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Maine’s super-volunteers and passionate student allies

In the days leading up to my departure for Maine, I wasn’t sure what to expect from the people I’d meet here. I’m no stranger to ballot campaigns; we’ve had our share of those in Oregon. I rode on Tuesday to a suburb outside of Portland, Maine with another volunteer staff to meet with nine high school students about their interest to get involved with the No On 1 campaign. Our goal was to start a “Friends and Family” Volunteer Recruitment Phone Bank with them on the spot, and to organize a few times when they and their friends could volunteer together, canvassing door-to-door the weekend before Election Day.

We rolled up to their neighborhood Starbucks at about 3 o’clock and met the students inside. They’d come straight after school, and had heard about the campaign at an all-ages concert, where they’d been watching their favorite local band. Three of the youth were band members! A few of them had worn their No On 1 buttons to school that day, and mentioned that they’d started conversations with other students about the issue, and what it meant to them.

After introducing ourselves and briefly describing the state of the campaign, we read through a script and role-played it, making sure to arm the students with the facts needed to express to their friends and family members how much this means to them and why we need their help in the last two weeks of the campaign. When we asked the students to get out their mobile phones and start calling to sign their friends up for volunteer shifts with the campaign, they excelled at the task! After about a half hour, the students made a plan to gather together with their newly signed up volunteers for a morning canvass on Halloween, knocking on doors to get out the vote.

None of the nine students were affiliated with the Gay Straight Alliance at their school, (and none mentioned that they identified as LGBT,) but all shared a sense that whoever you are and whomever you love, couples deserve to be recognized equally under the law.

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This entry was posted on Sunday, October 25th, 2009 at 10:08 am and is filed under Blog, News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

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