PICO National Network
Motto | "Unlocking the power of people" |
---|---|
Formation | 1972 |
Founder | John Baumann, SJ |
Type | Nonprofit |
Purpose | Community organizing for progressive public policy change |
Headquarters | Oakland, California |
Methods | Faith-based community organizing |
Executive Director
|
Scott Reed |
Revenue (2013)
|
$8,242,723[1] |
Website | www |
PICO National Network is a national network of progressive faith-based community organizations in the United States. The organization is headquartered in Oakland, California, with additional offices in San Diego and Washington, D.C. Its stated mission is "to increase access to health care, improve public schools, make neighborhoods safer, build affordable housing, redevelop communities and revitalize democracy."[2]
PICO supports full citizenship for immigrants who are in the United States illegally.[3][4] The organization also supports universal health care.[5][6][7]
Contents
History
PICO National Network was founded in 1972 by John Baumann, a Jesuit priest, as the Pacific Institute for Community Organization (PICO), headquartered in Oakland, California. In the late 1960s Baumann had worked with community organizing projects in Chicago, where he became familiar with Saul Alinsky’s ideas. During the 1970s, PICO worked with five neighborhood-based organizations, recruiting individuals and families. As neighborhoods experienced the economic and social upheavals of that decade, the neighborhood-based model of organizing became less viable as communities fractured.[8]
Following a staff retreat in 1984, PICO shifted to a congregation-based model based in part on the experience of COPS, a federation in San Antonio, Texas developed by Alinsky’s Industrial Areas Foundation. As it expanded beyond the West Coast, in 2004 PICO characterized its acronym as standing for People Improving Communities through Organizing. In 2005, it renamed itself PICO National Network, emphasizing the autonomy of its affiliated organizations, and its role developing national strategy, training, and consultation.[9]
The shift to faith-based organizing has emphasized the importance of religious culture to PICO. Its base in northern California meant that PICO could draw on the traditions of a variety of denominations. Sociology professor Richard Wood, who serves on PICO's board of directors, writes that this includes “the social Christianity of the historic black churches, the Social Gospel and Christian realist perspectives in moderate and liberal Protestantism, the strongly evangelical but socially responsible orientation of the Church of God in Christ, and the intellectual resources, working-class commitments, and Hispanic cultural ties of Roman Catholicism.”[8]
Activities
PICO's California Project led a $190 million public bond initiative for public school infrastructure.[10] PICO's New Voices Campaign, launched in 2004, seeks to help low-income communities have an impact at the national level on such issues as immigration reform, health care, education, and rebuilding the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.[11] In October 2008, PICO announced plans for a mid-November meeting in Washington, D.C., in which its affiliates would lobby Congress, the United States Treasury Department, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to help people keep their homes when facing foreclosure.[12]
Funding
The Ford Foundation is a major donor to PICO.[13] In 2015, PICO was added to the list of the Democracy Alliance's recommended funding targets.[14] PICO has received funding from the Open Society Foundations.[15]
See also
References
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Further reading
- Whitman, Gordon, “Beyond Advocacy: The History & Vision of the PICO Network," Social Policy, vol. 37, No. 2 (Winter 2006/2007), pp. 50–59.
- Wood, Richard L., "Higher Power: Strategic Capacity for State and National Organizing," pp. 162–192 in Transforming the City: Community Organizing and the Challenge of Political Change, edited by Marion Orr (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2007).