civic participators

Neighbors helping neighbors 💪 with the Supervisor & the Fire Captain at the Palace of Fine Arts

Last weekend, I had the pleasure of organizing and hosting a SFFD NERT Map Your Neighborhood (MYN) disaster preparedness class with SF City Supervisor Stephen Sherrill at the Palace of Fine Arts — and what an energizing afternoon it turned out to be!

Neighbors Come Together to Get Ready

Our Eventbrite registration page garnered more than 400 visits, so I hope that means a lot of people are quietly interested in being better prepared. About 10% completed the registration.

We had about 25 people total in attendance, including a teenage boy who brought his parents (I love seeing families learning together), neighbors from Broderick and Filbert Street including a block with a longtime neighborhood watch group. We were joined by several Marina District Avila Street group leaders who are now organizing for emergency response — they’re already famous for their Halloween block parties! Folks came not just from Cow Hollow and the Marina, but also from Pacific Heights, the Richmond, and even the Mission and the Sunset District — a great mix of neighborhoods coming together to learn how to take care of each other when disaster strikes.

Fire Department and City Leaders Join the Effort

As the SFFD NERT Program Coordinator from the Fire Department, Fire Captain Brandon Tom came and spoke to everyone about the opportunities to get free training.

The Supervisor’s legislative assistant Jack Hebb captured footage for District 2’s channels. The event was featured in the Supervisor’s newsletter (thank you for including us — it was a very full news month!).

SFFD PIO Sam Menchaca was there filming videos for the Fire Department to share.

SFFD PIO Sam Menchaca captures footage of SFFD NERT Paul Tipp registering walk-ins. Thanks to Paul and fellow NERT Elisabeth Brandon for volunteering to assist during this special event!

A Perfect Setting for Community Connection

The Small Theatre space at the Palace worked beautifully — cozy, focused, and perfect for discussion. Huge thanks to Rich Goss for helping us secure it for this event! We had a handful of walk-ins, and curious pedestrians stopped by to ask what NERT is, including a tourist from Boston, Massachusetts who will now look to see about CERT classes in his area.

Instructor Sue Brown addressing the class in the small theatre of the Palace of Fine Arts

Learning the Nine-Step MYN Plan

Our instructor, SFFD NERT Sue Brown, did a fantastic job leading the 90-minute session, walking everyone through the nine-step MYN plan — a simple but powerful way for neighbors to coordinate after a disaster when first responders can’t reach us right away. The class focused on communication, checking on neighbors, and mapping local resources so we can all help one another in that “golden hour” after an emergency.

One of the most exciting takeaways? Supervisor Stephen Sherrill’s involvement seems to have inspired other districts to invite their supervisors to participate in a class. Sue tells me Districts 7 and 11 are now planning their own MYN events — how great is that? Preparedness truly spreads!

Keeping the Spirit of NERT Alive

No one from my street or block showed up (despite my relentless leafleting directly to their residences 😅), but I’m hopeful that awareness will begin to build. After all, District 2 is where NERT began — right after the Loma Prieta earthquake — and it’s up to us to keep that legacy alive. We still have 92-year-old NERTs here in the neighborhood waiting for the next generation to step up. I am thinking about them when I contact the rest of you!

The Next Generation Is Every Neighbor

We already have the free classes from generous volunteer instructor Sue Brown — we just need people to take them.

Stay Involved and Stay Prepared

Find a readiness event that works for you, and come!

If you couldn’t make it this time, keep an eye out for future SFFD NERT and Map Your Neighborhood trainings listed on the Fire Dept. site here: NERT TRAINING CALENDAR.

The more we know, the stronger and safer our community becomes.

Because in the golden hour after a disaster, we all become first responders.

End of an era.... Xitter no more

When you find yourself tweeting/retweeting like I did this morning the very real evidence of civilizational collapse all around us, maybe it’s time to do something different with those minutes and hours and days.

Today I closed my last Xitter account after 17 years of daily use.

SEVENTEEN YEARS!

I’ve had a few accounts, but this was the holdout account and it’s formed the content of my KIP sensemaking framework for the past five years. (That’s okay, it’s just the end of a chapter since the framework and the data still exist and can be used, and await other editors, curators, contributors, and researchers.)

Closing the channel of the best news and opinion I’ve ever enjoyed with my carefully vetted lists of the best civic participators

Closing this particular social media account and ending my association with that platform is a great loss for me since it’s been my lifeline. I’ve just closed the channel of the best news and opinion I’ve ever enjoyed with carefully vetted powerhouse lists and follows of the best civic participators and my custom search and consumption practices that have consistently generated sharp, expert, early insights into current events.

It was my lifeline to the best news and opinion I’ve ever enjoyed due to my carefully vetted powerhouse lists, follows, and my custom search and consumption practices that have consistently generated sharp, expert, early insights into current events.

I guess I’ll just head over to LInkedin…where I see we’ve breached 7 of 9 planetary boundaries, and we’re past the point of national-scale mitigation. The dire immensity of this moment is a lot to take in.

However I’m eager to partake in the different pursuits that open up for me with the new-found time and attention. Especially because community resilience, local survival plans, and protecting each other is the only way forward.

I’m eager to partake in the different pursuits that open up for me with the new-found time and attention.
— Especially because community resilience, local survival plans, and protecting each other is the only way forward.

Now you can listen to KIP's Emerging Narrative...thanks to AI voice generator

Consider this audio a companion to the Bigger Picture video of various quotes I’ve collected rather than a mirror image…there’s more to this multifaceted story.

A unique curation of emergent voices describing this moment we find ourselves in.
— KIP

This is my first experiment with AI voice generation using a script made from individual quotes from civic participators I’ve been tracking for last past 7 years, describing this moment we find ourselves in. Quote credits in the images below and a full list to come.


2024 Progress Report: The Bigger Picture

Wearing my ‘serial founder exploring starting a company’ hat, I advanced my passion project KIP3.

KIP is a seven-year long passion project to tackle the disinformation problem on social media that makes us poor information citizens and polarized neighbors who cannot take collective action in the face of threats like the climate crisis.

The bigger picture, in your words

With my KIP project to make sense in the social age and surface the best civic participators - or members of “the Fifth Estate”, - I’ve been collecting the contributions on Twitter.

For a couple years I made graphic images of quotes I spied. I put some of them together into a larger narrative of our time, and this moment. Take a look!

Below is a short version of the narrative in the video. See the video for quote credits or read the transcript with credits here.

“The Bigger Picture” In Snippets From Emergent News Contributors Curated By KIP

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