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Fact Sheet

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E-Democracy.Org Fact Sheet from 2007 - TO BE UPDATED

Contents

[edit] Mission and Overview

E-Democracy.Org is a 501.c3 non-profit, non-partisan, volunteer-based project whose mission is to expand participation and build stronger democracies and communities through the power of information and communication technologies and strategies.

In 1994, we launched the world's first election information web site as Minnesota E-Democracy. Today as E-Democracy.Org, we are building the world's largest network of local online town halls we call "Issues Forums."

With over a decade of experience as a volunteer-based, trusted, neutral host of online civic dialog, E-Democracy.Org now hosts online community and neighborhood forums across nearly a dozen communities in Minnesota (USA), England, and most recently New Zealand. We are entering a phase of rapid community expansion and participant growth.

[edit] Issues Forums - Our Unique Online Town Hall Model

Issues Forums are a unique and highly effective model for sustained discussion of local public issues. Unlike the coarse and divisive partisanship we too often see, our "online town hall forums" encourage participation from across the political spectrum and bring in diverse community voices. Based on real-world political value, Issues Forums attract participation from community leaders, engaged community members, local elected and appointed officials, and journalists.

New forums launch when a local volunteer Forum Manager supported by a steering committee recruits at least 100 charter participants. This "built to last" model creates an ongoing and agenda-setting conversation on local issues that is web and e-mail accessible. Our most active forum reach 200 members (and many more web visitors) within a year and Minneapolis has the largest forum with close to 900 registered participants.

At E-Democracy.Org, we do things differently. Participants agree to use their real names and keep the discussion civil. And as a true "public space" -- unlike most other commercial online forums -- our rules limit E-Democracy.Org's arbitrary power and instead focus on facilitation and community accountability.

In 2005, the British government funded our expansion into the United Kingdom. Now in four English communities, we are a global model for local democracy in the information age. A 60-page guidebook and videos about Issues Forums is available from: http://e-democracy.org/if

Our local Issues Forum network includes the following (current to November 2007):

New Zealand

United Kingdom

United States

[edit] What do people discuss?

People exchange information and views on a wide range of very local issues. A quick scan of the discussion topics make it clear that the community "intelligence is in the network."

This is a sampling of discussion topics from October 2007:

While each local forum has its own independent message space, as our network grows, E-Democracy.Org is developing proposals for ways to connect active citizens across communities to share experiences and solutions to public challenges.

[edit] Expansion Goals and Strategic Plan

E-Democracy.Org seeks to expand the number of communities it serves from 10 to 20 over the next year. Our model is partly rooted in the century-old service club movement with a modern locally-led franchise approach and shared technology base. We are building the infrastructure for hundreds of direct local democracy online/citizen media as a direct part of our network and hope to inspire thousands of similar independent community-based efforts.

In the near term, we seek to deepen our presence in existing communities by quadrupling the number of registered participants to 10,000. We will do this by recruiting new and diverse voices and increasing the number of neighborhood forums where we are most established. In addition, our new strategic plan lays the path toward network support for local online citizen engagement activities.

Our official goals are:

Our Project Blog contains the inside scoop on our growth and development: http://blog.e-democracy.org

[edit] Praise for E-Democracy.Org and Issues Forums

[edit] Leadership

E-Democracy.Org is led by Co-Founder and Board Chair, Steven Clift.

Steven is among the world's foremost experts on "e-democracy" in government and community using public speaking and consulting to support his volunteer time with E-Democracy.Org. Steven was elected as an Ashoka Fellow in 2006 which included a three year stipend allowing him to dedicate himself full-time to E-Democracy.Org full-time for the first time.

Along with Steve's hard work, the recent E-Democracy.Org expansion was also the result of Tim Erickson, online facilitator and one-time Forum Manager of the St. Paul Issues Forum. He was a dedicated volunteer who subsequently led our UK funded pilot expansion and other new grant funded initiatives and Issues Forum development. He has moved on to other opportunities after mentoring Edward Davis, a local community activist, as his partial successor.

Edward comes to E-Democracy.Org with hopes to increase opportunities for effective discussion of public policy issues at all levels. He has experience in natural sciences, urban planning, and environmental management.

Our Board

Additional background details from http://e-democracy.org/about.html

[edit] Funding

E-Democracy.Org was an all volunteer organization with a donated information infrastructure for its first decade. Over the last few years our efforts have attracted an estimated $300,000 US worth of investment. This includes funding for our expansion into England from the UK Local E-Democracy National Project, in-kind technology support from OnlineGroups.Net in New Zealand, a three year stipend to cover Steven Clift's time from Ashoka, and two recent project grants providing approximately $75,000 in funding.

E-Democracy.Org adopted a basic one year budget of $150,000 from July 1, 2007 through June 31, 2008. We need to raise a minimum of $85,000 to meet that budget. Based on the demand for our services we expect the budget to increase and are planning for a mix of revenue streams including major donations, smaller voluntary participant and supporter donations, providing e-democracy services to other groups and governments for a fee, and grants (to support new programming and features). Based on our participant survey, in the UK in particular, we will explore ongoing local government support for Issues Forums.

 

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