From the shores of the St. Croix, to the winding dirt roads of the valley, people are starting to realize that they can make positive change in our community. We get a lot of opportunities to work with members from across Western WI to build power. GROWW’s Organizing Director, Bill Hogseth, gets to experience this all the time. “Every single day we get to see light bulbs going off for people. People choosing to step out of their comfort zone and do something that they know is important. That’s not easy, and people like making a commitment that’s beyond just doing one thing and being done.” Bill works with organizers and members on community projects ranging from stopping CAFO expansion to advocating for more affordable housing to bringing Final Five Voting to Wisconsin. At the heart of our work is organizing, and the radical belief that anyone can do it.

Each of our projects has a leadership team made up of members who are passionate about their community. Members can work to create positive change by not only developing their own leadership skills but by lifting up and supporting the people around them. This includes supporting those on their own organizing journey.

This past January, we held our first organizing workshop; GrassRoots School. This gave us the chance to support those who wanted to obtain the skills needed to make a change through community power. Many of those members are still working with us now. “Sometimes the training is like the first step on a longer journey for them and watching where they go after, that is really beautiful,” Bill says. “We’ve got people who were in GrassRoots School who are now in our leadership teams.” We get to watch people come into their own power and use it.

Members participating in GrassRoots School January 2023

To truly make a change in our communities, we need power.

Power-less

Most people think of power as a bad thing. There are countless negative connotations with power; that the people in power tend to abuse it or the idea that power corrupts. “Most people’s experiences with power are negative,” says Bill. “Where they’re being deprived of something or manipulated or exploited or not seen or not heard or not taken seriously.” When the people who have the power are irresponsibly causing more harm than good, it is easy to see power as something evil. “We don’t get many experiences to see ourselves or our family or our community as being powerful. The world lacks examples of ordinary people being powerful.”

For a time, Bill was a wildlife biologist at the DNR. He wanted to make a change in conservation and protect the places, habitats, and animals that make Wisconsin so beautiful. As a very data-oriented person, this seemed like the place to be – he had all the facts and now he had access to the people who had the authority and power to make change.

But it became increasingly apparent to him that the change he wanted to make was not possible through his position. Even with all his facts, there seemed to always be bureaucratic obstacles in the way. “It was a lot of experiences of realizing the problems that I wanted to solve couldn’t be solved by collecting data and having all the information to make the best decision because usually, the decisions came down to power of politics.”

It is common to feel that power is something only a few have in top-floor corporate offices, in the backrooms of Madison, and in the halls out in Washington D.C.. Even up the ladder of the DNR. That to have power one needs an official title on their business card declaring such. That the changemakers with real influence live outside the scope of our day-to-day life.

That is what those who are misusing their power want us to believe – that power is a finite resource only a few of us have. That power is for greedy and corrupt politicians, CEOs, or lobbyists. We have to choose not to believe the lies that we’ve been told about ourselves by these institutions. We know that in reality, we have power and can use it to benefit the communities we care about.

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