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Ohio Organizing Collaborative

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ohio Organizing Collaborative
Formation2007
Type501(c)(3) non-profit Cooperative
Location
  • Youngstown, Ohio
Websitewww.ohorganizing.org

The Ohio Organizing Collaborative[1] (OOC) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit statewide organization focused on uniting community organizers and organizing groups across Ohio with similar interests. The OOC was formed in 2007 by Kirk Noden with a mission of organizing citizens to build power and combat social, racial and economic injustices in communities across Ohio. The goal for the OOC is to organize Ohioans and the Midwest citizens into a progressive movement.[2] The OOC is composed of 18 community-based organizations with members in every major city across Ohio. These organizations include labor unions, faith organizations, community organizing groups among others. Currently the OOC participates in eight campaigns across the state through direct advocacy, voter engagement, fundraising, and community growth. Funding for the OOC is provided in many different ways including third party investors, grants, and fundraising.

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Transcription

Campaigns

The OOC currently participates in several campaigns across the state. These campaigns include Mass Incarceration, Immigration Reform, Civic Engagement, Environmental Justice, Leadership Training, Caring Across Generations, Economic Dignity, and Healthy Communities.

Organization

The OOC is headquartered in Youngstown Ohio with regional offices across the state including Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Dayton, Cincinnati, Toledo, and Warren, Ohio. The OOC works as a tool to unite organizations and people across the state to build people "Power" across the state and take control of issues affecting the community including mass incarceration, community engagement levels, and actual equality within the social, economic, and political sectors in Ohio.

Member organization

Several member organizations collectively make up the collaborative and expands its networking ability across the state. Aiming to reach community members throughout Ohio, this collaborative has designed a system of community outreach built through alliances with other organizations operating with similar interests. These organizations co-facilitate campaigns with local, regional, and national organizations targeting social justice issues and collectively building people power. Currently, the OOC comprises 18 member organizations including the Ohio Student Association, SEIU Local 1, Iron Workers, Ohio Prophetic Voices, and Northeast Ohio Alliance For Hope.

History

The OOC was formed in 2007 by Kirk Noden with the mission of organizing citizens to build power and combat social, racial and economic injustices in communities across Ohio. In 2011 The collaborative aligned with Stand Up for Ohio to take a stance against Ohio Senate Bill 5 issue on collective bargaining.

In 2012 The OOC developed a Civic Engagement Program that combines organizing and mobilization strategies with electoral work. The Civic Engagement Program is focused on seniors, student, and religious communities. The OOC covers six regions and 12 counties in Ohio.

In May 2012 the OOC began its faith-based campaign, Ohio Prophetic Voices and formed its seed organization the Ohio Student Association.

In March 2017, a canvasser paid by the OOC was sentenced to six months in the Columbiana County Jail for engaging in voter registration fraud.[3]

Leadership training in Ohio

Every year, the OOC and its statewide members host a training for approximately 100 leaders from the faith and labor community, electoral politics, public officeholders and grassroots leaders who seek to be more effective organizers in their communities, churches, or workplace. OOC's weeklong training blends the best of traditional organizing models with emerging innovation.[4]

The Ohio Student Association, a seed of the OOC is a statewide organization led by young people. OSA engages in values-based issue & electoral organizing, nonviolent direct action, advocacy for progressive public policy, and leadership development. On campuses and communities across Ohio, they organize young people to build independent political power.[5]

Battling mass incarceration

The OOC and the Ohio Justice and Policy have partnered to identify a series of data-driven progressive solutions that will safely reduce the size of Ohio's correctional population while addressing serious concerns of racial disparity[6] In the report Mass Incarceration and Criminal Justice Reform in Ohio[6] published by the collaborative concluded racial Inequality was found within Ohio's criminal justice system. The collaborative reports that while African Americans represent 12.5 percent of Ohio's population, they simultaneously make up 45 percent of incarcerated individuals in Ohio. A report posted by the U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics Correctional Populations in the United States, 2013,[7] provides that there was roughly 6.9 million people under the supervision of the adult correction system by the end of 2013.About 1 in 35. The United States has the highest prison population rate in the world at 716 per 100,000 of the nation's population as reported by the Worlds Prison Population List.[8]

The OOC focuses on a number of measures to address Ohio's mass incarceration including using its advocacy abilities to support and utilize the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections Smart Ohio Plan [9] which is a funding system created to increase community corrections alternatives to prison. This Plan would give counties in Ohio the ability to increase diversion program by providing funding based upon progress data and effectiveness.

References

  1. ^ "Ohio Organizing Collaborative". www.ohorganizing.org. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  2. ^ "50 Young Progressive Activists Who Are Changing America". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2015-12-14.
  3. ^ Giambroni, Tom (March 7, 2017). "EL woman gets jail for voter registration fraud". Salem News. Retrieved May 26, 2022.
  4. ^ "Ohio Organizing Collaborative". Ohio Organizing Collaborative. Retrieved 2015-12-14.
  5. ^ "Ohio Student Association". Ohio Student Association. Retrieved 2015-12-14.
  6. ^ a b "Mass Incarceration and Criminal Justice Reform in Ohio" (PDF). Ohio Organizing Collaborative. Ohio Organizing Collaborative, Ohio Justice and Policy center.
  7. ^ "Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)". www.bjs.gov. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  8. ^ "Research & Publications | World Prison Brief". www.prisonstudies.org. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  9. ^ "DRC Rolls Out Smart Ohio Plan". www.drc.ohio.gov. Retrieved 2015-12-14.
This page was last edited on 6 August 2022, at 18:10
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