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Workshops
Workshops at DUHC
First Steps in Dismantling Corporate
Rule – Our Introductory Workshop
Deep Democracy Weekend Retreat
Community Organizing 101
Democratic Campaigns
Community
Organizing Strategy Retreat
Food and Democracy
Corporations are Killing the Polar
Bears
Teaching to Awaken Democracy & Resist
Corporate Rule
Education Inc.: Selling Our Schools
How to Host A DUHC Workshop - General Logistics
Here’s some basic introductory info about what you need to know
and to do to bring us to your community for a workshop or presentation.
The following is meant to give you an idea of what kind of preparation
is needed to bring a good workshop to your community – but we are
pretty flexible about it all. Please contact us and we will make it work!
Workshop Options
We suggest you hire us to give a public talk on a previous evening (usually
Friday) for as big a local crowd as you can muster, and then a day-long
workshop following (usually on a Saturday). The workshop needs to be a
full day and it is often helpful to have another meeting the next day
for those interested in really running with it (see below). We like to
call the talk, “Why Do Corporations Have More Rights Than You Do?”
If your community has a bad corporate problem locally or regionally (who
doesn’t?!), and people are already aware it’s a problem, we
tend to name the corporation in the talk title: “Why does (XXX)
Corporation have more rights than you do?”
If you would like to get together a group of local citizens interested
in working on corporate rule in your locality in an ongoing way, we suggest
that you also set up another meeting for the morning after the workshop
(10am-1pm for example), and you invite interested workshop participants
to come to that. That way we can be there for your first meeting to help
you talk strategy. Everyone will have the analysis and perspective fresh
in their minds from the day before. We will help you to think through
what project or campaign you might like to undertake and to assist with
resources, advice and our own experience. We are also happy to provide
ongoing advice, consultation and help once we leave your community.
Our Fee Structure
Workshops & Strategy Sessions (3
hours or more)
All rates are sliding scale.
Rates: $50-$100/hour for first 8 hours of
presentation, afterwards $40-$90/hour
(note: each hour is for 2 people’s time).
All workshops must include:
4 hours prep time and 2 hours post-event, plus time spent during workshop
(does not include travel time or non-presentation time). We make every
effort to have a team of gender-balanced facilitators at each workshop.
We strongly discourage against bringing only one person to cut costs.
For example: a Saturday workshop from 9am-5pm (8 hours) + a Sunday strategy
session from 10am-2pm (4 hours), at the bottom end of the sliding scale: $400
(8 x $50) + $160 (4 x $40) + $300 (6 x $50) = $860 TOTAL (+ travel & meal
cost)
Honorariums for Speaking Engagements & Presentations
(up to 2.5 hours)
Institution rate: $500-$1000 sliding scale
Community group
rate: $250-$700 sliding scale
Note: if a Community Group arranges a talk at an institution to help
offset costs for a workshop they’re also organizing, we only charge
our hourly rate above, but the group is encouraged to try to arrange
for as high an honorarium as possible from the institution to offset
costs.
Travel & Accommodations
Driving: $.35/mile round-trip or the cost of a rental car + gas (we decide
which option).
Accommodations: bed (not a couch) and all meals while
in Community. Host can elect to pay for hotel room as well as restaurant
meals, or provide food and lodging. Additional cost of $25/day for meals
on travel days, per person.
Please do not let our fees deter you from contacting us about hosting
a workshop.
Venues
We prefer the workshop take place in a large comfortable living room
away from loud urban noises or roads, with good outside air for break
time. It tends to be a nicer aesthetic and more physically comfortable
than a church or other institutional setting. Though most churches do
have carpeted smaller rooms with comfortable chairs that are more than
adequate, as do many colleges and universities.
Workshop Schedule
If the workshop is scheduled as a full day, we suggest timing of 10:30am
to 5:30pm, with a lunch break and stretch breaks. People should be encouraged
to bring a sack lunch so we can mingle together informally. If it’s
a 2-day workshop, we suggest 10:30am to 5:30pm for day one, and 10:30am
to 1pm for day two. The host should try to have hot and cold drinks
(plus snacks) for all at lunch and breaks. It is also pretty easy to
get food donations from local grocery stores and restaurants and if
you do this it will help keep the snack and meal costs low.
Participant Fees
We urge workshop organizers to offer a broad sliding scale fee structure
so that everyone feels invited.
Depending on how much you decide to pay us we suggest you charge participants
somewhere in the range between $20 to $60, and $50 to $150. And if you
can afford it, you can also say “No one turned away” or “scholarships
available” on the flyers. We strongly recommend that you do offer
some way for folks of lower income to participate – we want our
work to be as accessible as possible. At the same time though, it’s
not unusual for full-day workshops to cost each participant hundreds of
dollars, so our workshops are quite affordably priced.
Workshop Size
An ideal size is 10 to 16 people, with a minimum of 6 participants and
a maximum of 20 participants. There always tend to be 2 to 5 no-shows,
unless people pay in advance. It’s important that participants attend
the full event, not drop in late, or leave early. When we do a workshop
locally we always make sure to ask participants to pre-register so we
have a sense of how many people are coming – we suggest that you
do the same.
Outreach and Publicity
Where and how you publicize depends on who you want to attend the workshop.
If your group or organization is going to provide participants from your
membership, you might not need to do public outreach. If this is the case,
we suggest you remember to call folks who you want to attend because email
announcements alone seldom get much response. And don’t forget to
send out reminders!
If you want to invite the public you will need to do more outreach. We
suggest making a flyer (we
can provide examples) that you can distribute to local restaurants,
coffee shops, bookstores, grocery stores, colleges, laundromats, community
venues and bulletin boards.
We also suggest sending out a press release (we can provide examples)
to local radio and television stations as well as newspapers. We are always
happy to do radio interviews with your local media by telephone before
we get there and it is often easy to set those up by following up on press
releases and requesting time on radio programs dedicated to local and/or
political events. It is best to schedule these 3-5 days before the event.
You should also ask your local radio, TV and newspapers to include the
event in their community calendars. You can also sometimes get the event
announced through calendars that local community groups send out to their
members. Try to be as creative and extensive with outreach as possible!
Please contact us if you would like
to host a workshop in your community. We are happy to help you with organizing
the event.
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