City Membership
* White Paper: City Membership. By Sam Pressler and Pete Davis. Democracy Collaborative, 2025
URL = http://democracypolicy.network/agenda/strong-people/strong-communities/city-membership
Description
Elias Crim:
"Membership is an attachment that seems to arise organically, almost spontaneously, when conditions are right. It is not a concept easily translatable into practical proposals, as we’ve learned from the failure of all those “red/blue” gatherings which did not actually bridge many divides.
Mindful of these challenges to rebuilding our nearly collapsed civic life, two very talented thinker-activists have just published “City Membership”, a highly readable whitepaper/toolkit offering a mix of policy elements, notable precedents, and strategy advice.
Authors Sam Pressler and Pete Davis argue for rebuilding our communities first from the municipal level, given that it’s pretty much only at that level that we still have some freedom to exercise genuine innovation and practice an authentic politics.
Here are some of my favorite recipes for their campaign to reground us in our own places:
Mayors should expand accessible meeting spaces and launch a unified space reservation system. This is a modest-sounding proposal to recognize our damaging lack of “third places” where local bonds can develop and even real politics can emerge.
Cities should collaborate with civic groups to create citizens’ assemblies in which randomly selected (i.e., jury style) groups of citizens deliberate and advise on local issues. This also is a big idea in quiet language!
Cities can also build up membership in its neighborhoods by creating more microspaces for organic events and meetups, along with microgrant funding.
The authors push for a much bigger commitment to welcoming new residents, via a “welcoming liaisons” program, a genuinely valuable and practical “welcome kits”, and new resident orientation sessions.
Civic “homecomings” encourage former residents (including whatever now-“famous” people that might include) are another piece of the authors’ proposed civic ecosystem, somewhat modeled on college homecomings.
If thoughtfully done, a city “hall of fame” is a way of publicizing a city’s values by raising up authentic local heroes (i.e., not just boosters or the usual business crowd) as a shared point of pride, somewhat on the model of the National Baseball Hall of Fame."
(http://solidarityhall.substack.com/p/from-citizenship-to-membership)