Sponsors:         Rese Fox, External Relations Chair, MSA-LSA representative

Charles Adside, Community Service Commission Co-Chair, MSA-LSA   representative

                        Mike Forster, External Relations Vice Chair, MSA-LSA representative

                        Tim Wiggins, External Relations member, MSA-LSA representative

 

1 Introduction: University of Michigan Mission and Student PIRGs

2 PIRG Chapter Features

3 PIRGIM Pilot Chapter Program Priorities

4 PIRGIM Pilot Chapter

5 PIRGIM Budget and Pilot Chapter Budget

6 Conclusion

Appendix A and B

 

1 Introduction: University of Michigan Mission and Student PIRGs

 

1.1 Whereas, the mission of the University of Michigan is to “serve the people of Michigan and the world through preeminence in creating, communicating, preserving and applying knowledge, art, and academic values, and in developing leaders and citizens who will challenge the present and enrich the future.[1]” And,

 

1.2 Whereas, Student PIRG chapters foster civic engagement in college students, as students at other colleges hosting Student PIRG chapters have chosen, designed and implemented campaigns focusing on student voter participation, renters rights, hunger and homelessness and more. And,

 

1.3 Whereas, the student PIRG program aggressively promotes the application of knowledge to public interest issues by engaging students, faculty, and other members of the campus community in direct community service. And,

 

1.4 Whereas, given the nature and structure of the PIRG program, there are many “professional” skills which are learned and practiced by students who participate in the PIRG internship program and as members of the student Board of Directors by honing their writing skills producing reports and educational materials; testing strategies for marketing new ideas and information to the campus, the public, and decision makers; understanding how to build and promote team work; and, as Directors of the organization they gain hands-on experience managing a non-profit corporation from budgeting and bookkeeping to personnel and policy decisions. And,

 

1.5 Whereas, the PIRG program’s relationship to research embraces the concept that new knowledge can serve society, while endeavoring to ensure that knowledge is in fact applied to societal needs and students at other colleges hosting Student PIRG chapters have participated in and applied research through campaigns on the California Energy Crisis, Tobacco at the Movies, Affordable Textbooks, and more.

 

2 PIRG Chapter Features

 

2.1 Whereas, the opportunity to tackle pressing social issues exists in a meaningful way through the Student PIRG program because students hire a staff of professionals – researchers, attorneys, advocates, and organizers – to work with them to design and implement PIRG projects.  And,

 

2.2 Whereas, PIRG professional staff provide the tools necessary for genuine public policy participation with expertise on issues and the political process. And,

 

2.3 Whereas, the PIRGIM Campus Organizer will be an available resource to the entire University of Michigan Community. And

 

2.4 Whereas, PIRG professional staff are consistently present in the corporate board rooms and legislative chambers where decisions are made which is a prerequisite to meaningful participation in the public policy arena. And,

 

2.5 Whereas, the student PIRG program is entirely student controlled – governed by a student board of directors elected by students from member campuses.  And,

 

2.6 Whereas, the student board is responsible for hiring staff, adopting policy positions, and approving the organizational budget.  And,

 

2.7 Whereas, student governance creates some of the unique learning experiences that the PIRG program has to offer, such as financial management of a non-profit corporation, personnel decisions, and strategic planning.  And,

 

2.8 Whereas, it is particularly important that the students involved in the PIRG program are the ones who determine the agenda and priorities since PIRG’s charter is non-ideological and without a set issue agenda. And

 

2.9 Whereas, Student PIRG chapters have traditionally been funded by student fees.  And,

 

2.10 Whereas, common funding mechanisms include allocations from the general student activities fee, or a separate fee created through a democratic decision making process. And,

 

2.11 Whereas, Given PIRG’s commitment to student engagement, it is also particularly important that the decision to fund a PIRG chapter does not require cuts to existing student programs.  And,

 

2.12 Whereas, establishing a pilot PIRGIM chapter would not require cuts to existing student programs.

 

3 PIRGIM Pilot Chapter Program Priorities

 

3.1 Whereas, the student body is generally uneducated on their rights and resources as tenants. And,

 

3.2 Whereas, the University of Michigan provides many good services, including mediation and legal services to students, but are not designed to answer simple questions, and are both already stretched thin in terms of meeting their requests for services, while underused by the student body at the same time. And,

 

3.3 Whereas, the University provides many useful resources, yet it does not and is often not in a good position to act as an advocate for students as tenants. And,

 

3.4 Whereas, the PIRGIM Pilot chapter’s highest priority campaign will be a Renter’s Rights campaign.  And,

 

3.6 Whereas, in executing the Renter’s Rights Campaign, the PIRGIM Pilot Chapter will thoroughly research community housing problems and available resources, set up a hotline next fall to serve as the “go-to” place to get housing questions answered, actively work to educate students on their rights as tenants.

 

3.7 Whereas, other priority campaigns will include a Higher Education Campaign and Affordable Textbooks for an Affordable Education.  And,

 

3.8 Whereas, the PIRGIM Pilot Chapter will further execute other smaller campaigns on the local, state and national level.

 

4 PIRGIM Pilot Chapter

 

4.1 Whereas, without an opportunity for students to interact and learn from staff and without an opportunity for students on campus to run and execute PIRGIM campaigns, it can be hard to imagine the impact a full PIRGIM chapter can have.  And,

 

4.2 Whereas, to showcase the potential of a chapter without a long term funding commitment, some campuses start pilot chapters with the intention of fully funding a chapter of PIRGIM in the future.  And,

 

4.1.3 Whereas, the PIRG “Pilot Chapter Program” is a way to introduce PIRGIM and the chapter model of organizing to new campuses across the state.  And,

 

4.4 Whereas, funding a PIRGIM pilot chapter represents a commitment and investment from PIRGIM and from the student body.  And,

 

4.5 Whereas, a PIRGIM pilot chapter introduces students on campus to the local, state and national campaigns of the PIRGIM student chapters and introduces faculty and staff to the internship program PIRGIM runs.  And,

 

4.6 Whereas, PIRGIM staff get acquainted with local issues while simultaneously introducing students with the staff and the issues they champion through a PIRGIM pilot program.  And,

4.7 Whereas, The Pilot Chapter program is a fourteen month program ending with a student government or campus-wide decision to fully fund and foster a PIRGIM Student Chapter at a particular campus.

 

 

5 PIRGIM Budget and Pilot Chapter Budget

 

5.1 Whereas, the PIRGIM Budget Chapter and Chapter Pilot Budget are as follows (see Appendix for Budget Narrative):

 

PIRGIM Budget & Pilot Chapter Proposal

 

Staffing

Chapter

Pilot Chapter

 

Operational Expenses

Chapter

Pilot Chapter

Campus Organizer

$20,700

$6,831

 

Office Supplies

$225

$74

PIRGIM State Director

$6,000

$2,000

 

Postage and Shipping

$150

$50

PIRGIM Environmental Advocate

$2,500

$825

 

Office Copies

$175

$58

PIRGIM Consumer Advocate

$5,000

$1,630

 

Printing and Publications

$3,600

$1,188

PIRGIM Field Associate

$2,500

$825

 

Travel

$2,200

$726

USPIRG Advocates & Organizing Staff

$4,500

$1,485

 

Office Rent

$2,200

$726

National Campus Program Staff

$3,000

$990

 

Local Telephone

$200

$66

National Campus Training, Development &  Oversight

$3,500

$1,155

 

Long Distance

$350

$116

Higher Education Project

$2,500

$825

 

Utilities

$225

$74

 

 

 

 

Books and Publications

$150

$50

Salary Total

$50,200

$16,566

 

Conferences/Special Events

$200

$66

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operational Total

$9,675

$3,193

 

 

Chapter

Pilot Chapter

Total

$59,875

$19,759

 

5.1.1 Whereas, the PIRGIM Pilot Chapter will operate under the rules governing 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations; and

 

5.1.2 Whereas, Students for PIRGIM requests to create a pilot chapter for Winter 2005 and introduce a ballot proposal for a fully-funded PIRGIM chapter in March 2006.

 

6 Conclusion

 

6.1 Therefore be it resolved, that the Michigan Student Assembly supports the creation of a PIRGIM chapter at the University of Michigan; and

 

6.2 Therefore be it further resolved, that the Michigan Student Assembly appoint a PIRGIM Oversight Select Committee to report back to MSA PIRGIM’s progress, (see attached Appendix for written description); and

 

6.3 Therefore be it finally resolved, that the Michigan Student Assembly transfer $19,759  from Committee Discretionary into External Relations account according to the previously stated budget in order to sponsor the University of Michigan PIRGIM Pilot Chapter.


Appendix A

 

PIRGIM Budget Narrative 2005

PIRGIM’s plan to meet its goals and objectives

The budget below is the driving force for all the campaigns, events, trainings and goals stated above.  This narrative is designed to give greater detail to the line items simply listed above in the PIRGIM Budget Reference Guide.

 

Staffing

Of all the numbers in our budget, this is the most important.  The staff positions students fund for the year is the most basic outline of our program work.  Our ability to hire experts is PIRGIM’s main strategy to make a difference on the things that are most important to Michigan and most motivating for students.  In addition, most of our line items (travel, benefits, rent, etc.) stem from our staffing scenario for a given year.  From this line item, we can safely predict our other expenses for the year.

 

With a full chapter, PIRGIM’s staff consists of organizers, advocates, researchers and issue experts.  The combination of staff is what makes all of our programs successful.  Our issue advocates that coordinate our efforts to clean up waterways or lower tuition rely on organizing staff to educate the campus community, train volunteers, and gather the public support the advocate needs to win.  During the pilot chapter, the University of Michigan would mostly pay for PIRGIM’s on campus program and specifically the campus organizer.  Organizers recruit students and coordinate a popular student run internship program.  The success of PIRGIM’s interns relies on the campaigns and activities we run to be real – to actually be making a difference on the things students care about.  So interns work closely with professional advocates to design campaigns and programs that will educate students and impact decision makers.  The reality of the work is so important because the student experience is richer when the press conference the student holds really does get on the 5 o’clock news, the report the intern researches actually influences the policy the governor drafts, or the public comments the volunteer gathers really do press the White House to do the right thing. 

 

This complement of on campus action that drives statewide solutions to statewide problems makes PIRGIM unique, it makes us effective, and it makes us important to the campus experience and to the state overall.

 

PIRGIM Staff

 

Our 2005 budget plans on the following staffing scenario:

 

Campus Organizer

The Campus Organizer, a professional organizer who receives over a month of training in their first year on staff, works directly with students and is the chapter’s primary resource.  The organizer runs internship and civic education programs and coordinates each semester’s campaigns with student leaders.  Having a fulltime organizer allows the students to take on a much larger volume of work by providing professional expertise on:

 

·         recruitment –how to begin the semester with an intense 3-week recruitment drive, recruiting hundreds of students to participate in the semester’s campaigns,

·         leadership development- how to constantly increase the skills and leadership of volunteers and interns,

·         grassroots organizing- how  to effectively use grass roots tactics such as public comments, call-in days and coalition building, etc.,

·         advocacy- how to effectively work with elected representatives,

·         and working with the media, how to write a press advisory and release, hold a press conference, get a letter to the editor published, etc.

 

Further the Campus Organizer is a resource to the entire campus community, providing advice and trainings to other student groups on executing effective campus programs.

 

Total salaried amount: $20,700 (salary assumes a 9 month position and includes taxes and benefits).

 

State Advocacy Staff

Theses line items funds part of the overall advocacy staff that work for PIRGIM – the resources here would subsidize advocacy and grassroots efforts coordinated on behalf of the student chapters.  Advocates would work with student interns and the Student Board of Directors to develop state-based PIRGIM campaigns.

 

Staff Biographies:

 

Brian Imus, State Director
As the Legislative Advocate, Mr. Imus coordinates the environmental, consumer and good government campaigns through research, advocacy and public education. Prior to joining PIRGIM staff in 1996, Mr. Imus worked on two campaign finance reform ballot initiatives, doing public education through the media and speaking before community organizations. Mr. Imus graduated from the
University of Oregon in 1995 with a degree in Public Policy and Management.  As State Director, Mr. Imus will work with the student chapter on developing and executing all of their campaigns.

 

Megan Owens, Consumer Advocate
As PIRGIM's Consumer Advocate, Megan Owens works to prevent consumer rip-offs and create a fair marketplace. In 2004, she authored a report entitled "Policing Privacy" and developed recommendations for preventing identity theft which led to Michigan's new identity theft laws. A life-long Michigan resident and graduate of the University of Michigan, Ms. Owens has worked for PIRGIM for six years. Her previous work has included organizing college students, working on political campaigns and teaching environmental education in the Michigan State Parks.  Ms. Owens will work with students on their consumer campaigns, like Affordable Textbooks for an Affordable Education.

 

Kate Madigan, Environmental Advocate
Based out of our Lansing office, Ms. Madigan works on a variety of our priority environmental issues, including our efforts to promote smart land use planning and to protect Michigan’s waterways. Prior to joining PIRGIM staff, Ms. Madigan worked for three years as Safe Foods Advocate for the National Association of State PIRGs. Ms. Madigan graduated from the
University of Michigan with a B.S. in Resource Ecology and Management, and received her M.A. in International Management from the School for International Training in Vermont.  Ms. Madigan will provide expertise and advocate on behalf of students on environmental issues.

 

Jason Barbose, Field Organizer

Mr. Barbose works to coordinate PIRGIM campaigns throughout the state. Through his work with media, activists, and other organizations, he builds visible support for PIRGIM's campaigns in an effort to convince Michigan  decision makers to preserve the environment, protect the public health, create a fair marketplace for consumers and promote responsible, democratic government. Mr. Barbose graduated with highest honors from the University of California, Santa Cruz with a degree in politics  Mr. Barbose will work with and provide expertise to students in executing strategic campaign work on both state and national campaigns.

 

Salaried amounts for each Advocacy Staff member is based on a percentage of their salary and the amount of time and resources they will be devoting to working on the chapter’s priority campaigns. 

 

United States PIRG Advocates and Campaign Staff

 

All the different state and student PIRGs hire national experts to work on the federal level on important public interest issues.  These staff work with Congress to protect the environment, defend consumers, promote civic participation and watchdog democracy.  Students hire more than twenty staff in total, and these staff write countless reports, run a number of campaigns, and provide advice for the students involved.  You can see all the work of the USPIRG staff at www.uspirg.org

 

National Campus Program Staff

 

Each year, students from across the country prioritize a set of issues to run as national campaigns.  These issues then receive special staff attention and coordination to make sure we have an impact.  This fall, the campaigns that students prioritized were the New Voters Project and Affordable Textbooks for an Affordable Education.  You can see examples of these campaigns at www.ospirgstudents.org.  National Campus Program Staff design campaigns with students, coordinate research and reports, and develop strategy.

 

National Campus Training, Development and Oversight

 

Our staff need training and oversight to succeed.  Organizers and students get training, strategic advice, and oversight from a set of national experts and direct supervisors.  Each year, our organizers and advocacy staff go through a month of intensive training so their work can be as effective as possible.  Each semester, students have the opportunity to go to statewide and regional trainings where experts and experienced staff run workshops on campaign and skill development.

 

The Student PIRGs Higher Education Project

 

The Student PIRGs Higher Education Project is one of the few student directed, DC-based projects that fights for federal financial aid.  This year, this project is even more important because Congress will be setting the next five years of higher education policy.  The advocates that work for the Higher Education Project in DC also provide expertise to state-based higher education efforts.

 

Operating Expenses

 

In order to make the work of our professional staff and student interns more effective, PIRGIM accrues a certain set of operating costs throughout the year.  We do everything we can to keep these costs at a minimum, and overall, the organization conserves these resources to the best of its ability because each operating dollar we spend takes away from funds we could use for hiring additional experts.  So every dollar spent is well thought through. 

 

Some of these operational expenses are good, strategic decisions too, and at times the organization will make the conscious decision to spend more money on certain resources that help make staff overall more effective. 

 

A general way to understand our operational expenses is to follow the staff, the money we spend on operational expenses increases as the number of staff increase.

 

Office Supplies

 This line item pays for a variety of materials and supplies on campus and at the state office.  Supplies purchased include: pens, notebooks, computer disks, paper clips, rubber bands, clips, laser printer cartridges, fax toner cartridges, file folders, markers, paint, tape, staples, staplers, and supplies for mailings including envelopes, plain and manila.  We budget on spending roughly $150 dollars on office supplies per campus chapter and staff person. 

Postage and Shipping

This line item pays for a variety of mailings to students, and citizens.  Petitions and letters are sent to decision makers.  Fact sheets, reports and other information are sent to media contacts and coalition partners.  In addition to regular mailings, materials, supplies, props and other campaign supplies are often purchased centrally and then shipped to chapters to save money on printing costs.

 

Office Copies

This line item pays for office copying costs for campus and state program staff.

 

Printing and Publications

This line item pays for the printing of fact sheets, websites, posters, brochures, newsletters, over 30 publications in all for tens of thousands of students and citizens across the state.  In addition, this line item pays for the printing and duplication of PIRGIM reports.  Each year, staff and students release research reports that call on decision makers to protect the public interest or warn the public about environmental threats, consumer dangers and rip-offs and assaults on our democracy.

 

Recent publications include from other student chapters include: (this is a partial list, the Student PIRGs are constantly working on newsletters, fact sheets, and brochures that communicate important public interest work to the surrounding campus and community):

Student PIRG Student Handbook

Student PIRG Activist Toolkit (a guide for student activists)

Student PIRG Internship brochure

Student PIRG Organizational Brochure

Student PIRG Impact: the newsletter of the Student PIRGs

Factsheets on: clean water, credit card rip-offs, bank fees, hunger, wilderness areas, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, global warming, clean air, federal higher education issues, Hells Canyon, textbooks, renter’s rights, among others.

Posters for: general interest meetings, internships, all Student PIRG issues, call-in days, etc.

Organizational banners

Campaign banners

 

The Student PIRG’s website can be found at www.studentpirgs.org, you can see an example of a specific student PIRG website at www.ospirgstudents.org.  To see an example of a campaign website, visit www.campusbookswap.com.

 

Travel

This line item pays for travel for students and staff for regional and national meetings and trainings, it also pays for program staff to attend meetings with decision makers and community leaders, press conference travel, etc. 

 

Office Rent

This line item pays for office space for our advocacy staff.  Students and the campus organizer will also use space when they are in Lansing to advocate on non-legislative issues.

Local Telephone

This line item pays for local telephone use and fees on campuses and for state program staff.  

 

Long Distance Telephone

This line item pays for long distance fees for organizers and program staff.  It assumes that the organizer will be on the phone long distance for three hours a month, and that the advocacy staff will spend eight hours a month on the phone.

 

Utilities

This line item pays for the utilities accrued throughout the year from the state office.  This line item pays for water, gas and electric bills. 

 

Books and Publications

This line item pays for a variety of books and publications that full time staff, board members, student interns and volunteers use for reference, research and training throughout the year.  In years past, we’ve used this line item to buy training books like Long Walk to Freedom, by Nelson Mandela, Fire at Eden’s Gate, The Heat is On, a book examining the problems of global warming, and Rules for Radicals, a book examining social reform movements.  Some expenses in this category are for research, one expense from last year in many states was the purchase of textbooks to help do the final research for the Student PIRG’s Affordable Textbooks for an Affordable Education campaign.

 

Conferences/Special Events

This line item pays for staff and student attendance at a variety of conferences and events throughout the year.  Conferences that staff and students in other states have attended in the past include: local and statewide debates, higher education conferences like the Northwest Student Leadership Conference, issues conferences on clean water and toxics, and we use this line item to expand our research and knowledge on issues, and less for training.  We do hold retreats and leadership events, but we ask students to pay their own way to those conferences. 

 

Appendix B

 

PIRGIM OVERSIGHT SELECT COMMITTEE WRITTEN DESCRIPTION

 

  1. Committee Composition
    1. The Leadership of the PIRGIM Oversight Select Committee will consist of a Chair and Vice Chair as specified by The Michigan Student Assembly Compiled Code (Article II.D.3)
  2. Committee Responsibility
    1. To ensure Student PIRGIM operates in a financially responsible manner.
    2. To report back to the Michigan Student Assembly on the progress of Student PIRGIM’s campaigns in relation to its stated goals.
  3. Committee Duration
    1. The committee will expire on April 16, 2006 (the last day of classes for Winter Term 2006), or
    2. By two reads and a majority vote by the Assembly

 



[1] University of Michigan, Office of the President, http://www.umich.edu/pres/mission.html