For more information contact us at capitolacares@gmail.com
We received some good press in Sunday’s Santa Cruz Sentinel. Unfortunately they didn’t make the the terrific article by Joel Isaacson available online. We’d also like to point out that while the article focused on Barbara and Amie, this project is fueled by a wonderful, dedicated committee: Capitola City Council Member Dennis Norton, Patti Bond, Molly Ording, Linda Hanson, Wendy Ballen and Karl Forest. It truly takes a village. We invite anyone else interested in this idea to join us. Contact capitolacalltoservice@gmail.com
(Reprinted from Santa Cruz Sentinel, EXTRA, Sunday, March 8, 2009)
CRAIGSLIST FOR SMALL KINDNESSES
Capitola Women On Fire With Obama’s Call To Service
By Joel Isaacson
Amie Forest and Barbara Goron are more than inspired by the Obama’s call to service- they’re onfire – and when these two Capitola activists team up, things happen.
Like when they get a candidate elected to the City Council. Or when they helped write an Obama anthem, then taught 200 people to sing it in three part harmony, filmed and recorded it and put it on You Tube.
Their current project includes a grassroots community assistance network, utilizing the latest Internet social-networking tools. Think of Craigslist for small kindnesses. “These are tough times and people lead busy lives,” Forest said. “There are lots of people who would love to volunteer their time, but they can’t take on a regular, on-going, open-ended commitment.
But maybe they have a free hour now and then,” Gorson adds. “They could go online and, for example, find someone with a broken leg who needs her dog walked. Just eliminate the feeling of obligation that keeps people from serving, and they’ll do what they can, when they can.”
Forest says that genius of the Obama campaign was to ask less from people, thereby allowing more people to give.
“Community” is the focus of the project: enriching, strengthening and expanding it. Not just with high-tech tools but with block parties and salons. Gorson and Forest believe that Capitola is the perfect place to try something like this out because it’s not too big, it’s cohesive and there’s plenty of community and neighborhood pride. They feel that the iconic Capitola businesses like the Capitola Book Café and others are community institutions that deserve community support. They envision holding salons at Capitola cafes and “Dine Out in Capitola” evenings to help local restaurants.
Yes, they know things can go wrong: what if there are offensive postings on the Web site, what if some people don’t have computers and what if nobody’s interested?
“We’ll deal with it, that’s all,” Gorson said. “We’ll try different things until we get it right. This is all an experiment: we know it won’t be perfect, but we’re not going to let that stop us from going ahead.”