start a nonprofit to help get rural liberals web-enabled
The idea, in a nutshell: 4 years ago

So, I built a site for the county Democrats in my hometown, and it was a decent success… they grew their membership, raised money, and generally managed to get some real momentum behind their local liberal community for the first time in recent memory. But, there were problems, primarily with providing the needed functionality and still making something useable with open source or very inexpensive tools.

So, what I want to do is come up with a suite of simple tools(weblog software, a mailing list manager, a file upload script, survey/polling software, and calendaring software seem like the essential pieces) with robust functionality, but not many confusing configuration options for the end-user, for setting up and running a small-to-medium political organizational site on a budget.

I’m not sure how I’m going to do this yet. The most attractive option to me, not being a hardcore codemonkey, is to avoid reinventing the wheel by just gluing together existing free software with a new interface and some authentication code. If I could get a couple of really good PHP or Perl people on board, I could maybe get more ambitious. But, I want it to be self-limiting in some ways. Civicspace and others are already covering groups that need huge amounts of functionality. I’m going more for ease of use and simplicity here.

Once I’ve got something to work with, I’ll try to roll it out to a few other groups or candidates, likely through connections developed in the course of making the original site. After that, who knows? I’d like to make it available and support it for as many groups as possible eventually, but that will take sources of funding and an administrative structure and all that, and thus is way down the road.



Comments:

Check out indyvoter.org

It’s not an exact tool-set match but it’s made from ground up for political-oriented community involvement.

I’d start out with a small tool set as possible and add features as it’s clear the expected users really want them.

Also, I’ve found using verbage as closely tied to the user’s language makes issues like setting options and learning how to use the tools go much easier.

Diary means more to average person than blog. Error messages can be friendly and fun. Things like that.

Hmmm, if successful, you should document your experience. That way I can, y’know, start efforts to help rural conservatives get web access. ;)

Well, the main thing rural conservatives have going for them is that they don’t really need it. They’ve already got the churches to provide a strong social network that the political and social (and web, for that mattter) activists can plug right into. Rural liberals are pretty much totally disorganized and isolated as far as I can tell, so even though they’re not a huge minority (40-45%) in many places they’re pretty much hopeless and invisible.

So, you’ll forgive me if I don’t run to help out the other side. If I had done this 4 years ago, it would have been a nonpartisan project to encourage civic participation in general, but not these days when the people I agree with are at such a disadvantage on the ground. I’ll probably still release whatever comes of it openly and freely, but I’ll probably only actively support it for groups I generally agree with and want to promote.

You got my attention. Nine months ago I would have looked at the “liberal” in this project and skipped to something else. All I wanted was nonpartisan projects. Now I not so quick to dismiss anything with the word “liberal” since without those who still consider themselves such I will not see any change four years from now.

Unfortunately, I’ve no programming skills, so I can’t be of any help, but if I’ll be watching your progress, if I can figure out how to follow this goal.

tools are already built...

you might want to take a look at getting what’s termed a “shared hosting reseller” account at a web hosting company…

Reseller accounts come with Control Panel software that automates just about everything you’ve discussed. There are even packages that will allow each local group to click install the software they need (blogs, bulletin boards, polls, even page builders, etc.).

Like you said, you don’t want to reinvent the wheel, and unless you have a specific technical goal that relies on the interoperatibility of these sites (like some civicspace features) then what your really talking about is simply access. Making it as easy as possible to put up a site that suites each local community’s needs.

Reseller accounts that can accomidate many individual community sites are very affordable, <$100 month. So you could spend your efforts in raising money to provide this free service, providing the technical support that would be needed (use Control Panel to set up account, ftp some templates into account, develop a faq, etc), and promoting the free service.

Again, if it’s really about getting communities online and not about a brand new technical idea, the software is already built, the biggest hurdle for these communities is access and guidence. I know, i would donate money for free hosting for Democratic community websites.


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