Students from St. Paul’s Macalester College and the
University of Minnesota launched the World Energy Community Action
Network (WeCAN), a citizen alliance to help Minnesotans shift to clean
energy and confront global warming.
The alliance was launched at a February 23-25 Minnesota
Citizens Conference on Climate and Energy Action in Minneapolis
supported by Church World Service.
Last year CWS joined two faith partners in supporting
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in its legal action to force the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to regulate carbon-dioxide
emissions—the main cause of global warming—from motor vehicles. Climate
change has widespread effects on the vulnerable people worldwide with
whom the organization partners. It also affects hurricane victims and
other communities requiring CWS disaster relief efforts.
CWS supports young adults as they engage in a variety of
issues that underpin its advocacy and education. The organization
co-sponsors the annual Young Adult Ecumenical Forum to promote dialogue
and action on the impact of globalization.
WeCAN launched its website at the Twin Cities
conference. The website allows members to share information and
collaborate within the network. It is hosted by RE-AMP, an online
commons for Midwest leadership in 21st century clean energy.
Among the 30 or so participants, there was a local trade
union leader fighting for public ownership of a hydroelectric power
station at a soon-to-close Ford assembly plant in St. Paul, a proponent
of grass-fed beef, and non-profit groups at the forefront of clean
energy and water initiatives in the Twin Cities Metro area.
Working groups discussed sustainable transportation and
urban design, and better agricultural systems. Participants shared
skills in messaging, citizen lobbying, funding, movement building, and
transportation alternatives.
Also attending the Minnesota Citizens Conference was a
member of the Planning Commission of Frontenac, MN, and representatives
of Congregations Caring for Creation, the Alaska Coalition, and the
foundation of polar explorer and global warming activist Will Steger.
The conference was organized by student members of the
Macalester Conservation and Renewable Energy Society (MacCARES) and the
University of Minnesota’s Ecowatch. MacCARES members at the meet
included Jason Rodney, a former Cleveland Heights, OH, high school
student who coordinated a CROP Walk there, and David Schmitt, the first
student at Macalester majoring in both religious and environmental
studies.
High school student Jennifer Heinzel from Edina told of
working with the town's mayor to pass an energy bill.
Such conferences connect citizens acting locally on
global issues with policy makers. They help advocate for policies that
bring sustainable solutions to global and local challenges.
“The challenge is to connect policy makers to everyday
people,” said MacCARES co-chair Timothy DenHerder-Thomas, who helped
organize the conference. “How the community responds is driven by what
people on the ground are doing.”