDD Sustaining Member, will be our guest during a free online book club on Wednesday, March 5, from 2-3 Eastern (11-12 Pacific). So sign up today!

NCDD is excited to be partnering with Chelsea Green Publishing on this event, but we’d also love to hear from you ahead of time. It’ll make for a richer conversation when we all come together, so take a look at our Q&A with Susan below, see what engages you, and offer your own experiences, insights, and questions.

Susan, what does “slow democracy” look like? What are its major characteristics?

Slow democracy weaves together three key elements of local democratic decision making:

  1. Inclusion–ensuring broad, diverse public participation
  2. Deliberation–defining problems and weighing solutions through a public process, based on sound information and respectful relationships
  3. Power–defining a clear connection between citizen participation, public decisions, and action

Did you struggle with any aspect of comparing democracy to the Slow Food movement, or could you immediately embrace the whole concept?

For a time, the Slow Food movement had an elitist reputation–local arugula and artisanal goat cheese are nice if you can afford them. But they have worked hard to overcome the myth that only rich people deserve healthy food, with slow food activists organizing across the world in low-income neighborhoods, schools and prisons. They are raising awareness that each of us can share in the responsibility–and pleasure–of nourishing ourselves. In the same way, we understand that in today’s economy, a person with three jobs doesn’t have time for democratic engagement through a lot of evening meetings.

That’s why Slow Democracy focuses so heavily on creative inclusion techniques–meeting people where they are; and on power–making sure that participation is worth citizens’ precious time.

Which of your ideas might prove the most challenging for members of the D&D community?

Power is hard to talk about, and can have distasteful connotations (“power corrupts”). Many people claim they want nothing to do with it. It can be an especially troubling concept for women. Power is, perhaps, less in the forefront in a dialogue than it is in deliberative decision making. But of course, power is critical to be aware of in both dialogue and deliberation. Power might be camouflaged by terms like “influence,” “impact,” “authority,” or “control,” but whatever you call it, it is worth careful exploration.

What are the greatest obstacles facing the Slow Democracy movement?

Paradigms left over from the Industrial Revolution. For instance, that speed and efficiency are all-powerful. And that change is made from the top down… It’s interesting: On the right, the Tea Party hates big government. And the activists on the left, for instance the Occupy movement, despise big corporations. Slow Democracy worries about “big” in general. We argue that centralization and privatization are both enemies of local democracy. And the only way past them is by coming together.

What gives you hope about democracy today?

“Emergence” is the term used by systems thinkers to describe the exciting phenomenon of many local collaborations producing global patterns. In the same way that schools of fish or flocks of starlings move in sync without a leader, we’re seeing small movements adding up to meta-level patterns, fueling and informing each other like a wiki. What I loved best about writing Slow Democracy was hearing so many stories about communities putting aside worn-out labels, identifying common values, and making inspiring positive change. Getting past our old paradigms offers very hopeful possibilities.


What do you think of Susan’s book, or of her responses to our mini-interview (conducted by our board member Marla Crockett, by the way!)? What questions do you want to ask Susan on March 5th?

NCDD welcomes two extraordinary new Board members

This post was submitted by Barb Simonetti — the new chair of NCDD’s Board of Directors as of January.

It is my extreme pleasure to announce two wonderful new additions to NCDD’s Board of Directors. Both are longtime members and active friends of NCDD with impressive credentials.

SusanAndMartinSignsSusan Stuart Clark is the founder and Executive Director of Common Knowledge with the mission of exploring and demonstrating more inclusive and innovative approaches to achieving sustainable social change. She works with state and local government agencies, nonprofits, foundations and businesses, often facilitating multi-sector collaboratives.  New insights and possibilities generated by dialogue are the core of the work.  Susan and her colleagues gravitate to projects that that debunk the myth that the public is apathetic, that identify common ground on contentious issues and discover new resources hidden in plain sight in our communities.

Martin Carcasson is an Assistant Professor, founder and Director of the Center for Public Deliberation (CDP) at Colorado State University. The CPD is dedicated to enhancing local democracy through improved public communication and community problem-solving. The CPD was founded in August of 2006 within the Speech Communication Department at Colorado State University, and serves as an affiliate of the National Issues Forum (NIF) network. CSU undergraduates and local citizens are trained as impartial facilitators, and work with the local governments, media, the school district, and citizen organizations on various deliberative projects. Deliberation requires safe places for citizens to come together, good and fair information to help structure the conversation, and skilled facilitators to guide the deliberative process. The CPD is dedicated to providing these three key ingredients to Northern Colorado.

Susan and Martin join existing board members John Backman (Treasurer), Courtney Breese (Past Secretary), Marla Crockett (Past Chair), and Diane Miller (Secretary) and me, Barbara Simonetti (Chair). Lucas Cioffi, our previous Treasurer has stepped off the board as his term ended. We are a working board and we would all like to thank Lucas and all of our previous officers for their many contributions as we welcome Susan and Martin.

It is going to be another great year of serving and growing this extraordinary NCDD community. Learn more about all of NCDD’s Board members (and staff) at www.ncdd.org/contact.

Barbara Simonetti
Director, Meetings That Matter
Board Chair, National Coalition for Dialogue & Deliberation (NCDD)

Registration open for Special NCDD Confab on Everyday Democracy’s Approach to Change

We’ve got a special treat in store for you for next month’s NCDD Confab.  On Wednesday, March 26 from 2:00 to 3:00 Eastern (11-noon Pacific), we’ll spend time with the staff of one of NCDD’s founding members, Everyday Democracy. We’ll explore what Everyday Democracy has learned over the years, through their close work with community partners, about how to create dialogue and change.

Everyday Democracy, led by my good friend Martha McCoy, is one of the most respected organizations in our field — though in my opinion they’re pretty low key and humble about their expertise. This is a wonderful opportunity for NCDD members to learn more about Everyday Democracy’s innovative work in hundreds of communities across the country (I’m sure you’ve heard of the “study circles” approach they’ve pioneered), and take a look at tools and features on their new website that are designed to provide change makers with resources for creating change in their own communities.

Malik Russell, Communications Director, and Carolyne Abdullah, Director of Community Assistance, will be presenting in the webinar.

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More about Everyday Democracy…

Everyday Democracy helps communities build their own capacity for inclusive dialogue and positive change. Everyday Democracy’s ultimate aim is to create a national civic infrastructure that supports and values everyone’s voice and participation.

Because structural racism and other structural inequities affect communities everywhere, Everyday Democracy helps community groups use an “equity lens” in every phase of dialogue and change – coalition building, messaging, recruitment, issue framing, facilitation, and linking the results of their dialogues to action and change. They provide advice, training and flexible how-to resources on a wide range of issues – including poverty, racial equity, education, building strong neighborhoods, community-police relations, violence, early childhood, and community planning.

Glance at the EvDem/Study Circles tag in the NCDD Resource Center to get a sense of the breadth and depth of work these folks do!

Register today at https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3303617182457564161. All NCDD members and potential members are welcome to attend!

Join us for an online book club event on Slow Democracy

We know many NCDDers have been reading Susan Clark’s 2012 book Slow Democracy: Rediscovering Community, Bringing Decision Making Back Home — and if you’re not, you really should be!

SlowDemoCoverAuthorNCDD is partnering with Chelsea Green Publishing to offer you a free online book club event on Slow Democracy. The event will take place on Wednesday, March 5 from 2:00 to 3:00 Eastern. Sign up today if you’re interested in joining us and exploring the book with author (and NCDD member) Susan Clark!

Of all the great books that have come out in our field over the past few years, this is one of my very favorites. Undoubtedly one of the reasons for this is that when I flip through the book I see many NCDD members’ stories, innovations, and insights shared. Slow Democracy is both a much-needed primer and a source of inspiration and fodder for those on the forefront of dialogue, deliberation and public engagement.

The event is free, but I encourage you to get yourself a copy of the book if you don’t already have one. To get a 35% discount on the book, buy it here and enter “READCG” at checkout.

So what is “slow democracy”?

Just as slow food encourages chefs and eaters to become more intimately involved with the production of local food, and slow money helps us become more engaged with our local economy, slow democracy encourages us to govern ourselves locally with processes that are inclusive, deliberative, and citizen powered. Readers learn the stories of neighbors who collaborate to address the causes of crime, residents who take up environmental issues, parents who find creative solutions to divisive and seemingly irreconcilable school-redistricting issues, and a host of other citizen-led actions that are reinvigorating local democracy and decision-making.

About Susan

Susan Clark is a writer and facilitator focusing on community sustainability and citizen participation. She is an award-winning radio commentator and former talk show co-host. Her democratic activism has earned her broad recognition, including the 2010 Vermont Secretary of State’s Enduring Democracy Award. Her work strengthening communities has included directing a community activists’ network and facilitating town-visioning forums. She served as communication and education director of the Vermont Natural Resources Council and Coordinator of the University of Vermont’s Environmental Programs In Communities (EPIC) project. Clark lives in Middlesex, Vermont, where she chairs a committee that encourages citizen involvement and serves as town-meeting moderator. Check out Susan’s NCDD member profile to read her bio or connect with her.

Messaging, Short and Sweet: Can you help us gather examples of effective communication in dialogue and deliberation?

At the 2012 NCDD Seattle conference a small group of us started a quest. We shared a desire to see dialogue and deliberation (D & D) become more widely understood, experienced, and available. But, we also knew that when many people hear words like “dialogue,” they envision scenes from political talk shows, “open mic” style municipal meetings, or dogmatic speeches from family, friends, and colleagues. The rich possibilities for successful engagement do not seem widely understood.

What to do? We decided to create a collection of specific, concrete examples of messages that practitioners have effectively used to help the general public or elected officials understand concepts related to D & D. Then, we’ll share the collection with you.

Can you help us? Can you provide specific examples of messages that have worked well for you?

Types of messages can include:

  • metaphors
  • brief anecdotes
  • evocative language
  • images
  • video clips
  • mini-experiences for potential participants
  • others

Please add your examples to the Comments section by clicking “Add Comments” above.

We look forward to working on this challenge from a variety of different angles, here, at the NCDD Listserv, and on Facebook. As we gather examples, we’ll post new queries to help flesh out the collection, and we’ll add some concrete memory ticklers to bring out treasures you may have forgotten.

Once we’ve gathered examples, we’ll organize them in a way we hope makes it easy for you to find what you need when you face a communication challenge. We’ll share the collection in as a document available among the free resources at the NCDD site.

We look forward to working with you on this project!

We are:

Myles Alexander, Project Coordinator at Kansas State University
Laura Chasin, Founder and Board Member at The Public Conversations Project
Kim Crowley, Principal Consultant at Training & Development Support

With help from:

Lisa Pytlik Zillig, Research Specialist at the University of Nebraska Public Policy Center
Nancy Glock-Grueneich, Faculty at Shandong Youth Univ. of Political Science
Sandy Heierbacher, Director, NCDD

NCDD’s 2013 Year-in-Numbers

2013 was a banner year for NCDD, and we’ve already summarized our activities, collaborative projects, and new developments in our Year-in-Review post. Please help us increase NCDD’s reach (and celebrate 2013!) by sharing this infographic with all those you think need to know there’s an amazing community of innovators in public engagement and group process work they can tap into or join in with.

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Andy has created 3 versions of this infographic for NCDD members to use or share:

  • A .png image, which is great for including in blog posts
  • A web-friendly PDF, which is great for emailing to colleagues and displays larger than the .png online
  • A print-quality PDF, which fits nicely on an 8.5 x 11 piece of paper

You can also just use the share buttons below to share this post with your networks.

Please email me at sandy@ncdd.org or Andy (NCDD’s Creative Director) at andy@ncdd.org if you have questions or need help sharing the infographic.

NCDD’s Year In Review

2013 was an incredible year for NCDD and for our community.

We started off the year by intensely engaging our members around how the D&D community can respond to crises like the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting (explore the Hackpad series here). Soon after that, we announced the two projects that won our member-selected Catalyst Awards (in hindsight, we realized we had actually run our first Participatory Budgeting process, having had members develop the contending projects in teams and then vote for the winners!).

NCDD Meetup at TuftsWe ran two mini regional events — one at Tufts in July and one at the Univ of Virginia in November thanks to Lucas Cioffi and Nancy Gansneder, and we secured a great space for next year’s national conference and are seeing buzz building around that event already!

We bumped up our “virtual” events this year as well, getting in the habit of offering a high-quality and well-attended Confab Call or Tech Tuesday almost every month (archived recordings here).  We also experimented with informal “coffee hour” calls, which our Board plans to continue in 2014 in a different format, having Board member run monthly Coffee Hours on a topic of interest to them and our community.

We spent a good deal of time this year on collaborative projects with other leaders in the field — projects we felt were well worth our investment of time due to their potential to move our field forward.  NCDD continues to serve on the core team of Creating Community Solutions, the “dialogue part” of HHS’s national dialogue on mental health.  We have continued our work with the Orton-led Community Matters partnership, building resources on civic infrastructure with key leaders in our and related fields. And we have become part of the amazing community that is convened regularly by the Kettering Foundation, and you’ll be hearing more and more about our exciting work with them during 2014.

We also played a leading role in the Text Talk & Act experiment that melded the fun and convenience of texting with the irreplaceable value of face-to-face dialogue.  And we supported projects to develop a comprehensive open database of case studies (Participedia.net), to develop and promote new local laws that “make participation legal again,” to run the first online unconference on online facilitation, and to offer the top-notch Dialogue, Deliberation & Public Engagement certificate program.

US-GoogleMap-outlinedWe’ve grown to 1,900 members this year, and to 33,000 subscribers on our e-updates.  And we scrapped our not-nearly-good-enough members network and replaced it with a gorgeous Google map and super-useful online directory of our members.

We also launched the Dialogue Storytelling Tool this year in partnership with the Kettering Foundation and Participedia, to help our members report on their dialogue and deliberation projects and events, and let NCDD do the work of spreading the word.

We doubled or tripled the usefulness and quality of our community blog by hiring Roshan Bliss as our lead blogger, and saw more and more NCDD members post their own news and resources on the site as well.  And of course we maintained the tools you rely on that keep our community vibrant and connected, like our listservs and social media spaces.

Our small staff and our amazing Board and volunteers do our best to support this vital community’s work, and I think 2013 may have been our best year yet in this regard.


Does all this make you want to support NCDD with an end-of-year gift? We need your support to keep this work going strong — so please think of us as you consider end-of-year donations. It’s extremely easy to donate to NCDD using the short form that’s up at www.ncdd.org/donate.  NCDD is a tax exempt 501(c)(3) organization, so your donations are fully tax deductible.

Results of NCDD’s member drive – and a huge THANK YOU!

Last month, we shared NCDD’s news from 2013 with all our members—including our strengthened relationship with the Kettering Foundation—and asked you to support our efforts to serve you by “stepping up” your membership.  Our goal was to see many non-dues members upgrading to supporting member levels, and to see those whose dues were due for renewal or lapsed to get their supporting membership in good standing.

ThankYouImageMany people did exactly that. In all, nearly 150 stepped up during the drive (all but 14 as supporting members), representing more than $6,000 in support for 2014. That includes 64 brand-new members (welcome!). We think it says a lot when people choose to contribute dues when they don’t have to.

To everyone who joined, renewed, or upgraded, thank you. In the final analysis, you are NCDD, and your commitment fuels our ability to strengthen your practice, expand your network, and advance the field of dialogue and deliberation. Without you, it doesn’t happen—so your dedication to NCDD is deeply appreciated. (And in case you missed out, there’s still time to upgrade or renew your membership.)

Again, thank you for your support. NCDD’s staff and Board wish you all the best for the holidays.