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CCA Grassroots Workshop. Sustaining Relationships Building Credibility and Developing Legislative Champions Chip Bergstrom, Bay State College, VP of Marketing Carl Spatocco, Education Affiliates, VP Regional Manager. Targeting Legislators.
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CCA Grassroots Workshop Sustaining Relationships Building Credibility and Developing Legislative Champions Chip Bergstrom, Bay State College, VP of Marketing Carl Spatocco, Education Affiliates, VP Regional Manager
Targeting Legislators • Use your time wisely – identify individuals on relevant committees and prioritize in terms of leadership • Remember which political party is in control • You have some strategic decisions to make in terms of who you target • Research – bio, archived articles, religion, political party, postsecondary education, previous employment and any alliances you should be aware of • Be prepared and cautious of what you say • Figure out what’s important to them – they will probably listen better to you and you will be better prepared to make remarks
Identify Legislators on Relevant Committees • Education Committee • Appropriations Committee • Veterans Committee • Financial/Banking Committee • Chairmen and Ranking Minority Members
Focus on Leadership, Committee Chairmen, and Ranking Minority Members • Senate • President, Majority Leader, Majority Whip, Minority Leader, Minority Whip • House • Speaker, Majority Leader, Majority Whip, Minority Leader, Minority Whip • Chairmen and Ranking Minority Members control the agenda/issues for their respective political caucuses
Cultivating Relationships • Reach out – target key members to meet with • Be thorough in your research to find out what is important to them, their causes, read any articles referencing them, and gather information about what they’ve championed in the past • Support your friends and their causes • Support financially for political campaigns • Support their friends’ campaigns (especially if they are in leadership) • Support their charities, causes, etc. • Follow-up – always send thank you letters and remember to provide more detail about issues covered or any requests from the meeting
Educating Members • Build credibility by educating members through coalitions and third parties • Student Groups • Local Businesses and Employers • Policy Foundations • Educate - Arm them with statistics, data, success stories and allow them time to meet your students • Give our Legislative Champions the tools to explain why Career Colleges are such an important part of higher education
Student Groups • Students for Academic Choice • Developed a leadership team, created by-laws, collected 32,000 signatures opposing Gainful Employment, and now building database of positive student experiences • The power of this group speaks for itself!!
Business and Economic Organizations • Coalition Building • Make sure that CEO knows that employees are our students • Recognize employers through scholarship funds • Create partnerships with economic development organizations • Chambers of Commerce • Point out employers during Chamber Meetings • Coordinate with Workforce Boards • New York Workforce Investment Board • Coordinate charitable efforts with local, community businesses
Profiles: In-depth view of who they are • The Hon. Tim Bishop (D-1st, NY) • From Southampton, NY • Former College Provost • Married (Kathryn) • Two daughters (Megan/Molly) • Catholic • First elected in 2002
Profiles: In-depth view of who they are • Glenn W. Thompson, Jr (R-5th, PA) • From Bellefonte, PA • Penn State Graduate • Married (Penny) • Protestant • First elected in 2008 • Former career as a Rehabilitation Therapist
Treat Legislative Staff as you do the Member • Staff are the key to the Members – be courteous, helpful and respectful • Staff will likely have a deeper knowledge of issues or legislation • Invite the staff to your campus; provide them with school “give-aways”, provided the law says you can • Follow-up with thank you notes and any other information or details requested • Remember names of staff and build a database with contact information to help you remember
Meet with Congressional District Staff • Many relationships formed with the district staff are long-term and will help you access the DC office • Educate them about your students, the local community, local workforce needs, and the number of career students and employees in the District • Invite them to tour your campus • Example: Art Kennedy • District COS for Cong. Alcee Hastings • Best friends with Cong. Elijah Cummings
Cultivating Champions for our Students • Champions must trust you • Be honest, provide factual data and always be student-centered • Educate and listen to them, and know what is important • Get to know and become a good resource for staff • Full commitment • Campus tours and broad-based support (employers, physicians, advisory board members, veterans) • Fundraising • Be respectful and have professional courtesy even when you disagree • Follow-up with thank you notes and other information requested • Recognition – provide exposure in venues they care about
Develop Tools and Resources • Take a student-focused approach in your public comments and any communication • When you meet have a one-page document which covers your issues and any specific action needed or requested by you • You can leave other types of documents which will help in your advocacy: white-papers, brochures, data pieces, and any media clippings or newspaper articles • Use letters of support from employers, community leaders, or other businesses to show broad-based support • Power of data – Guryan Study
How to Duplicate your Success • State vs. Federal • Use student-centered approach • Identify key legislators on relevant committees • Build relationships and leverage those relationships • Remain on message: be clear and concise • Be courteous to all Members and their staff • Coalition building: become a main-stream player so other groups will defend you • Conduct fundraisers, host Members to your campus and visit them in DC • Know state rules and federal rules and what differences there are • Continue to build credibility of our sector through articles, letters from employers, and demonstrate accountability and performance • Differences • Legislative tracking (Knowlegis, Roll Call, CQ) • Politics • Enlarged universe – if you are meeting a Member not from your state, you need to know about the career college sector in their state and which schools are located there • Legislative staff vs. Committee staff, longevity, and # of staffers and issues vastly increases in Washington DC • Culture between your state capital and Washington DC