Now is the time to tell them which way to scramble. As they
look around for a hot position, they'll see us calling them to
position themselves on the side of community.
Write or call them now. Contact at least one congressperson or
candidate. You can find the email addresses and URLs for every
electronically-accessible Senator and Congressperson at http://www.webslingerz.com/jhoffman/congress-email.html.
Regular addresses and phone numbers can be found at http://www.vote-smart.org/congresstrack/#contact
(which also gives hints on writing letters).
What exactly might you tell your respresentatives and candidates?
This is probably the most important action we can do right now
-- communicating this message strongly to our representatives
and politicians in search of our votes. We can't depend
on government-- but whatever it does do, needs to support
the positive efforts of communities. Remember: The Congress and
state and local officials that are elected this November will
be governing us through January 2000.
You can expand your impact by alerting friends in other states
to this political reality. Expain the role that politicians will
have in their lives and in the future of our society. Encourage
them to write and talk to their politicians and neighbors.
And you, yourself, might even decide to write to more than one
public official or candidate: after all, once you've written one
letter, you'll know what to say in your next letter, so don't
stop. (There is a form letter about some of this you can check
out at http://www.angelfire.com/mn/inforest/smpc1.html.
Rev. Dacia Reid's letter
to Al Gore is also interesting. If you want to learn more
about the role government should play in dealing with the crisis,
read the articles by Harlan
Smith, Steve
Davis and Leon
Kappleman, et al.)
This may be one of the few times when our voices suddenly have
real power, more power than we ever thought they'd have.
This Special Committee is the main official national forum for
exploring Y2K. As of mid-August, they have yet to explicitly address
the needs of community. This isn't surprising. Their "jursidiction"
from the Senate is "to study the impact of the year 2000
technology problem on the Executive and Judicial Branches of the
Federal Government, State governments, and private sector operations
in the United States and abroad." Notice that it doesn't
say anything about communities, cities, or counties. (For some
reason it doesn't say anything about Legislative branches, either!)
We can get the Special Committee to address community government
issues by asking them to investigate whether State governments
are dealing well or poorly with the Y2K preparations of the county,
city and town governments and state and regional utility districts
in their jurisdiction?
And we can get them to address grassroots community and non-profit
preparations under the category "private sector operations."
Although "private sector" is often code for business,
it actually includes all non-governmental entities, including
individuals, groups, corporations of all kinds, and non-governmental
agencies.
We want the Senate Special Committee to focus their spotlight
on the impact of Y2K on communities
We want the Special Committee to clarify how these
can be prepared and protected. They should get at least as much
attention as big government and big business. Of course, some
activities of big government and big business are important to
the health of communities (welfare, medicines, toxics control,
etc.). And so we're very interested in those activities, as well.
But we don't want so much time spent on all the others (like the
international money markets and fighter jets). After all, people
actually live in local communities. That's where they'll feel
the impact of Y2K most vividly.
So who do we need to reach on this? Here's who's on the committee:
Republicans
Robert F. Bennett, Utah
Jon Kyl, Arizona
Gordon Smith, Oregon
Susan Collins, Maine
Ted Stevens, Alaska -- Ex Officio
Democrats
Christopher J. Dodd, Connecticut
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, New York
Jeff Bingaman, New Mexico
Robert C. Byrd, West Virginia -- Ex Officio
Ultimately, you want to get through to Bennett or Dodd, the chair
and vice-chair of the Special Committee. They decide what gets
dealt with by the committee, and who gets to testify. Tell your
Senators to speak to Bennett and Dodd for you -- especially if
you have a Senator on the committee. Contact Bennett and Dodd,
yourself. Get your friends who live in the states represented
on the Special Committee -- AZ, AK, CT, ME, NM, NY, OR, UT, WV
-- to write to their Senators who sit on that committee. If you
are connected to any community-oriented nonprofit, church, professional
organization, etc., get them to contact the Bennett and Dodd.
National organizations, especially, have clout with Senators in
defining what is a community issue. Doing any of these would be
great. Doing a number of them would be extremely powerful.
Y2K is a complex issue, and the people at Senatorial offices are
busy (if not crazed). The message we want to communicate has three
simple parts. We need to focus their attention and ours on that
message. So tell them:
(There are many experts we could recommend, but we need to focus on one and Harlan is an especially good point person to initiate this effort. He can authoritatively explain what needs to be done with essential infrastructure. A retired electronics engineer with some 36 years experience of working on complex radar systems in the military, General Electric and Texas Instruments, Harlan has written several articles on the year 2000 problem including an introduction to the embedded systems problem and a plan for achieving global Y2K readiness called "Synergistic Mitigation and Contingency Preparation" which describes getting an "Austere Infrastructure" Y2K-ready. You can find out more at the following web sites:
http://www.scotsystems.com/harlany2k.html (for printout of infrastructure article)
http://www.angelfire.com/mn/inforest/smpc1.html (for citizen-action project)
The easiest thing to do is send an email or letter to the Senator
you're contacting, telling them the three points. More effective
is to send a telegram. More effective yet (by far) is to have
a personal conversation with their local office or call their
DC office and ask "Who has issue responsibility for Y2K?"
In the case of Special Committee members, ask "Who is involved
in handling the Year 2000 hearings for Senator X, or scheduling
testimony for the Special Committee on Y2K?" You can also
talk to the Senator's Legislative Director (LD) and ask him or
her how to best propose an expert to testify on the Special Committee
on Y2K. Find someone you can communicate the three points to;
then do it. If you let us know (cii@igc.apc.org),
we can track how this is progressing and focus our efforts better.
At the first hearings of the Special Committee on June 12,
Senator Dodd said: "I am very, very concerned that even as
government and business leaders are finally acknowledging the
seriousness of this problem, they are not thinking about the contingency
plans that need to be put into place to minimize the harm from
widespread failures.... I think we're no longer at the point of
asking whether or not there will be any power disruptions, but
we are now forced to ask how severe the disruptions are going
to be.... Contingency planning has to start today - not just for
the worst-case disaster scenarios but for all the medium-sized
disruptions that are more likely to occur.... If the critical
industries and government agencies don't start to pick up the
pace of dealing with this problem right now, Congress and the
Clinton Administration are going to have to make some very tough
decisions to deal with a true national emergency."
In a speech June 2 to The Center for Strategic and International
Studies, Senator Bennett named seven Y2K priorities. "The
number one priority is to see to it that all of the utilities
work, with power and water being available." If these shut
down, he said, "you can imagine the social consequences that
will occur in our major cities." The second priority is telecommunications,
especially phone service. The third priority is transportation,
especially railroads and oil supertankers. The fourth is financial
services, especially banking. Then come government services --
especially health care, welfare, police, fire and defense. Priority
six is general business activity and seven is litigation. Bennett
went on to say:
"When people say to me, 'Is the world going to come to an
end?' I say, 'I don't know.' I don't know whether this will be
a bump in the road -- that's the most optimistic assessment of
what we've got, a fairly serious bump in the road -- or whether
this will, in fact, trigger a major worldwide recession with absolutely
devastating economic consequences in some parts of the world....
But we must not be Chicken Little and tell them that the sky is
falling, and, therefore, they need do nothing but plow up their
backyard to put in a propane tank, a bomb shelter, and a large
supply of dried food that they will live in until the world finally
comes back in three or four years. Because that kind of attitude
in the next 18 months will, indeed, turn into a self-fulfilling
prophecy that will produce the disaster that we want to do whatever
we can to try to avoid.... We must start thinking across the individual
lines of our own organization, indeed across the individual lines
of our own country's borders, think in these macro terms of these
whole systems that must be preserved.... We must coldly, calculatingly
divide up the next 18 months to determine what we can do, what
we can't do, do what we can, and then provide for contingency
plans for that which we cannot"
These two perceptive public officials already know that government agencies and businesses can be either a part of the problem or a part of the solution. They just need to be reminded that the same is true of communities -- and that communities may be the best allies they have in avoiding disaster. They just need to mobilize and empower them and make sure their basic needs are taken care of.
Mapping out a creative political perspective for Y2K now
The current public discourse on Y2K is focused on three things:
1) the impact on business (and economic fortunes)
2) the impact on governance (and political fortunes)
3) the impact on individuals (and their pursuit of
individual survival)
We aim to add a fourth focus to the list, which we believe is
the most important one of them all:
4) the impact on communities, on populations where
they live.
We observe that public officials and others involved with communities
evolve through a number of stages regarding Y2K:
1) Ignorance: "What's Y2K?"
2) False security: "This is a technical problem being handled by
the government's technical people."
3) Government coping: "We won't get all our government systems
compliant, so we need to do triage and focus on mission-critical
systems."
4) Waking up to the big picture: "Other organizations (businesses,
governments, nonprofits, countries) are not going to be compliant,
and this will impact our community/agency."
5) Waking up to the needs of the community: "We need to make sure
that actions are taken to prepare our community to survive."
(At which point people start advocating one or more of these.)a) action by higher levels of government
b) action by their own level of government
c) action by the community, itself6) Identifying specific programmatic approaches to support the survival of all communities: (People advocate one or more of these.) (Leading advocates are listed after each option. Major references are linked where first mentioned.)
a) austere infrastructure mitigation [getting vital infrastructure
Y2K-compliant] (Smith, Carmichael, Beal, Victor, Kappelman, et al)
b) contingency preparation (all proposals)
c) community resilence development (includes sustainable
technologies and the revitalization of citizenship) (Atlee,
Theobald, Beal, Carmichael, O'Reilly, Victor, Wells)
d) legal modifications to encourage Y2K information-sharing
(Kappelman, et al)
e) bipartisan effort to cease the blame game (Kappelman, Atlee)
f) conscious use of media to educate and orient populations to
pro-social responses (Atlee, Carmichael, Wells, Victor)
g) mass simulations to "practice" for Y2K-crisis (Carmichael, Victor)
Most officials are currently at either stage (1) or stage (2).
We want to move them as rapidly as possible to stage 6, and to
move public dialogue and political discourse into "which
aspects of 5 and 6 should we focus on, and how should we accomplish
that?" Bennett, Gore and Clinton have all now spoken up for
6 d and e. Bennett has talked a bit about 6 a and b. But none
of them have started talking about community action.
Note that 6a-6c involve systems and resources that are vital for
community survival. This is, oddly enough, a grey area.
What systems and resources are
considered vital is not only a technical question, but a controversial
political one. We believe that certain systems are basic enough
that consensus will be found to address them IMMEDIATELY while
the other systems are being researched and debated. These first-priority
systems include:
a) water (primarily potable)
b) sewage
c) basic food (in terms of calories and minimal nutrition)
[see Eight Steps to U.S. Y2K Food Security by Carla Emery]
d) heat (in areas where it is dangerously cold in winter)
e) public health (epidemic prevention + some basic individual health care,
esp. vital medications)
f) security (basic community and national)
g) toxics/nuclear control
h) basic inter-community communicationsIt is noted that 6a, 6b, and 6c (infrastructure mitigation, contingency preparedness, and community resilience development) all imply different and potentially complementary approaches to meeting each of these needs. Take water, for example: Austere infrastructure mitigation may involve ensuring the Y2K compliance of certain water utilities. Contingency preparation may involve families and communities stockpiling fresh water. Community resilience may involve building the capacity of neighborhoods to catch drinkable rain runoff. A different mix of these may be appropriate in different communities.
The next level of things to attend to, about which there is less
agreement and therefore require more political discourse to establish
priorities, includes:
i) corporate survival and welfare
j) welfare of the poor and otherwise vulnerable
k) functioning financial systems
l) maintenance of global commerce
m) welfare of other countries
n) transportation
o) full energy availability
p) full telecommunications and mass media services
Again, there are diverse approaches to these, supported by diverse
interest groups. In things like finance, welfare, transportation,
energy and telecommunications, a mixed approach (of, for example,
rationed provision plus community self-reliance) may be better
than a one-solution-fits-all approach.
1) Trying to sustain a holding pattern (emergency management) and
getting back to business-as-usual as soon as possible.
2) Using whatever force is necessary to push solutions and public order
(call out the National Guard!).
3) Supporting participatory local responses which will leave
communities more resilient and self-reliant after the dust settles.
We expect that different mixes of these will work best in different
areas, and will be advocated by different interest groups. Most
community-oriented groups, experts and activists favor (1) and/or
(3) as their central strategy. We advocate the utmost restraint
and care in applying force (2) to deal with this problem.