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Kate Christensen, owner of The Garden Gate in Arcata, supports Measure T! (30 secs)
Ray Raphael, Humboldt County Historian, supports Measure T! (30 secs)
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News Articles
Measure T Trumps Big Business 
By Maxwell Schnurer, Adbusters Magazine
May 2007 issue
In 2005, a small community group in Eureka California successfully authored
and passed a ballot initiative, called Measure T, which forbids non-local
corporations from giving any money to county elections. Considering the
prevailing American political climate where big businesses are given
anything they want, it is worth exploring how a little organization called
Democracy Unlimited persuaded their community to ban out-of-town corporate
money.
Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, campaign co-manager of Measure T, explains that
this was a “readymade issue.” Humboldt is a rural county
which had attracted the negative attention of big business before. In
1999 Walmart spent $235,000 to re-write local zoning laws, and in 2003
the lumber company Maxxam spent hundreds of thousands in an attempt to
recall a district attorney critical of big timber. Both of the campaigns
created “an educated public who were primed for Measure T,” says
Sopoci-Belknap.
Democracy Unlimited made sure that the public arguments for Measure
T were about community control. Arguing that big corporate money undercut
Humboldt Elections, the group positioned Measure T as a modern day Boston
Tea Party, an anti-corporate rebellion. Complete with purple tea bags
and yard signs, the campaign connected the very real negative impacts
of corporate indifference with a political movement.
While the symbols of the campaign were radical, the foundation of measure
T was traditional organizing. The all-volunteer campaign, largely consisting
of veteran Green Party and progressive organizers, scoured voter lists,
staffed phone banks and walked door-to-door to explain the issue to voters.
With an explicitly feminist model and with women in key positions, the
structure of the campaign was effective at creating new activists who
could take the message of Measure T to the farthest reaches of this rural
community.
Measure T is an amazing model for other communities to help defend themselves
from corporate influence. There is no place on this planet that has not
been touched by major corporations. With the success of Measure T, Democracy
Unlimited has given us an effective template for community groups to
protect the places we live.
Find out more about Democracy Unlimited.
This article appeared in the May 2007 issue of Adbusters Magazine. Maxwell
Schnurer is a community organizer and professor of communication at Humboldt
State University.
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Humboldt County Leaders Endorse Measure T!
Democratic Party of Humboldt County
Green Party of Humboldt County
Central Labor Council of Humboldt and Del Norte Counties
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local #1684
Building and Construction Trades of Humboldt and Del Norte Counties
Carpenters Union Local #751
Operating Engineers Union Local #3 AFL-CIO
Paul Gallegos, Humboldt County District Attorney
Peter LaVallee, Eureka Mayor
Chris Kerrigan, Eureka City Council
Dave Meserve, Arcata City Council
Harmony Groves, Arcata City Council
Paul Pitino, Arcata City Council
Bob Ornelas, Former Arcata Mayor
Connie Stewart, Former Arcata Mayor
Elizabeth Conner, Former Arcata City Council
Julie Fulkerson, Former Humboldt County Board of Supervisors
... and hundreds of other individuals and local businesses! Join us today!
View the full list of public endorsements!
Learn More!

Learn more about Measure T in a Pros and Cons Video, produced by Eileen McGee (51 mins)
Radio Ads

Chris Kerrigan, Eureka City Counsel, and Kate Christensen, owner of The Garden Gate, support Measure T! (1 min)

Paul Gallegos, Humboldt County District Attorney, and Nezzie Wade, community member, support Measure T! (1 min)
Larry Glass, owner of The Works, and Dennis Rael, owner of Los Bagles, support Measure T! (1 min)
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